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Monday, 23 March 2026

Australian survey ship HMAS Leeuwin A245 1997-




Royal Australian Navy 125 Anniversary International Fleet Review at Sydney, Australia March 2026

Clinton J Down Photography, Shellharbour, New South Wales, Australia

Thanks for us allowing us to republish

Australia-flagged, homeport HMAS Cairns, IMO 9151773, MMSI 503177000 and call sign VLSE. Part of Leeuwin-class. Ordered on 2 April 1996, launched by North Queensland Engineers&Agents, Cairns, Australia on 1 June 1997, commissioned on 27 May 2000

British anti-submarine frigate HMS Loch Harray (K 623) 1945

River-class ©Warshipsresearch.blogspot.com

Loch-class. ©Warshipsresearch.blogspot.com

Bay-class. ©Warshipsresearch.blogspot.com

Modified River-class hull and improved armament. Of this class were 28 ships built and 54 cancelled. To be built by Smith’s Dock Company, Limited. Cancelled in 1945.

Sources

Jane’s Fighting Ships 1944-1945

David K. Brown. Nelson to Vanguard. Warship design and development 1923-1945.

David K. Brown. Atlantic Escorts. Ships, Weapons and Tactics in World War II.

J.J.. Colledge/Ben Warlow. Ships of the Royal Navy. The Complete Record of all Fighting Ships of the Royal Navy from the 15th Century to the Present.

Norman Friedman. British Destroyers&Frigates/ The Second World War and After.

Leo Marriott. Royal Navy Frigates since 1945. 2nd edition.

G.M. Stephen. British warship designs since 1906.

A.W. Watson. ‘Corvettes and frigates’ in: Transactions of the Institution of Naval Architects, 1947, p. 165-185

British army surgeon annex inventor Dr. John Collis Browne proposed around 1879 his design of an ironclad

Dr. John Collis Browne (18 June 1819 Maidstone, Kent, England-30 August 1884 Mount Albion House, Ramsgate, England) was a surgeon serving in the British Army and who invented Chlorodyna to be used against cholera. Furthermore he was inventor of items to be used for yachts. What Wikpedia not mentioned was his proposal for an ironclad.

Huët referred in 1879 to Iron. The Journal of Science, Metals and Manufacturer No. 148 Vol. VY. New Series dated 13 November 1875, page 612 where a fast ship for ocean routes was described. The ship was presented at the Paris Maritime Exposition, the merit of the invention claimed by M. Bazin. Dr. J. Collis Browne however forwared documents and dreawing that the merit of inventing and applying the principle so far as the hull was concerned, was his. His schooner yacht Kala-Fishbuilt on this principle in 1872was exhibited to the French authorities at Boulogne in 1873. At the Paris exhibition could a working steam model of the invention be seen. In the Kensington Museum were the past two years models presented. Browne showed an engraving of a proposed ironclad on the same plan. The ironclad was to be fitted out with a beak 60 feet long at each end and with a deck long 224 feet. Hetr decks sloped outwards at an angle of around 40 degrees. Flat in her bilge and with a keel. Displacement calculated at 15,000 tons and with a freeboard of nearly 16 feet. Before the ship wnet into action was she water ballasted in tanks constructed for that purpose “so as to expose no more of her hull than is duly protected with armour. The depth occupied by the latter (measured on the slope) will be 12 feet and the vertical depth of the hull 40 feet. Herbuoyancy, it is estimated, will be such taht the 12 feet of freeboard may be plated with armour three feet thick! This vessels swells mout both laterally and longitudinally below the water line. The principle which governs this design is that of gaining the power of carrying an enormous weight by immersing as great a bulk a possible.”

Sources

Browne, Dr.J. Collis. “Wave lines: a short description of their true form, and how ships ought to be constructed to meet them”, in Marine Engineering News, London 1 January 1876.

Huët, A. La Locomotive marine. Etude sur le Transport Maritime a grande vitesse. La Haye, Pays Bas, 1879.

