World Naval Ships Forums  
CURRENT SPECIAL OFFERS ON OUR HUGE SELECTION OF ART PRINTS!

Go Back   World Naval Ships Forums > Naval History > Australian Navy and Ships
Register FAQ Members List Calendar Search Today's Posts Mark Forums Read

Australian Navy and Ships Topics relating to a specific Australian ship or ships.

Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
  #1  
Old 03-09-2008, 21:30
tinduck's Avatar
tinduck tinduck is offline
Sub-Lieutenant
 
Join Date: Jun 2008
Location: West Midlands
Posts: 199
tinduck is on a distinguished road
Default An Australian I class destroyer?

Is this one of the RANs I class destroyers? It looks similar, although the fore 4in 'bandstand' is unusally high.

Is there a list of pendant numbers for these destroyers. I see they are not on Jim's list of RN numbers

Dave
Attached Images
File Type: jpg 83 unknown.jpg (99.6 KB, 59 views)
Reply With Quote
  #2  
Old 04-09-2008, 04:43
herakles
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: An Australian I class destroyer?

I can't help you I'm afraid and I'm not sure other members can as their interest seems only to lie in RN ships. I hope someone can help you.
Reply With Quote
  #3  
Old 04-09-2008, 11:33
tinduck's Avatar
tinduck tinduck is offline
Sub-Lieutenant
 
Join Date: Jun 2008
Location: West Midlands
Posts: 199
tinduck is on a distinguished road
Default Re: An Australian I class destroyer?

Thanks anyway Herks

I've since found a list of pennant nos for the class in WW1, 83 isn't listed. These nos are the ones commonly seen on photos of the class in the Med during 1917, most RN ships changed nos during the war so its likely the RAN Rivers did too.

Dave

50 HUON
55 PARRAMATTA
61 SWAN
67 TORRENS
70 WARREGO
79 YARRA
Reply With Quote
  #4  
Old 05-09-2008, 06:11
hydroggy's Avatar
hydroggy hydroggy is offline
Leading Seaman
 
Join Date: Apr 2008
Location: Australia
Posts: 26
hydroggy is on a distinguished road
Default Re: An Australian I class destroyer?

Quote:
Originally Posted by tinduck View Post
Is this one of the RANs I class destroyers? ...SNIP....Dave
I must admit I have never heard them refered to as "I" class - River, S or V & W ar all that I can remember. Probably pointing out the obvious but have you taken a look at http://www.navy.gov.au/Ship_Histories
__________________
Mike.
Reply With Quote
  #5  
Old 05-09-2008, 08:34
herakles
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: An Australian I class destroyer?

The latest Parramatta (FFH154) is an Anzac class frigate commissioned in 2003. So it's not one of them!

HMAS Parramatta (D55) was was a River class torpedo boat destroyer commissioned as Royal Navy ship HMS Parramatta for the voyage to Australia on 10 September 1910. Along with HMAS Yarra (D79).

HMAS Torrens (D67) is another one of these, commissioned in 1916.

I guess the others will be similar.
Attached Images
File Type: jpg HMAS_Parramatta_1910.jpg (9.6 KB, 12 views)
Reply With Quote
  #6  
Old 05-09-2008, 13:31
tinduck's Avatar
tinduck tinduck is offline
Sub-Lieutenant
 
Join Date: Jun 2008
Location: West Midlands
Posts: 199
tinduck is on a distinguished road
Default Re: An Australian I class destroyer?

Mike, yes thanks, I'd looked at that site, useful short histories, but nothing on pendant numbers. The ships were a sub-class of the RNs Acheron or I class and are so variously described!

Herks - these are almost all the images I have of the class

Dave
Attached Images
File Type: jpg Huon-01.jpg (43.8 KB, 12 views)
File Type: jpg Parramatta-01.jpg (47.6 KB, 12 views)
File Type: jpg Parramatta-03.jpg (54.5 KB, 13 views)
File Type: jpg Swan-01.jpg (44.2 KB, 12 views)
File Type: jpg Swan-02.jpg (51.4 KB, 13 views)
File Type: jpg Swan-03.jpg (63.8 KB, 12 views)
File Type: jpg Torrens-01.jpg (65.0 KB, 14 views)
File Type: jpg Torrens-02.jpg (36.5 KB, 16 views)
File Type: jpg Warrego-02.jpg (36.1 KB, 12 views)
File Type: jpg Yarra-01.jpg (48.5 KB, 10 views)
File Type: jpg Yarra-02.jpg (39.3 KB, 13 views)
File Type: jpg Yarra-03.jpg (60.7 KB, 24 views)
File Type: jpg Yarra-04.jpg (91.6 KB, 11 views)
Reply With Quote
  #7  
Old 05-09-2008, 15:55
astraltrader's Avatar
astraltrader astraltrader is online now
Forum Moderator
 
Join Date: Jan 2008
Location: Exeter/Devon.
Posts: 11,355
astraltrader is a splendid one to beholdastraltrader is a splendid one to beholdastraltrader is a splendid one to beholdastraltrader is a splendid one to beholdastraltrader is a splendid one to beholdastraltrader is a splendid one to beholdastraltrader is a splendid one to behold
Default Re: An Australian I class destroyer?

