Under construction in Canada
As TR 1 in Canada
Towed target alongside
HMNZS Wakakura (T00) 1926–1941 was HMS Wakakura in the New Zealand Division of the Royal Navy. Thereafter RNZN Used as danlayer from July 1944.
HMNZS Wakakura after she received a major overhaul in 1944
HMS/HMNZS Wakakura (T00) An aerial photograph, showing the minesweeper Wakakura leaving Auckland Harbour for the Hauraki Gulf with the naval floating target in tow. 1932-01-06
Some history here – HMNZS Wakakura (T00) in the Lyttelton Harbour.; Douglas Jones; 1926-1947 The Canterbury Division of the RNVR 02 April 2023 The British Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve (RNVR) was instituted in 1903 and manned largely by members of the Royal Naval Artillery Volunteers as part of a modernisation of the British Commonwealth’s defence forces that included His Majesty Edward VII’s Colony of New Zealand. While the colony had always relied upon the Royal Navy’s Australasia Station and its largely British-born sailors for its primary naval defence, the Lyttelton Naval Artillery Volunteers had been formed in 1880 as part of a nationwide coast guard militia manning the gun emplacements that protected the Port of Lyttelton from the British Empire’s adversaries. With Edward VII’s modernisation efforts, the Lyttelton Naval Artillery Volunteers became the No. 1 Company Canterbury Division of the New Zealand Garrison Artillery Volunteers. On the disbanding of the British Royal Navy’s Australasia Station in 1913, the New Zealand Naval Forces were created as a Division of the Royal Navy under the command of its China Station. After WWI, the New Zealand Division of the British Royal Navy was formed in 1921, funded by the New Zealand government and increasingly crewed by New Zealand sailors. Five years later in 1926, the Royal Naval Volunteer Reserves were formed throughout New Zealand in support of their New Zealand Division. The Canterbury Division of the RNVR was composed of civilians from diverse backgrounds who shared a love of the sea and a willingness to serve the British Empire’s naval forces in times of war. Members included bank clerks, office workers, manual labourers and tradespeople, representing a broad cross section of New Zealand society. The RNVR’s commitment to the Crown and readiness to undertake naval operations at short notice made them an essential component of New Zealand’s Royal Navy defence force. In 1926, with the founding of local RNVR divisions, the New Zealand government purchased Her Majesty’s Naval Trawler TR1 from the British Admiralty. Built in 1917 in Canada, this naval trawler had been on loan to the Royal Canadian Navy for use in WW1 minesweeping and anti-submarine operations. A 540 ton, 41 m long steam ship with a crew of 26, she was armed with one 4 inch (102 mm) gun and two Lewis machine guns along with depth charges. Renamed HMNZS Wakakura (literally ‘boat school’ in te reo Māori) she served as the nation’s main steamer training vessel for the RNVR and was a regular visitor to Whakaraupō Lyttelton Harbour. Throughout the 1930s, when in port, she provided the Canterbury Division RNVR sailors with naval experience in seamanship, gunnery and minesweeping. On the advent of WWII, after the sinking of RMS Niagara by German mines, the New Zealand government embarked on the construction of the Castle Class minesweepers based on the design of the Wakakura, which also joined the 28th Minesweeper Flotilla. The cutter Deveron was a permanent Lyttelton-based training complement to the HMNZS Wakakura. At 26 tons, 16 m in length, and of kauri construction, she was built around 1877 in Auckland where it traded from, before being sold to a Lyttelton fisherman in 1886. She took part in the cargo salvage of the iron barque May Queen, wrecked at Camp Bay in early 1888, and traded timber in Southland and Stewart Island through the 1890s. From the early 1900s she was popularly known as the ‘Peninsula cutter’ trading goods around the bays from Lyttelton to Akaroa for some 20 years under Captain Christian Andersen and his son. Bought at auction for the sum of £25 on 26 July 1929, she was outfitted with an auxiliary