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1921
In January 1921 HMS CHATHAM a coal fired cruiser arrives and became flagship on the new station. The first task was to make the now rusting and obsolete Philomel seaworthy and move her to Auckland from her Wellington Berth as a training ship which was completed in April.
While these two ships were the nucleus of the new New Zealand Division the Admiralty stationed ships in New Zealand to maintain an adequate Royal Navy presence in the South Pacific.
The New Zealand Naval Board set up by Order in Council dated 14 March; this was followed by Regulations under Order in Council dated 20 June that same year. These set out how the Navy was to function and named it the New Zealand Division of the Royal Navy. Ships were to be prefixed HMS and a training scheme was to be established to recruit and train New Zealanders for service within their own navy. There would be a large proportion of loaned RN personnel for many years yet, but New Zealand’s own navy was underway.

HMS Chatham was a Town-class light cruiser of the Royal Navy launched on 9 November 1911 from Chatham Dockyard. She was the lead ship of the Chatham subgroup.
She was initially assigned to the 2nd Light Cruiser Squadron in the Mediterranean, where she participated in the pursuit of the German ships Goeben and Breslau, but in 1914 was detached to operated in the Red Sea. In November that year Chatham (Captain Sidney R. Drury-Lowe) was involved in operations against the German commerce raider SMS Königsberg. In May 1915 she returned to the Mediterranean to operate in the Dardanelles to support the allied landings at Gallipoli. She oversaw the landings at Suvla Bay, where she was the flagship of Rear-Admiral John de Robeck who commanded the landing fleet. In 1916 she returned to home waters and joined the 3rd Light Cruiser Squadron of the Grand Fleet. On 26 May 1916, Chatham struck a mine and had to be repaired.
After the war, Chatham was lent to the Royal New Zealand Navy from 1920 to 1924, and was sold for scrapping on 13 July 1926 to Ward, of Pembroke Dock.
In 1922, the crew of the Chatham donated a cup to the New Zealand Football Association. This became the Chatham Cup, New Zealand's local equivalent of the FA Cup, and its premier knockout football trophy.
The U.S. Silent Service
An interesting 3 minute 30 recruiting video for the U.S. Submarine service forwarded to me recently by one of our readers from Indiana.
Thanks Paul (who is a retired U.S.N.R. Captain)
http://www.navy.mil/media/multimedia/silentsub/silentservice.mp4
VIRGINIA CLASS ATTACK SUBMARINE
W.R.N.S. Black Stockings to be removed
1975 : Another black day for the Royal Navy.
The ‘infamous’ DCI T641/75 announced that black nylon stockings for Wrens (Vocabs 45500-05) were to be replaced by black tights. ‘BR81 and BR96 will be
amended’.
The Navy had not fully recovered from the withdrawal of
the Rum ration in 1970 when this further blow landed. A vigorous but
futile ‘Fight Tights’ campaign was led by the FAA. The black stockings
calamity ‘had a devastating effect on morale’.
.........."We are not amused"...............
THE LOSS OF HMS SPARTAN
(Thanks to Ngapona Association N.Z.)
The story of Derek Evans, a young seaman whose action station was a loader on an oerlikon gun starboard side aft.
HMS SPARTAN was a Dido-class light cruiser, the same class as HMNZS ROYALIST. She was laid down on 21 December 1939 and launched on 27 August 1942.
The first operation SPARTAN undertook in Italy was to bombard the German navy whilst a crossing was being undertaken on the River Garigliano. The American Army who were operating on the West coast of Italy were reinforced by British regiments of the Eighth army. On returning to Naples after the operation, it became apparent that the ship would be involved in another large operation. This proved to be the invasion of Anzio. This took place on the 22nd January 1944. SPARTAN was part of the original invasion fleet. The Army unfortunately could not get their vehicles ashore, and this led them to becoming surrounded by the German forces. On Saturday, January 29th 1944, the Anzio beachhead was under intensive air attack, SPARTAN was not designed for that type of conflict in a confined space and was attacked by a radio-controlled glider bomb which sank the SPARTAN with much loss of life.
We were still closed up to action stations and the 5.25 A.A. guns were firing, it was very noisy but I failed to hear any explosion after we received a direct hit from a glider bomb, which, of course had been controlled by a parent aircraft. My action station was at an oerlikon gun starboard side aft. After being told by an old messmate recently that I was lashed to a Carley float and put over the side, apparently the float overturned and Dennis Brownhill then presumed that I was dead and it wasn't until we got in touch last year that he found out the truth.
I have a very hazy memory of being in the water, wondering how, and why, I was in this predicament. My legs wouldn't work and my fingers on my right hand were bent backwards at right angles to the back of my hand. No proper recall then until I came round in a sick bay or something similar. It was definitely a ship as we were moving, but there was only dim sheltered lighting visible. I was freezing cold and very thirsty but my needs were soon attended to. Back into oblivion and my next lucid memory was coming around in a hospital bed and receiving ministrations from a padre, turned out later he was administering the last rites !!!! I didn't realise the full implications of this until later.
The hospital was the 92nd General Hospital in Naples on the top of a big hill. We visited Naples a few years ago and saw the building but didn't visit. The hospital ward was very large and between every bed there was a stretcher complete with a casualty. One night there was a great commotion as a Yugoslav partisan, who had lost a leg, crawled out of bed, fell on a stretcher case below, and then with a knife in his mouth tried to get at a wounded German P.O.W. in one of the other beds. This effort was unsuccessful and peace was restored to the ward.
Eventually the powers that be decided that I would be repatriated, and eventually I was embarked on a Hospital Ship, the name eludes me but it could have been the Devonshire, and we set sail for the U.K. There was a large hold with a serried rank of cots, all suspended in gimbals bolted to the deck. Consequently whenever the ship rolled all the cots remained on an even keel. I don't have much recollection about dates, times at sea, routine or anything really at this time. We eventually docked at Avonmouth, nr Bristol and thence by Hospital bus Ambulance to R.N.Aux. Hospital at a place called Barrow Gurney. I remember every bump in the road on this never ending journey !!! We eventually arrived and I was put into bed in a small ward with about half a dozen other patients.
I applied for a transfer nearer home, home being Llandudno in North Wales, and sod's law prevailed and I ended up in Sherbourne in Dorset, However eventually I was transferred to the Ministry of Pensions Hospital at Childwall in Liverpool and had a lengthy stay until my discharge home nearly two years later.
THE LOSS OF HMS SPARTAN 29th JANUARY 1944

HMS SPARTAN A DIDO CLASS LIGHT CRUISER OF THE BELLONA GROUP
At sunset on 29th January, the Luftwaffe began a glide bomb attack on the ships in Anzio Bay. At the time of this attack, HMS Spartan was anchored providing AA protection for the ships in the vicinity of the beachhead. Smoke had been ordered in the anchorage but was not fully effective owing to the short time it was in operation and the strong breeze. HMS Spartan was making smoke from stem to stern but was not herself covered.
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