The Imperial British Navy How the Colonies Began to Think Imperially Upon the F

Cover The Imperial British Navy How the Colonies Began to Think Imperially Upon the F
The Imperial British Navy How the Colonies Began to Think Imperially Upon the F
H C Ferraby
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She was of 5600 tons displacement.
THE ROYAL AUSTRALIAN NAVY 99 the Melbourne and the Sydney, also reached Australia during 1913. A training ship was obtained by the gift from the Admiralty of the small cruiser Pioneer, which enabled the old Protector to be used for service as a tender to the Gunnery School, and the Encounter was lent to the Commonwealth until the third new cruiser, the Brisbane, was built. Work on her began at the Com- monwealth Dockyard, Sydney, in January, 1913, but she was
...not launched until Sep- tember 30, 1915. On March 14, 1917, Mr. Cook, Minister of the Navy, announced in the House of Representatives that she was satisfactorily serving with the Fleet. Three more destroyers, the Derwent, Swan, and Torrens, were built at Sydney, and an oil supply ship, the Karumba, and a submarine depot ship, the Platypus, were built in British yards. Two submarines, AEi and AE2 were built in England, and made the voyage to Australia under their own power in May, 1914.
It is worth putting on record the list of ships of the Royal Australian Navy as exist- ing at the beginning of the war : 100 THE IMPERIAL BRITISH NAVY IN SERVICE Tons Built displacement.


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