Hi Dave in addition to the pictures you have shown, I also have these two that you might find of interest...
Attached Images
File Type: jpg HMAS PARRAMATTA-3-1910-1929..jpg (65.4 KB, 19 views)
File Type: jpg HMAS WARREGO 1911 TO 1931..jpg (78.4 KB, 22 views)
__________________
Best wishes,
Terry/Exeter. UK



HMS BADSWORTH [HUNT CLASS DESTROYER]
Reply With Quote
  #8  
Old 05-09-2008, 22:49
tinduck's Avatar
tinduck tinduck is offline
Sub-Lieutenant
 
Join Date: Jun 2008
Location: West Midlands
Posts: 199
tinduck is on a distinguished road
Default Re: An Australian I class destroyer?

Herks - thanks, I hadn't got either of those pics.

Dave
Reply With Quote
  #9  
Old 06-09-2008, 17:32
astraltrader's Avatar
astraltrader astraltrader is online now
Forum Moderator
 
Join Date: Jan 2008
Location: Exeter/Devon.
Posts: 11,355
astraltrader is a splendid one to beholdastraltrader is a splendid one to beholdastraltrader is a splendid one to beholdastraltrader is a splendid one to beholdastraltrader is a splendid one to beholdastraltrader is a splendid one to beholdastraltrader is a splendid one to behold
Default Re: An Australian I class destroyer?

Dave you can call me most things but not Herks - please!
__________________
Best wishes,
Terry/Exeter. UK



HMS BADSWORTH [HUNT CLASS DESTROYER]
Reply With Quote
  #10  
Old 10-09-2008, 11:34
tinduck's Avatar
tinduck tinduck is offline
Sub-Lieutenant
 
Join Date: Jun 2008
Location: West Midlands
Posts: 199
tinduck is on a distinguished road
Default Re: An Australian I class destroyer?

Sorry, Terry. Got the 'posters' crossed somehow!

Dave
Reply With Quote
  #11  
Old 05-08-2011, 02:30
ludsie ludsie is offline
Lieutenant-Commander
 
Join Date: Aug 2009
Posts: 348
ludsie is on a distinguished road
Default Re: An Australian I class destroyer?

I've only heard of them referred to as rivers so cant help
Reply With Quote
  #12  
Old 05-08-2011, 08:18
tjstoneman tjstoneman is offline
Commodore
 
Join Date: Mar 2008
Posts: 841
tjstoneman will become famous soon enough
Default Re: An Australian I class destroyer?

The six ships listed by Dave in post #3 were Australian River class destroyers. When the Admiralty retrospectively allocated class letters to destroyers in about 1912, the Acheron class (which was the design used for the RAN ships) were designated as the "I" class. I've seen no reference to these six destroyers being known as "I" class ships in RAN service - but then, I've not gone into RAN matters in much detail.
Tim
Reply With Quote
Reply



Ship Search by Name : Advanced Search
Random Timeline Entry : 26th January 1941 : HMS Aberdeen : Lt. Stanley Gordon Rivers-Smith, RN Assumed Command

NAVAL PRINTS

Click above to see our naval art portal - Eight random half price items are displayed to the right.

Some Current Half Price Offers

USS Missouri and HMS King George V head south to Tokyo for the surrender, after completing the last shore bombardment of mainland Japan, 1945.

Setting of the Sun by Randall Wilson.
Half Price! - £35.00
HMS Glowworm, burning severely after receiving hits from the mighty Admiral Hipper, is depicted turning to begin her heroic sacrifice off the Norwegian coast on 8th April 1940. Hugely out-gunned and already crippled, Glowworms captain, Lieutenant-Commander Roope rammed his destroyer into the side of the Admiral Hipper, inflicting a 40 metre rip in its armour belt before drifting away and exploding. 38 British sailors were rescued from the sea and Roope was awarded a posthumous VC for his bravery, the first earned by the Royal Navy in WWII.

HMS Glowworms Attack on the Admiral Hipper by Ivan Berryman (AP)
Half Price! - £25.00
The cruiser HMS Frobisher dominates this scene off Houlgate at the Normandy landings of 1944.  The monitor HMS Roberts lies beyond Frobisher with a Large Infantry Landing Ship or LSI (L) unshipping its LCAs on the extreme right of the picture.  In the foreground, a motor launch attends a group of LCP (L)s as they head for the French beaches.  Two Spitfire Mk.IXs conduct sweeps overhead as Operation Neptune gathers momentum.