John Collis Browne. Wikepedia 22-3-2026 14:22. 

Dutch minesweeper Hr.Ms. Willem van Ewijck sunk according to a report of the American Naval Attaché at Berlin, Germany Nr. R562 dated 15 September 1939

Diary note dated Friday 8 September 1939. An item reported that the Dutch minelayer Hr.Ms. Willem van der Zaan hit a British mine and sunk off Den Helder, Netherlands. Of her crew 25 men died and 8 were seriously wounded.

Note

1. Part of Willem van der Zaan-class. Laid down by Nederlandsche Droogdok Maatschappij, Amsterdam, Netherlands on 18 January 1938, launched on 15 December 1938, commissioned on 21 August 1939, escaped on 13 May 1940 towards England, arrived on 16 May 1940, decommissioned on 27 February 1970 and sold to be broken up on 6 October 1970. It was the Hr.Ms. Willem van Ewijck part of Jan van Amstel-class minesweepers which sunk on 8 September 1939, laid down by P. Smit, Rotterdam, Netherlands in 1936, launched on 22 February 1937, commissioned on 19 July 1937.

Source

National Archives. FDR Presidential Library&Museum Roosevelt PSFC000175. War diary Naval Attaché Berlin, volume 1 (1 September 1939-26 May 1940)

British merchant steamship Lord Ard hired for the Sudan campaign in 1885

Engaged by the British government for the new expedition to the Soudan. Gross tonnage 1,304 tons. Service in Red Sea. 

Due to the despressed state of the shipping trade was the Admiralty able to hire troop transports towards Suakin, Sudan for just 17s 6 ton/month in contrary to the 28s ton/month in the 1882 campaign. The first Suakim expedition was in February 1884, the second one in March 1885. The campaigns were part of the Mahdist War (1881-189) between the Mahdist Sudanese and the Khedivate Egypt later the United Kingdom resulting in the condominium Anglo-Egyptian Sudan 1899-1956 and then succeeded by the Protectorate of Uganda, Italian Libya and the Republic of Sudan, nowadays Egypt, Libya, South Sudan, Sudan and Uganda. On 26 January 1885 fell Khartoum and the British garrison was massacred. In March was a British expeditionary  force sent to Suakin but lacking success and finally withdrawn.

Source

The Steamship dated 16 February 1885, p. 64. 

Australian submarine HMAS Dechaineux SSG 76 1993-

Royal Australian Navy 125 Anniversary International Fleet Review at Sydney, Australia March 2026

Clinton J Down Photography, Shellharbour, New South Wales, Australia

Thanks for allowing us to republish

HMAS Orion of the Oberon-class

Australia-flagged, homeport Fleet Base West, Perth, Australia, MMSI 503659000 and call sign VKDA. Part of Collins-class preceded by Oberon-class succeeded by cancelled Attack-class, planned nuclear-powered Virginia or SSN-774-class and SSN-Aukus. Laid down by Australian Submarine Corporation, Osborne, Australia on 4 March 1993, launched on 12 March 1998 and commissioned on 23 February 2001. 

Construction status of the German submarine U 2285 in 1944

List of planning with deadlines for new construction of submarines by foreign shipyards dated Berlin 22 May 1944. Type XXVII. Yard Simmering (Cantieri Riuniti dell’Adriatico), Monfalcone, Italy. Date building ordered 28 March 1944. Date completion June 1944.

Source

Deutsches Historisches Institut Moska. Records 500 findbuch 201253-file 152. 

Construction status of the German submarine U 2458 in July 1944

©Warshipsresearch.blogspot.com

List of planning with deadlines for new construction of warships by German shipyards in July 1944. Type XXIII. Yard Deutsche Werft, Hamburg (Schiffswerft Linz). Yard number 138. Date building ordered 289 October 1943. Date completion -. Remarks construction by decision of Ob.d.M. for the time being postponed.

Source

Deutsches Historisches Institut Moska. Records 500 findbuch 12453-file 147. 

