Tuesday, September 16, 2014

Some 1,500 people gathered in Papua New Guinea as the Royal Australian Navy paid tribute to the first Allied submarine lost in action in the Great War.

First submarine lost in WW1 remembered by Australian Navy
15 September 2014
Some 1,500 people gathered in Papua New Guinea as the Royal Australian Navy paid tribute to the first Allied submarine lost in action in the Great War.
HMAS AE1 was lost in September 14 during operations to drive Imperial German Forces out of the South Pacific, taking all 35 crew – including 16 Britons  – with her.
Pictures: Royal Australian Navy
AUSTRALIANS paid tribute to the first submariners –16 of them Britons – lost in the Great War as they search for the wreck of HMAS AE1.
More than 1,500 people gathered in Simpson Harbour, Papua New Guinea, for a centennial service 100 years to the day that the boat was lost.
Built in Barrow and crewed by 18 Australians, 16 Britons (all her officers, plus men who’d transferred from the RN to the RAN) and one New Zealander, AE1 was the first boat in the Royal Australian Navy, arriving in Sydney just a couple of months before the outbreak of war.
The last known photograph of HMAS AE1 with the battle-cruiser HMAS Australia and torpedo boat destroyer HMAS Yarra in the background
In September 1914 she and her sister AE2 were sent as part of the force dispatched to drive German forces out of New Guinea.
One day after the capture of the key port of Rabaul, AE1 headed out on patrol and was never seen again.
The names of all 35 souls lost when the submarine disappeared were read out by Cdre Kim Pitt and the Australian High Commissioner Deborah Stokes – from Lt Cdr Thomas Besant, AE1’s skipper, to Australian stoker Charles Wright.
The crew of today's HMAS Yarra take part in commemorations to mark AE1's loss
The service came at the end of a concerted search for AE1’s wreck by the Australian survey ship HMAS Yarra, whose sailors provide a guard of honour for the centenary service.
“It was mind-blowing to see how many people came to see the service and while I am disappointed that we didn’t find the submarine, we did our best,” said PO Richard Kamprad. 
His shipmates spent four days scanning difficult terrain on the seabed – a steep volcanic shelf, numerous rocky outcrops littered with the detritus of conflicts past (as well as the actions of WW1, Rabaul was a major Japanese base a generation later).
A contemporary memorial souvenir produced in Australia
Using oral histories, data from previous searches, contemporary naval and weather records, and knowledge of the waters around the Duke of York Islands, to pinpoint the hunt for the wreck, concentrating on the waters off Mioko Island, about 20 miles east of Rabaul.
“Locals that lived on Mioko Island spoke of a ‘monster’ – possibly AE1 – that approached the reef and then moved away north-east before disappearing,” said Lt Cdr Brendan O’Hara, Yarra’s Commanding Officer.
Most of the contacts Yarra picked up were classified as natural objects, but one remains unidentified and will require further investigation, other operations allow.
You can read more about HMAS AE1 and her tragic fate at: http://www.navy.gov.au/hmas-ae1

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