Isles Class – history and their story – photos
Guns crew training off of the NZ coast
HMNZS Inchkeith off of Cape Rodney with Barrier in background – 1942
HMNZS Inchkeith with HMNZS Killegray following, entering Whangarei – 1942
Isles Class Minesweepers at Russell – 1942
Passing Sugar Loaf and Poor Knights – 1942 – Minesweepers Auckland to Russell
Auckland to Russell – Rangitoto Channel
A flotilla of Isles Class minesweepers in Queen Charlotte Sound – 1942
Streaming the kite in Queen Charlotte Sound – 1942
4 inch gun and crew – Queen Charlotte Sound 1942
Manning an anti-aircraft gun during anti-gas exercises in Queen Charlotte sound during a night operation – 1942
Photos from NZ Herald
Inchkeith was one of the first warships to be commissioned into the Royal New Zealand Navy after the awarding of the title that was effective 1 October 1941. From October 1942 to June 1943 Inchkeith and her sister ships were employed on anti-submarine patrols while supply ships were discharging at Norfolk Island.
Ship Details:[1]
Class: Isles-class minesweeper
Pennant Number: T155
Builders: John Lewis & Sons Aberdeen
Laid Down: 6 November 1940
Launched: 10 July 1941
Completed: 24 October 1941
Dimensions: 50 x 45.7 x 8.4 x 4.1m (164 x 150 x 27.6 x 13.5ft)
Displacement: 782 tonnes full load
Machinery: 1-shaft recip. Triple expansion, coal fired, ihp 850 = 10/8.5 kts
Armament:
1 x 12pdr gun single mounted, 3 x 20mm single mounted,
2 machineguns, ASDIC, 30 Depth charges
Complement: 40
RNZN Service: Commissioned 17/10/1941 Decommissioned 12/2/1946
History:[2]
Inchkeith was one of the first warships to be commissioned into the Royal New Zealand Navy after the awarding of the title that was effective 1 October 1941. It was named after the Scottish island in the Firth of Forth.
The Isles-class minesweepers were a group of vessels based on the Admiralty designed Anti-submarine and Minesweeping trawler HMS Bassett that was commissioned in 1935. Other groups of similar design include the Tree-class minesweepers in which many New Zealand RNZNVR officers served in during the Second World War. The Isles-class purpose was for training rather than active operations. In April 1941, the Admiralty offered four Isles-class vessels to the New Zealand government which accepted it in July as part of the recommendations that there by nineteen vessels for minesweeping and anti-submarines duties in New Zealand’s home waters.[3] The government paid £65,000 each for the four vessels that were commissioned as Inchkeith, Sanda, Killegray, and Scarba.[4]
Inchkeith was completed in October 1941 and commissioned into service with the RNZN under the command of Lieutenant-Commander H.A. Dunnet RNR a New Zealander who would serve as her commanding officer until 1943.[5] The majority of the ship’s companies were New Zealanders. The initial workup of the four vessels was carried out in Scottish waters and the vessel conducted escort work around the coast. On 15 March 1942 Inchkeith collided with an ocean boarding vessel HMS Marsdale, damaging some of her superstructure. In fact the Isles-class ships in RNZN service seem to have had a reputation for accidents and collisions.
On 15 March 1942, Inchkeith, the other three vessels and the Bird-class corvette HMNZS Tui left Greenock and joined a Canada-bound convoy [ONS76] as escorts. From Canada the ships sailed down the eastern coast of the United States and arrived at Bermuda were Inchkeith and Killegray was repaired during a 12-day stay.[6] After spending four days in Jamaica, the fleet passed through the Panama Canal and arrived at the USN naval base at San Pedro, California on 25 May 1942. There the fleet acted as an anti-submarine escort a USN fleet of ten tankers to Pearl Harbour arriving on 22 June 1942.[7] The ships departed on 6 July, less HMZNS Killegray which had boiler trouble, and arrived in Suva on 24 July.