British cargo ship Frankby seized by Russia in 1904

Gross tonnage 3,480 tons. Underway from Barry to Hong Kong Type cargo coal.Seized in the Red Sea on 19 February 1904, released on 28 February. Russian recognizedclaims advance and agreed to pay an indemnity. The war between the Russian and Japanese empires was between 8 February 1904-5 September1905.

Source

Official history (Naval and Military) of the Russo-Japanese War. Vol. II. Liao Yang, the Sha Ho, Port Arthur. Prepared by the Historical Section of the Committee of Imperial Defence. London, 1912. 

Japanese cruiser submarine (ex-Submarine No. 51 1922-1924) I-52 1924-1942 (I-152 1942, Haikan No. 14 1942-1948)

I-52. ©Warshipsresearch.blogspot.com

Part of Kaidai-class submarine Type II based on the German Type U 139 submarine and indicated as Project S25. Ordered under the 1919 fiscal year. Laid down by Kure Naval Arsenal, Kure, Japan on 14 February/2 April 1922, launched on 12 June 1923, renamed I-52 on 1 November 1924, completed and commissioned on 20 May 1925, renamed I-152 on 20 May 1942, decommissioned on 14 July 1942, stricken, hulked and renamed Haikan No. 14 on 1 August 1942 and broken up between 1946-1948. 

Australian whaler Governor Halkett arrived in the Bay of Islands, New Zealand according to the Australian newspaper The Sydney Gazette and New South Eales Advertiser dated Saturday 25 May 1839

An item referred to a list of arivals and departured at the Bay of Islands between 26 February-2 May reporting the arrival of the Australian whaler Governor Halkett, Bolger of Sydney, 17 months, 1,200 sperm oil on 5 March. Departed for cruising on 30 March. 

Portuguese fishing vessel (ex-Xana Feur 1983-1998, Antonio Cacao 1998-2014) Nadir 2014-

Aveiro, Portugal 4 March 2016

Portugal-flagged, IMO 8212776, MMSI 204260000 and call sign CSOW. Owner Sociedade de Pescas Miradouro (SPM), Gafanha da Nazaré/Ílhavo, Portugal. Built by Argibay Construccoes Navais & Mecanicas, Alverca, Portugal in 1983. 

Whaler Brilliant arrived in the Bay of Islands, New Zealand according to the Australian newspaper The Sydney Gazette and New South Eales Advertiser dated Saturday 25 May 1839

An item referred to a list of arivals and departured at the Bay of Islands between 26 February-2 May reporting the arrival of the whaler Brilliant, Smith, sundries on 5 March.

British flotilla leader HMS Hoste 1915-1916

Sistership Kempenfelt Marksman-class. ©Warshipsresearch.blogspot.com

Seymour, Parker-class flotilla leader. ©Warshipsresearch.blogspot.com

Built under the Six Emergency War Construction Programme. Ordered in July 1915. Part of Parker-class flotilla leaders preceded by Marksman-class and succeeded by Admiralty V-class. Laid down by Cammell Laird, Birkenhead, England on 1 July 1915, launched on 16 August 1916, commissioned on 13 November 1916 and sunk after a collision with HMS Negro on 21 December 1916. 

Catch results of the Dutch Greenland commandeur J. Huysman according to the Dutch newspaper Oprechte Haerlemsche courant dated 14 August 1749

An item dated Amsterdam, Netherlands 13 August reported the arrival at Texel, Netherlands on 12 August of Dutch Greenland commandeurs bringing with them a list with the catch results of the Dutch Greenland commandeur J. Huysman 3 whales.

New Zealand frigate HMNZS Te Kaha F77 1994-

Royal Australian Navy 125 Anniversary International Fleet Review at Sydney, Australia March 2026

Clinton J Down Photography, Shellharbour, New South Wales, Australia

Thanks for allowing us to republish

New Zeland-flagged, MMSI 512000600 and call sign ZMBE. Part of Anzac-class preceded by Leander-class frigates. Laid down by Tenix Defence on 19 September 1994, launched on 22 July 1995 and commissioned on 22 July 1997. 