HMS Frobisher and HMS Roberts at Normandy by Ivan Berryman (P)
Half Price! - £4000.00
B63AP.  HMS Malaya at Capetown by Ivan Berryman.

HMS Malaya at Capetown by Ivan Berryman (AP)
Half Price! - £25.00

 Wearing her unusual black and white disruptive colour scheme, HMS Repulse is pictured as part of Force Z in company with HMS Prince of Wales and the destroyer Vampire. These two mighty battleships were to be lost within hours of each other, the victims of intense Japanese air strikes. Vampire and the destroyer Electra were on hand to pick up survivors from both ships.

HMS Repulse by Ivan Berryman. (Y)
Half Price! - £50.00
HMS Glowworm, burning severely after receiving hits from the mighty Admiral Hipper, is depicted turning to begin her heroic sacrifice off the Norwegian coast on 8th April 1940. Hugely out-gunned and already crippled, Glowworms captain, Lieutenant-Commander Roope rammed his destroyer into the side of the Admiral Hipper, inflicting a 40 metre rip in its armour belt before drifting away and exploding. 38 British sailors were rescued from the sea and Roope was awarded a posthumous VC for his bravery, the first earned by the Royal Navy in WWII.

The attack on the Admiral Hipper by HMS Glowworm by Ivan Berryman (Y)
Half Price! - £70.00
 The King George V class battleship HMS Anson is pictured in Sydney Harbour where she joined the Pacific Fleet in July 1945, viewed across the flight deck of HMS Vengeance, where ten of her Vought F4.U Corsairs are ranged in front of a single folded Fairey Barracuda. 

HMS Anson at Sydney Harbour, July 1945 by Ivan Berryman (P)
Half Price! - £2900.00
B114.  HMS Carmania sinking the German armed liner SS Cap Trafalgar off Ilha da Trindade, South Atlantic. 14th September 1914.  By Ivan Berryman.
HMS Carmania sinking the German armed liner SS Cap Trafalgar off Ilha da Trindade, South Atlantic. 14th September 1914. By Ivan Berryman.
Half Price! - £15.00

SPORT PRINTS

Click above to see our sport art portal - Four random half price items are displayed to the right.

Some Current Half Price Offers

 Michael Schumacher celebrates another win for Ferrari.
Dream Team by Franklin.
Half Price! - £25.00
B40. Jean Alesi/ Benetton B.196

Jean Alesi/ Benetton B.196 by Ivan Berryman
Half Price! - £40.00
B49. Damon Hill/ Williams FW.17 by Ivan Berryman

Damon Hill/ Williams FW.17 by Ivan Berryman
Half Price! - £40.00
 Ally McCoist of Glasgow Rangers and Scotland.  Produced to celebrate Scotlands most prolific goalscorer.  Super Ally became nothing short of a legend during his tenure with Glasgow Rangers of the Premier League.  It was not until Graeme Sounes took over as player manager of Rangers that McCoist really hit his stride and began to excel himself as the most prodigious goalscorer in the history of Scottish football.  Allys unprecedented career includes over 300 league goals for Rangers helping the club to 9 titles in a row, a Scottish Cup Winners medal, 2 UEFA Golden Boot awards, Scottish player of the year 91/92 and 61 Caps for his country resulting in 19 international goals.  Ally became one of Glasgow Rangers and Scotlands all time football heroes, and is now part of the Rangers coaching staff under Walter Smith.

Ally McCoist MBE by Scott Bridges.
Half Price! - £60.00

AVIATION PRINTS

Click above to see our aviation art portal - Four random half price items are displayed to the right.

Some Current Half Price Offers

 At 3.30am on the 23rd June 1945, a Dakota of 357 (special duties) Squadron took off from Mingaladon airfield nr.  Rangoon , to travel the 600 miles, 300 of them behind enemy lines, to rescue a downed American Liberator crew deep in the jungles of   Siam  .  The Dakota was flown by pilot Fl Lt. Larry Lewis, who already held the DFM awarded to him for 33 ops as a rear gunner on   Wellingtons  in 1941. Two crews had already failed when Lewis was asked to attempt this hazardous mission. Flying between 5,000 - 6,000ft he flew over The Hump, a ridge of mountains running down the spine of   Burma  . Local villagers had cleared a rough airstrip 800yds long with Lewis finding it by the time dawn broke. With monsoon clouds gathering, the Liberator crew aboard and the Dakota sinking in the wet ground, he managed, just, to get airborne. Flying at zero feet and looking out for Japanese Zero fighters Lewis took a different course back. Although being fired on from the ground they managed to make it all the way to the airfield at Dum Dum nr.   Calcutta ,  India  . Lewis was awarded an immediate DFC. By the end of the war he had completed 63 ops, held the rank of Squadron Leader with his service from 1938-1945, and was awarded the Air Efficiency Medal.