engine and commissioned on 16 December 1929 by Royal Navy Commodore of the New Zealand Division, Geoffrey Blake, as the sail training vessel of the Canterbury Division RNVR based at Rīpapa Island. The Deveron proved popular with the reservists who eagerly took her to sea almost every weekend through the early to mid 1930s. Canterbury Division RNVR crews also sailed her in yachting races such as the Banks Peninsula Cruising Club’s annual ocean race from the harbour heads out to Brighton pier and back. With longer training trips around the peninsula to Akaroa and south to Dunedin via Timaru – at times braving fierce gales – or north to the port of Kaiapoi, the young hands gained vital sailing experience that would serve them well when called up for WWII. By late 1936, however, the venerable Deveron was starting to show her near 60 years of age, with one wag suggesting “it is time that she was treated to about 10 gallons of petrol and a match”. Sold for £10 in December 1936 she was finally scrapped in early 1940. With the establishment of the Royal New Zealand Navy in 1941, the Dominion’s long association with the British Royal Navy was finally ended, and the RNVR became today’s Royal New Zealand Naval Volunteer Reserve (RNZNVR) with the Canterbury Headquarters based at HMNZS Pegasus. See also ‘Leading Signalman Pat Luxton – Oral History’ at https://rnzncomms.org/luxton-2-2/ Join the Rebuild!
HMNZS Wakakura (T00) at No 4 wharf in Lyttelton during World War II.; Unknown; 1939-1945;
HMNZS Wakakura (T00) was originally a First World War Castle-class naval trawler built in Canada. Ordered by the Admiralty , the vessel, named TR 1 , was loaned to the Royal Canadian Navy for use on the East Coast of Canada . She was purchased by New Zealand in 1926 and transferred to the Royal New Zealand Navy when it was established in 1941.
She displaced 530 tons standard, could manage 10 knots (19 km/h; 12 mph) and was equipped with a 4-inch (102 mm) gun during World War II .
Wakakura is a Māori word which means “precious canoe” or “training boat”
World War II[edit ]
Wakakura remained in commission throughout the Second World War as a training vessel and minesweeper. For the first part of the war she was part of the 28th Minesweeper Flotilla, until the flotilla was transferred overseas. From then the Wakakura was based at Lyttleton.
“A little trawler paid a big part in the lives of New Zealand’s pre-war and wartime naval reservists. Her Majesty’s Trawler (later HMNZS) Wakakura, purchased from the Royal Navy scrap heap ‘as is, where is’ to be a training ship, also left an impression on various wharves and a couple of other ships as she roamed from port to port around New Zealand instructing young would-be sailors in naval procedures.”[1]
During 1944 the Wakakura reported that it had sighted and depth charged a Japanese submarine off the Canterbury Coast, possibly sinking it. Naval historians concluded that while it was possible for Japanese submarines to be in the area, it was unlikely at that stage of the war.[2]
The ship’s bell was installed in the Devonport Naval Base Chapel.[3]
Cargo vessel[edit ]
After the war in 1947 she was sold to the Tasman Steamship Company owned by a syndicate of 17 former merchant seamen. The ship was renamed SS Wakakura and converted to a refrigerated cargo vessel for use on the trans-Tasman run from Auckland and Wellington to Sydney.[4] The ships maiden voyage as a merchant ship was in October 1947 under Captain F A Barrett from Auckland to Sydney. The newspaper stated that the voyage across the Tasman Sea was expected to take 6 days.[5]
By 1948 the company decided that the ship was to small for the Trans-Tasman run and decided to purchase a larger vessel. The ship had made seven return voyages by the time.[6] The Fiji Government owned motor ship Viti was acquired by the company as a replacement.[7] When the Viti entered service the Wakakura was used for coastal shipping.[8]
The company put the ship up for sale in November 1950, and was sold to Mason Bros. Engineering Co. Ltd, being broken up at the Viaduct Basin in Auckland.[
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