Catch results of the Dutch Greenland commandeur J.C. Buys according to the Dutch newspaper Oprechte Haerlemsche courant dated 14 August 1749

An item dated Amsterdam, Netherlands 13 August reported the arrival at Texel, Netherlands on 12 August of Dutch Greenland commandeurs bringing with them a list with the catch results of the Dutch Greenland commandeur J.C. Buys 3 whales.

British destroyer HMS Ulleswater 1917-1918

Sister ship Truculent, Yarrow Later M- class destroyer©Warshipsresearch.blogspot.com

Preceded by Yarrow M-class. Despite lacking geared steam turbines sometime described as Yarrow R-class destroyers. Ordered in March 1916, laid down by Yarrow Shipbuilders, Glasgow, Scotland in 1916, launched on 4 August 1917, completed in 1917 and torpedoed and sunk by the German submarine SMS UC-17 or UC-71off the Dutch coast of 15 August 1918. 

French whaler Asia visited Honolulu, Hawaii according to the newspaper The Polynesian dated 16 November 1850

An item reported that at Honolulu, Hawaii on 12 November the French whaler Asia master Maison was cleared for Le Havre, France. 

American Aegis guided missile destroyer USS Fitzgerald DDG-62 1990-


Royal Australian Navy 125 Anniversary International Fleet Review at Sydney, Australia March 2026

Clinton J Down Photography, Shellharbour, New South Wales, Australia

Thanks for allowing us to republish

Spruance-class. ©Warshipsresearch.blogspot.com

Part of Arleigh Burke-class preceded by Kidd- and Spruance-classes succeeded by Zumwalt and DDG(X)-classes. USA-flagged, homeport San Diego, USA, MMSI 338839000 and callsign NFTZ. Ordered on 22 February 1990, laid down by Bath Iron Works on 9 February 1993, launched on 29 January 1994, christened on 29 January 1994 and commissioned on 14 October 1995. 

American whaler Moctezuma visited Honolulu, Hawaii according to the newspaper The Polynesian dated 16 November 1850

An item reported that at Honolulu, Hawaii on 12 November the American whaler Moctezuma master Tower was cleared for New Bedford. 

Sunday, 22 March 2026

British battle cruiser design I3 1920

HMS Hood. ©Warshipsresearch.blogspot.com

Design I3. ©Warshipsresearch.blogspot.com

Preceded by Admiral-class. Legend displacement51,570 tons and as dimensions 915 x 108 x 33 feet. Equipment 1,000-fuel 12,000-margen 260 tons. Armament 8,670 tons. Machinery etc. 6,430 tons. Armour&protection 14,600 tons. Hull 19,590 tos. Armament 3x3-18” cal 45 guns, 16-6” guns, 5-4.7” anti aircraft guns, 4 multiple pom-poms and 2 torpedo tubes. Horsepoower 180,000 shhp. Speed 32.5 knots.

Armour belt 12” inclined at 25°, bulkheads 11” (forward)-10” (aft) inclined at 25°, turrets 15” (face)-12” (sides)-9” (rear)-8” (roof). Barbettes 12” and 10”. Conning tower 12”-6” (roof). Torpedo bulkhead 1 3/4”. Armour deck 7” with 8”slope from ‘A’ to X’, 4” with 5” slope over machinery spaces, 6” with 7” slope over after 6” magazines and 4” with 5” slope aft and 7”, 5”,4” forward but not stem.

Sources

Brown, D.K. Nelson to Vanguard.

Brown, D.K. A Century of naval construction. The history of the Royal Corps of naval constructors.

Breyer, Siegfried. Battleships and battle cruisers, 1905-1970.

Burt, R.A. British Battleships 1919-1945.

