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词条 Task Force 44
释义

  1. History

     1942  1943  1944 

  2. Ships of the task force

  3. References

     Bibliography 
{{Infobox military unit
|unit_name =Task Force 44
|image =TG17.3 and HMAS Australia under attack May 7 1942.jpg
|caption =Task Force 44 (temporarily redesignated as Task Group 17.3) under Japanese air attack on May 7, 1942 during the Battle of the Coral Sea
|dates =April 22, 1942 – March 15, 1943
|country ={{flagu|United States|size=23px|1912}}
{{flag|Australia|size=23px}}
|allegiance =
|branch={{Flag|United States Navy|1864|size=23px}}
{{flagdeco|Australia|naval-1913}} Royal Australian Navy
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|role =Naval warship support
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|battles =World War II
  • Battle for Australia
  • New Guinea Campaign
  • Guadalcanal Campaign

|anniversaries =
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|commander4 =
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|notable_commanders =John Gregory Crace
Victor Crutchley
John Augustine Collins
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}}

Task Force 44 was an Allied naval task force during the Pacific Campaign of World War II. The task force consisted of warships from, mostly, the United States Navy and a few from the Royal Australian Navy (RAN). It was generally assigned as a striking force to defend northeast Australia and the surrounding area from any attacks by Axis forces, particularly from the Empire of Japan.

History

1942

The task force was created on 22 April 1942 from the ANZAC Squadron as part of United States Army General Douglas MacArthur's South West Pacific Area (command). The unit's first commander was Royal Australian Navy Rear Admiral John Gregory Crace. From 13 June 1942 the task force was commanded by Rear Admiral Victor A.C. Crutchley of the Royal Navy.

The unit saw action during the Battle of the Coral Sea, in which it helped turn back a Japanese attempt to invade Port Moresby, New Guinea. The Force was temporarily redesignated Task Group 17.3 during the battle. The task force later, under Crutchley, assisted with the initial stages of the Guadalcanal Campaign along with escorting Allied convoys around the northeast Australia, New Guinea, and Coral Sea areas. In August 1942, the force participated in the Battle of Savo Island. The next month, the unit served with the U.S. Navy's Task Force 18, centered on the aircraft carrier {{USS|Wasp|CV-7|6}}.

1943

When the Operation Pamphlet convoy sailed from Fremantle on 20 February 1943 it was escorted by the Australian light cruiser {{HMAS|Adelaide|1918|6}}, as well as the Dutch cruiser {{HNLMS|Jacob van Heemskerck|1939|2}} and destroyer {{HNLMS|Tjerk Hiddes|G16|2}}. It met the ships of Task Group 44.3, a component of Task Force 44, on 24 February in the Great Australian Bight. This force comprised the heavy cruiser {{HMAS|Australia|D84|6}} and American destroyers {{USS|Bagley|DD-386|6}}, {{USS|Helm|DD-388|2}} and {{USS|Henley|DD-391|2}}, and had been dispatched from Sydney on 17 February to escort the troopships.[1] Adelaide and the Dutch warships left the convoy shortly afterwards to escort {{SS|Nieuw Amsterdam|1937|2}} into Melbourne; the liner docked there on the afternoon of 25 February.[1][2] Task Group 44.3 escorted the remaining ships to Sydney, passing south of Tasmania. The escort was strengthened by Jacob van Heemskerck and the French destroyer {{ship|French destroyer|Le Triomphant||2}} en route.[2] The three liners arrived at Sydney on 27 February 1943, completing Operation Pamphlet without loss.[2][3] Despite the official secrecy concerning the convoy, large crowds assembled on vantage points around Sydney Harbour to watch the ships arrive. Queen Mary anchored off Bradleys Head and the other two liners berthed at Woolloomooloo.[4] Curtin officially announced that the 9th Division had returned to Australia in a speech to the House of Representatives on 23 March.[5]

On 15 March 1943 the organization was redesignated as Task Force 74 under the United States Seventh Fleet.

1944

In mid-1944, Commodore John Augustine Collins was made commander of the Australian-U.S. Navy Task Force 74, and commander of the Australian Naval Squadron, with the heavy cruiser {{HMAS|Australia|1927|6}} as his flagship. He became the first graduate of the RAN College to command a naval squadron in action, during the bombardment of Noemfoor, on 2 July 1944.

Commodore Collins was badly wounded in an attack which may have been the first kamikaze strike, which hit Australia on 21 October 1944, in the lead up to the Battle of Leyte Gulf. He did not resume his command until July 1945. When the war ended Collins was the RAN's representative at the surrender ceremony in Tokyo Bay.

Ships of the task force

  • Heavy cruisers: {{USS|Chicago|CA-29|6}}, {{HMAS|Australia|D84|6}}, {{HMAS|Canberra|D33|6}}
  • Light cruiser: {{HMAS|Hobart|1939|6}}
  • Destroyers: {{USS|Perkins|DD-377|6}}, {{USS|Whipple|DD-217|6}}, {{USS|Farragut|DD-348|6}} (from 7 May 1942), {{USS|Walke|DD-416|6}} (from 7 May), {{USS|Henley|DD-391|6}} from 14 May, {{USS|Helm|DD-388|6}} (from 19 May), {{USS|Selfridge|DD-357|6}} (from 21 May), {{USS|Patterson|DD-392|6}} (from ???)

References

1. ^Plowman (2003), p. 381
2. ^Gill (1968), p. 287
3. ^Roskill (1956), p. 433
4. ^Plowman (2003), p. 382
5. ^{{cite news |url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article2626409 |title=Return of 9th Division to Australian Announced|newspaper=The Canberra Times|date=24 March 1943 |accessdate=29 March 2015 |page=2 |publisher=National Library of Australia}}

Bibliography

  • {{cite book

| last = Gill
| first = G. Hermon
| year = 1968
| url = http://www.awm.gov.au/histories/second_world_war/volume.asp?levelID=67911
| title = Volume II – Royal Australian Navy, 1942–1945
| series = Australia in the War of 1939–1945, Series 2: Navy
| location = Canberra
| publisher = Australian War Memorial
| accessdate = 2006-11-20
}}
  • {{cite book

| last = Willmott
| first = H. P.
| authorlink =
| coauthors =
| year = 1983
| chapter =
| title = The Barrier and the Javelin: Japanese and Allied Pacific Strategies February to June 1942
| publisher = Naval Institute Press
| location = Annapolis, Maryland
| isbn = 0-87021-535-3
}}

5 : South West Pacific theatre of World War II|1942 in Australia|1943 in Australia|Pacific theatre of World War II|Military history of Australia during World War II

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