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词条 HMAS Goorangai
释义

  1. Construction

  2. Operational history

     Collision and loss  Memorials 

  3. References

{{Infobox ship image
Ship image=HMAS Goorangai berthing.JPGShip caption=Goorangai coming in to berth
}}{{Infobox ship career
Ship country=AustraliaShip flag=Ship name=GoorangaiShip operator=*Government of New South Wales (1919–1926)
  • Cam & Sons (1926–1939)
Ship builder=Government Dockyard, NewcastleShip laid down=Ship launched=1919Ship fate=Requisition for naval service, 1939}{{Infobox ship careerShip country=AustraliaAustralia|naval-1913}}Ship acquired=8 August 1939Ship commissioned=9 September 1939Ship renamed=Ship reclassified=Auxiliary minesweeperShip motto=Ship nickname=Ship honours=Ship fate=Sunk following collision in 1940Ship notes=Pennant number: GRShip badge=}{{Infobox ship characteristicsShip type=Auxiliary minesweeper (former trawler)Ship tonnage=223 tonnes117|ft}}22|ft|1|in}}13|ft|8|in}}9.5|kn}}Ship range=Ship endurance=Ship complement=3 officers, 21 sailorsShip armament=*1 × QF 12-pounder 12 cwt naval gun
  • Depth charges
Ship notes:}

HMAS Goorangai was a 223-ton auxiliary minesweeper of the Royal Australian Navy (RAN). She was built in 1919 for the Government of New South Wales, then sold in 1926 to the fishing company Cam & Sons. The trawler was requisitioned for military service following the outbreak of World War II, converted into a minesweeper, and assigned to Melbourne. She was sunk in an accidental collision with {{MV|Duntroon}} in 1940, becoming the RAN's first loss of World War II, and the first RAN surface ship to be lost in wartime.

Construction

Goorangai was built by the Government Dockyard, Newcastle in 1919, for use by the Government of New South Wales.[1] The vessel had a tonnage rating of 223 tonnes, was {{convert|117|ft}} long, had a beam of {{convert|22|ft|1|in}}, and a draught of {{convert|13|ft|8|in}}.[2][1] Top speed was {{convert|9.5|kn}}.[1]

Operational history

The vessel was in government service until 1926, when she was sold to Sydney-based fishing company Cam & Sons for use as a trawler.[2][1]

At the start of World War II, Goorangai was requisitioned for military service on 8 September 1939; one of eight vessels requisitioned from Cam & Sons during the war.[1] The vessel underwent modification, and was fitted with minesweeping gear, a QF 12-pounder 12 cwt naval gun, and depth charges.[1] After conversion into an auxiliary minesweeper, Goorangai was commissioned into the RAN on 9 September 1939, and assigned the pennant number GR.[2][1] She was operated by Royal Australian Navy Reserve personnel: 21 sailors and 3 officers.[2] Goorangai was assigned to Minesweeping Group 54, which was based in Melbourne and tasked with keeping Bass Strait and surrounding waters clear of mines.[1]

Following the loss of {{SS|Cambridge|1916|6}} and {{MS|City of Rayville}} in November 1940 to sea mines laid off Wilsons Promontory and Cape Otway, Goorangai and two other auxiliary minesweepers, HMA Ships {{HMAS|Orara||2}} and {{HMAS|Durraween||2}}, were sent to clear to Bass Strait to sweep for mines.[2]

Collision and loss

On the night of 20 November, Goorangai was crossing the mouth of Port Phillip Bay to anchor at Portsea for the night.[2] The minesweeper was sailing under 'brownout' conditions, with minimal lighting.[3] At 20:37, {{MV|Duntroon}}, en route to Sydney, emerged from Port Phillip Bay and cut Goorangai in two.[2] The small auxiliary sank within a minute, taking all 24 personnel aboard with her.[2] Only six bodies were recovered, one of which couldn't be identified.[2] Goorangai and her ship's company were the RAN's first loss in World War II, and the first RAN surface ship ever to be sunk while in service.[2][3][4][5]

News of the accident quickly spread in Melbourne, as the media outlets decided that as the loss of life was due to an accident and not military action, censorship restrictions did not reply.[1] The Australian Commonwealth Naval Board disagreed, and the War Cabinet later issued supplementary instructions preventing the publishing of any loss of Australian personnel or equipment without approval.[1] Because the wreck was inside the shipping zone and resting in less than {{convert|15|m}} of water, it was destroyed by explosives in January 1941.[2] The Court of Marine Inquiry initially found both ships to be at fault for the collision, but later exonerated the captain of Duntroon as poor positioning of lights aboard the minesweeper, which led him to believe that the minesweeper was on a parallel course, was identified as the main cause of the accident.[1][3]

Memorials

A memorial cairn was erected at Queenscliff in 1981.[2] The ship was recognised under the Historic Ship Wrecks Act on 16 November 1995.[2] In 2004, the Royal Australian Naval Professional Studies Program initiated a series of occasional papers focusing on subjects related to the Naval Reserve: the series was named Goorangai, after the ship.[2]

A memorial plague is also dedicated to HMAS Goorangai and her Tasmanian RAN personnel at the Tasmanian Seafarers' Memorial at Triabunna on the east coast of Tasmania.[6]

References

1. ^10 {{cite web |title=HMAS Goorangai |url=http://www.navy.gov.au/hmas-goorangai |publisher=Royal Australian Navy |accessdate=30 March 2015}}
2. ^10 11 12 13 {{cite journal |date=November 2004 |title=Goorangai |journal=Goorangai |publisher=Royal Australian Naval Professional Studies Program |volume=1 |issue=1 |url=http://www.navy.gov.au/sites/default/files/documents/Goorangai_2004_Vol1_No1.pdf |accessdate=30 March 2015}}
3. ^{{Cite VHD shipwreck|294|HMAS Goorangai}}
4. ^{{cite book |last=Gill |first=G. Hermon |title=Royal Australian Navy 1939–1942 |url=http://www.awm.gov.au/histories/second_world_war/volume.asp?levelID=67910 |series=Australia in the War of 1939–1945. Series 2 – Navy |year=1957 |page=275 |publisher=Australian War Memorial |location=Canberra |isbn=}}
5. ^{{cite book |last=Goldrick |first=James |editor=Stevens, David |title=The Royal Australian Navy |series=The Australian Centenary History of Defence (vol III) |year=2001 |publisher=Oxford University Press |location=South Melbourne, VIC |isbn=0-19-555542-2 |oclc=50418095 |chapter=World War II: The war against Germany and Italy |pages=116–7}}
6. ^{{cite web|title=HMAS Goorangai (1940)|url=http://seafarersmemorial.org.au/memorials/vessels/goorangai.php|website=seafarersmemorial.org.au|publisher=Tasmanian Seafarers' Memorial|accessdate=27 February 2017}}
{{Coord|38.29278|S|144.6825|E|display=title}}{{November 1940 shipwrecks}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Goorangai}}

5 : Fishing ships of Australia|Maritime incidents in November 1940|Minesweepers of the Royal Australian Navy|Shipwrecks of Victoria (Australia)|1919 ships

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