Campbell, N.J.M. “Washington’s Cherrytrees. The evolution of the British 1921-1922 Capital Ships”, in: Warship, Vol. 1-4.

Friedman, Norman. British Battleships 1906-1946.

Johnston, Ian and Ian Buxton. The Battleship Builders.

Parkes, Oscar. 1860-1950. A History of Design, Construction and Armament British Battleships.

Raven, Alan and John Roberts. British battleships of World War Two.

Stern, Robert C. The Battleship Holiday. The Naval Treatries and Capital Ship Design.

Papers Sir Eustace Tennyson D'Eyncourt, Royal Museums Greenwich.

Warshipsresearchblogspot.com

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/G3_battlecruiser checked 27-2-2026

British transport England hired for the Abyssinian expedition in 1867

According to a letter dated Admiralty, Somerset House 6th September of the Director of Transport Services W.R. Mends to the Under Secretary of State for India was the iron screw steam transport England hired. Number transport 3. Tonnage 3,307 tons. Horsepower 350 hp. Rate per ton per month. If discharged at home 35s0d and aAbroad three months additional pay. Date of acceptance 2 September. Likely to sail early next week. 

The British Abyssinian Expedition found place between 4 December 1867-13 May 1868 against the Ethiopian Empire or Abyssinia to release the imprisoned missionaries and representatives of the British government.

Source

Accounts and papers: thirty-five volumes. Army. Abyssinian expedition. Session 19 November 1867-31 July 1868. Vol. XLIII., p. 115.

German minesweeper M 20 1939-1944

Maritime Museum Hamburg, Germany. Model made by Günther Seherr. 

Type 1935 minesweeper, built by Flender Werft, Lübeck, Germany in 1939, sank with the M 413 in the Narwa Bay during a Soviet air attack on 21 July 1944. 

German minesweepers active in the North and Baltic Sea according to a report of the American Naval Attaché at Berlin, Germany Nr. R562 dated 15 September 1939

Diary note dated Friday 8 September 1939. An item reported that the German navy was sweeping mines in the North and Baltic Seas and that a Polish coastal battery, presumably at Gdynia, was shooting at the minesweepers although with no success.

Source

National Archives. FDR Presidential Library&Museum Roosevelt PSFC000175. War diary Naval Attaché Berlin, volume 1 (1 September 1939-26 May 1940)

British destroyer HMS Wolverine 1909-1917

Sister ship HMS Rattlesnake. ©Warshipsresearch.blogspot.com

Part of Beagle- or G-class preceded by Tribal or F-class succeeded by Acorn- or H-class. This class was built by several shipyards on base of a loose specification leaving the details to the builder. Laid down by Cammell Laird&Company, Birkenhead, England on 26 April 1909, launched on 15 January 1910, completed in September 1910 and sunk when she collided with the sloop HMS Rosemary in Lough Foyle on 12 December 1917. 

American whaling bark Bayard visited Honolulu, Hawaii according to the newspaper The Polynesian dated 16 November 1850

An item reported the arrival at Honolulu, Hawaii on 11 November of the American whaling bark Bayard master Graham 14 months out 30 barrels sperm oil 1,000 barrels whale oil 12,000 lbs bone

German torpedo fast patrol boat of the Libelle-class project 131 20th Century

Maritime Museum Hamburg, Germany

Project 131.4. Of this class were between 1974-1977 30 built at Rachlin and fitted out by Peenewerft of which 14 were still in service between1989-1990. Lacking names but numbered 131.401 to 131.430.

Germany claims sinking fourth Polish submarine according to a report of the American Naval Attaché at Berlin, Germany Nr. R562 dated 15 September 1939

Diary note dated Friday 8 September 1939. An item referred to German naval news received that afternoon claiming the sinking of a fourth Polish submarine.(1)

Note

1. With the outbreak of the Second World War the Polish navy possessed four submarine namely the Dutch built Orzel and Sep belonging to the Orzel-class and the French built Wilk, Rys and Zbik belonging to the Wilk-class. The Orzel and Wilk escaped to England, the Sep was damaged on 2 September by the German destroyer Friedrich Ihn, but survived torpedo attacks by German submarines U-18 and U-14 on 3 September although the Germans claimed she was sunk, she escaped to Sweden and was there interned and returned to Polish control in September 1945. The Zbik and Ryw ere also interned at Sweden during the war and returning to Poland in 1945. In the month September were none Polish submarines destroyed as the Germans claimed. 