Larry Lewis DFC by Graeme Lothian. (B)
Half Price! - £40.00
 Pictured above the beaches of Normandy shortly after D-Day in June 1944, Spitfire Mk IX MK392 was the personal aircraft of Wing Commander Johnnie Johnson, carrying his initials JE-J instead of the usual squadron codes.  He went on to become Britain's highest scoring ace against the Luftwaffe with 34 claimed victories with many other probable victories.

Tribute to Air Vice Marshal James Edgar 'Johnnie' Johnson by Ivan Berryman. (P)
Half Price! - £750.00
 Shown in the colours of Jasta Boelke and carrying Baumers personal red / white /  black flash on the fuselage, Fokker DR.1 204/17 was the aircraft in which he scored many of his 43 victories. Although the Sopwith Triplane had been withdrawn from service, German pilots frequently found their DR.1s being mistakenly attacked by their own flak batteries and, sometimes, by other pilots. For this reason, in march 1918, Baumers aircraft bore additional crosses on the centre of the tailplane and on the lower wings to aid identification. For some reason, his rudder displayed what appeared to be an incomplete border to the national marking. Nicknamed Der Eiserne Adler – The Iron Eagle – Paul Baumer survived the war, but died in a flying accident near Copenhagen whilst testing the Rohrbach Rofix fighter.  He is shown in action having just downed an RE.8 while, above him, Leutnant Otto Lofflers DR.1 190/17 banks into the sun to begin another attack.

Leutnant Paul Baumer by Ivan Berryman. (P)
Half Price! - £1800.00
 A pair of Spitfire Mk.IXEs of 611 Squadron make their way home from a patrol during the summer of 1942. At this time 611 Squadron were based at Kenley and were the first squadron to receive the new Mk.IX putting it on equal terms, for the first time, with the formidable Focke-Wulf 190.

Spitfire Mk.IXE by Ivan Berryman. (Y)
Half Price! - £40.00

MILITARY PRINTS

Click above to see our military art portal - Four random half price items are displayed to the right.

Some Current Half Price Offers

 Ernst Barkmanns (Das Reich, 2nd SS Panzer Division) famous day long solo engagement against an American Armoured breakthrough towards St. Lo, Normandy, 26th July 1944.

Barkmanns Corner by David Pentland. (GL)
Half Price! - £300.00
 Cheux, Normandy, 25th June 1944.  Royal Armoured Corps Recce troops of the 15th (Scottish) Infantry Division set up a temporary observation post to locate 12th SS Panzer Division positions, prior to Operation Epsom.  The 15th Division comprised of 9th Cameronians, 2nd Glasgow Highlanders, 7th Seaforth Highlanders, 8th Royal Scots, 6th Royal Scots Fusiliers, 6th King's Own Scottish Borderers, 10th Highland Light Infantry, 2nd Gordon Highlanders and the 2nd Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders.

Enemy in Sight by David Pentland. (P)
Half Price! - £700.00
 General Major Erwin Rommel leads the vanguard of his vaunted 7th Panzer (Ghost) Division past an abandoned French Char B tank on its epic drive from the Ardennes to the English Channel.

Blitzkrieg, Northern France, May 1940 by David Pentland.
Half Price! - £50.00
 Juno Beach, Normandy, 6th June 1944.  Sdkfz 232 armoured cars of 12th SS Reconnaissance Battalion commanded by  Obersturmfuhrer Peter Hansmann observe the Canadian beachhead at Juno Beach.  His small team was tasked with finding out if an invasion was actually underway and it drove some 80km, arriving at the coast near Tracy at 7.30 in the morning to witness the landings in progress.

D-Day Recce by David Pentland. (P)
Half Price! - £700.00
Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
 
Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Forum Jump

Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Australian Navy Gunplot Maritime Michael Ian Australian Navy and Ships 11 26-04-2011 11:03
American Lend-Lease: Town Class Destroyer Mystery tonclass Royal Navy Ships and Crews 17 28-10-2010 02:02
RAN "N" Class Destroyers spruso Australian Navy and Ships 5 25-07-2010 05:20
Australian Beginnings in WW1 tomsam Other Naval Topics 4 09-03-2008 19:45
Before the Royal Australian Navy. Batstiger Australian Navy and Ships 5 12-01-2008 12:21


All times are GMT. The time now is 00:35.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.7
Copyright ©2000 - 2013, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.