Source

National Archives. FDR Presidential Library&Museum Roosevelt PSFC000175. War diary Naval Attaché Berlin, volume 1 (1 September 1939-26 May 1940)

Auction of 1/16 share in the Dutch whaler De Drie Gebroeders in 1759

Auction at the Nieuwezyds Heeren Loogement, Amsterdam, Netherlands on Monday 2 July 1759 of 1/16 share in the Dutch whaler De Drie Gebroeders, commandeur Cornelis Backer, built in 1736, dimensions 115¼ x 29 x 12 5/11, deck 7 feet, bound for Greenland, 6-7 boats and bookkeeper Joan Muysken.

Source

Archief van de Burgemeesters: scheepsverkopingen door makelaars. Archive 5071 Gemeentearchief Amsterdam, Netherlands archive No. 5071, inventory number 22.

German aircraft carrier Graf Zeppelin 1935-1947

Maritime Museum Hamburg, Germany

Contracted as the Flugzeugträger A on 16 November 1935, laid down by Deutsche Werke on 28 December 1936 as part of the Graf Zeppelin-class, launched on 8 December 1938, never completed, scuttled at Stettin in March 1945, salvaged by the Soviet Union in March 1946 and finally sunk during weapon tests north of Poland on 16 August 1947. Her wreck was found back on 12 July 2006.

Sinking of British ships by German submarines according to a report of the American Naval Attaché at Berlin, Germany Nr. R562 dated 15 September 1939

Diary note dated Friday 8 September 1939. The American Naval Attaché asked the the German liason officer what he knew about the losses of the British shipping caused by German submarines as broadcasted by the British radio. Het got as answer that a report the same morning mentioned one ship and the day before the figure for sunk tonnage was 50,000 tons and which he called a bagatelle.

Source

National Archives. FDR Presidential Library&Museum Roosevelt PSFC000175. War diary Naval Attaché Berlin, volume 1 (1 September 1939-26 May 1940

Design “G’” of a battleship by Italian general naval engineer Ferrati dated 1915

Italian battleship design-G'. ©Warshipsresearch.blogspot.com

French Normandie-class. ©Warshipsresearch.blogspot.com

French Lyon-class. ©Warshipsresearch.blogspot.com

Edgardo Ferrati (Turin, Italy 26 August 1862-Rome, Italy 18 December 1919) was in charge for the never completed Francesco Caracciolo-class battleships (8-38.1cm/15” guns). In 1899 director off naval construction at Castellammare and built the battleships Benedetto Brin, Vittorio Emanuele and Naples. Promoted in 1913 to the rank of lieutenant general and president of the committee for ship projects.Stationed in 1915 at La Spezia Arsenal. His design was to be an Italian answer on the French designs of the never realized Normandie (12-34cm guns) and Lyon (16-34cm guns)-classes and other battleship designs. Displacement 37,200 tons and length 225 metres. Armament 4x4-38.1cm cal 24 guns, 8x2-17cm cal 24 guns and 24x1-10.2cm cal 50 guns. Armour was 27cm and 17 cm just like previous desighns with an additional 310 tons for armour cm added. Design “F” had as armour 27cm for 66% of the ship length and with a reduced height up to her bow and the first rudder.

Sources

Bollettino d’Archivio, Dic. 1988, A Rastrelli.

Warshipsresearch.blogspot.com

Italian Navy Historic Office

British whaler Harmony arrived at Hull, England in 1834

Returning from the northern fishery. Named in the list for 1820. Tonnage 300 tuns. Crew 45 men. tuns of oil 104. tuns of bone 5. Number of whales caught 11. Owner or agent T. Bell.

Source

The Trade and Commerce of Hull and its ships&shipowners. Past and present. Hull, 1878, p. 82-83. 

Saturday, 21 March 2026

German East German coast defence ship Rostock 141 (ex-Nerpa 1974-1989) 1978-1991

Model Klaus Irmscher Maritime Museum Hamburg, Germany

Project 1159 Del'fin anti submarine warfare frigate. Koni I -class called by NATO. Built by USSR Shipbuilder Sudnoye Zaod Krasniy Metallist, Zeledolsk, Volga river, Taristan, Soviet Union as export ship. Especially for anti submarine warfare. Pennant became F 224 on 3 October 1990 and commissioned in East German navy on 25 July 1978. After she was used for explosion tests, sold and sunk in the North Sea. Laid down on 22 October 1974, launched on 4 June 1977, commissioned on 31 December 1977 and decommissioned on 31 December 1991 

Construction status of the German submarine U 2457 in July 1944

©Warshipsresearch.blogspot.com

List of planning with deadlines for new construction of warships by German shipyards in July 1944. Type XXIII. Yard Deutsche Werft, Hamburg (Schiffswerft Linz). Yard number 137. Date building ordered 289 October 1943. Date completion -. Remarks construction by decision of Ob.d.M. for the time being postponed.

Source

Deutsches Historisches Institut Moska. Records 500 findbuch 12453-file 147. 

German submarine UB 122 under repair at the Kaiserliche Werft, Kiel, Germany in 1918

A list dealing dated 23 June 1918 reported the status of work on the submarines expected on 23 June. Work started on 1 June. Planned completion on 13 June. Description of the work stern damage. Remarks replaced on 16 June 1918.

Source

Bundesarchiv RM 3-11254. 

Kutter yacht near light ship Swantewitz in the harbour of Stettin, Germany [nowadays Poland]

Painted in 1895 by Robert Parlow (26 February 1835 Stepnica, Poland-1901). 

Maritime Museum Hamburg, Germany

British merchant steamship Deccan hired for the Sudan campaign in 1885

Engaged by the British government for the new expedition to the Soudan. Gross tonnage 3,429 tons. Troop transport. 

Due to the despressed state of the shipping trade was the Admiralty able to hire troop transports towards Suakin, Sudan for just 17s 6 ton/month in contrary to the 28s ton/month in the 1882 campaign. The first Suakim expedition was in February 1884, the second one in March 1885. The campaigns were part of the Mahdist War (1881-189) between the Mahdist Sudanese and the Khedivate Egypt later the United Kingdom resulting in the condominium Anglo-Egyptian Sudan 1899-1956 and then succeeded by the Protectorate of Uganda, Italian Libya and the Republic of Sudan, nowadays Egypt, Libya, South Sudan, Sudan and Uganda. On 26 January 1885 fell Khartoum and the British garrison was massacred. In March was a British expeditionary force sent to Suakin but lacking success and finally withdrawn.

Source

The Steamship dated 16 February 1885, p. 64. 

British anti-submarine frigate HMS Loch Eye 1945

River-class ©Warshipsresearch.blogspot.com

Loch-class. ©Warshipsresearch.blogspot.com

Bay-class. ©Warshipsresearch.blogspot.com

Modified River-class hull and improved armament. Of this class were 28 ships built and 54 cancelled. To be built by Harland & Wolff. Cancelled in 1945.

Sources

Jane’s Fighting Ships 1944-1945

David K. Brown. Nelson to Vanguard. Warship design and development 1923-1945.

David K. Brown. Atlantic Escorts. Ships, Weapons and Tactics in World War II.

J.J.. Colledge/Ben Warlow. Ships of the Royal Navy. The Complete Record of all Fighting Ships of the Royal Navy from the 15th Century to the Present.

Norman Friedman. British Destroyers&Frigates/ The Second World War and After.

Leo Marriott. Royal Navy Frigates since 1945. 2nd edition.

G.M. Stephen. British warship designs since 1906.

A.W. Watson. ‘Corvettes and frigates’ in: Transactions of the Institution of Naval Architects, 1947, p. 165-185

German Navy denied British broadcast about Geman unrestricted submarine warfare according to a report of the American Naval Attaché at Berlin, Germany Nr. R562 dated 15 September 1939

Diary note dated Saturday 9 September 1939. An item reported that he was called on the phone around 19.30 o’clock by captain Mirow (1) who was head of the Attache Group in the German Navy department. Mirow stated that the British radio broadcast that Germany was waging unrestricted submarine warfare was enterily false and that the Kriegsmarine emphatically denied this broadcast. The Attaché immediately informed the Chargé and after dinner the US Navy Department.

Note

1. Hans Mirow (30 August 1895 Wandsbek-9 June 1986 Bremen, Germany), promoted in 1943 to the rank of rear admiral?

Source

National Archives. FDR Presidential Library&Museum Roosevelt PSFC000175. War diary Naval Attaché Berlin, volume 1 (1 September 1939-26 May 1940)

Nationalist Chinese Navy District patrol vessel YP 412 1950s

©Warshipsresearch.blogspot.com

British whaler Truelove arrived at Hull, England in 1834

Returning from the northern fishery. Named in the list for 1820. Tonnage 296 tuns. Crew 43 men. tuns of oil 60. tuns of bone 3. Number of whales caught 9. Owner or agent T. Ward.

Source

The Trade and Commerce of Hull and its ships&shipowners. Past and present. Hull, 1878, p. 82-83. 

Japanese patrol vessel PS 45 1950s

PS 44. ©Warshipsresearch.blogspot.com

Operated by the Maritime Safety Board. Length about 147.6 feet

No daily conference at German Navy Department according to a report of the American Naval Attaché at Berlin, Germany Nr. R562 dated 15 September 1939

Diary note dated Sunday 10 September 1939. An item reported that there was no conference at the German Nay Department that day. The newspapers and radio repeated the news of the day before.

Source

National Archives. FDR Presidential Library&Museum Roosevelt PSFC000175. War diary Naval Attaché Berlin, volume 1 (1 September 1939-26 May 1940)

Portugese fishery patrol boat No. 6 anno 1942

©Warshipsresearch.blogspot.com

First two boats laid down by Arsenal d’Alfeite, Portugal in September 1938, launched summer 1941. Diesel propulsion, range 850 nautical miles/11 knots, two screws, horsepower 2,600 hp speed 19 knots and fuel oil bunker capacity 25 ton. Armaament 2x2-25mm anti aircraft guns.

American whaler Almira visited Lahaina, Hawaii according to the newspaper The Polynesian dated 19 November 1853

An item reported the arrival at Lahaina, Hawaii on 4 November of the American whaler Almira master Jenks of Edgartown coming fron the Arctic 500 barrels whale oil 5,000 lbs bone

Italian ocean going diesel-electric submarine Reginaldo Giuliani 1939-1943 and German U.I.T. 1943-1944

Brin-class. ©Warshipsresearch.blogspot.com

Liuzzi-class. ©Warshipsresearch.blogspot.com

Part of Liuzzi-class of which totally 4 four were built preceded by Brin-class. Laid down by Cantieri NavaleTosi, Taranto, Italy on 13 March 1939, launched on 3 December 1939, commissioned on 3 February 1940, converted into a cargo submarine with a cargo capacity of 130-160 ton in early 1943, arrived at Singapore coming from Bordeaux, France on 26 July 1943, seized by the German forces due to the Italian armistice and became the U.I.T. 23, active on shipping line Singapore Singapore-Batavia, Dutch East Indies, torpedoed and sunk by the British submarine HMS Tally-Ho south of Penaning in the Malacca Strait on 14 February 1944 and stricken on 29 February 1947