On the leg from Suva to Auckland, HMNZS Sanda ran out of coal which was poor quality and Inchkeith took her under tow from 1 August and then handed over to HMNZS Muritai two days later. Inchkeith arrived at Devonport Naval Base [HMNZS Philomel] on 4 August 1942. She underwent a refit and was deployed for minesweeping duties from September 1942 with the 7th Trawler Group. The area of operations for the group included the Hauraki Gulf and the Bay of Islands. In 1944 the group consisted of the four Isles-class trawlers.[8]
Occasionally there were escorts for merchant ships sailing to Norfolk Island. In October 1942 Inchkeith was the anti-submarine escort protection to the steamer Waipori that took supplies for the garrison on the island that was being developed as a base for anti-submarine operations. From October 1942 to June 1943 Inchkeith and her sister ships were employed on anti-submarine patrols while supply ships were discharging at Norfolk Island.[9]
This work continued for the duration of the war. In January 1945, perhaps returning the favour, HMNZS Sanda took fourteen hours to tow Inchkeith from Whangaparapara Harbour, Great Barrier Island back to HMNZS Philomel. From March to October 1945 the 7th Trawler Group undertook clear-sweeping of the Hauraki Gulf minefields. Even though after five years it was thought probable that the mines would have being lost or sunk. However, it was essential that the approaches to the Waitemata Harbour and Hauraki Gulf be totally free of mines. By May 1945, no mines had been swept. When detailed information was received from the Admiralty where the mines laid by the German raider Orion in 1940, a further sweep was undertaken but no mines were located. In October 1945, shortages of coal forced the ships into lay-up until February 1946 when the corvettes HMNZS Arabis and Arbutus were fitted out as minesweepers and four Isles-class ships including Inchkeith were paid off to reserve.[10]
Inchkeith remained in reserve at the dockyard until the RNZN declared it surplus in 1957. All four Isles-class ships were sold en bloc to G A Sparrey in August 1958 for scrapping. The ships were broken up at the Lighter Basin in Freemans Bay, Auckland in 1959.
[1] R.J. McDougall, New Zealand Naval Vessels, Christchurch: GP Books, 1989, p. 61.
[2] Ibid., pp. 61-62.
[3] S.D. Waters, The Royal New Zealand Navy: Official History of New Zealand in the Second World War 1939-45, Wellington: War History Branch Department of Internal Affairs, 1956, p. 200.
[4] Ibid., p. 203.
[5] Ibid.
[6] Ibid., p. 204.
[7] Ibid.
[8] Ibid., p. 273.
[9] Ibid., p. 267.
[10] Ibid., p. 276.
Young Auckland naval officer takes charge of HMNZS Taupo. He joined the Royal New Zealand Navy 10 years ago with no sea-going background, but 29-year-old Lieutenant Toby Mara has quickly notched up enough experience to be handed command of the inshore patrol vessel HMNZS Taupo.
23 July, 2024
The Aucklander will be in charge of Taupo, which carries out maritime surveillance, fishery patrols, boarding operations, navigation training and search and rescue response around New Zealand’s 15,000km coast and out to the 200 nautical mile limit of the country’s economic exclusive zone.
“Within the Navy it’s significant to undertake command as a lieutenant as junior sailors and officers are more comfortable talking to peers. If I can act as conduit right to the top, it’s a powerful connection,” Lieutenant Mara said.
The inshore patrol vessel HMNZS Taupo – one of the busiest ships in the RNZN fleet.
Commanding Officer of HMNZS Taupo, Lieutenant Toby Mara with the ship’s Symbol of Command
He joined the Navy in 2014 despite never having been to sea before.
Lieutenant Mara quickly learned about Navy life with his first posting to the offshore patrol vessel HMNZS Otago as a trainee watchkeeper and travelled throughout the south west Pacific, circumnavigated New Zealand and conducted several deployments to the Sub-Antarctic Islands and the Ross Sea.
Lieutenant Mara then posted to frigate HMNZS Te Mana with the primary goal of obtaining his warfare ticket, the final tick he needed to become a qualified officer of the watch.
While on Te Mana he travelled from Hawaii, through South East Asia and Australia, taking part in several international exercises and wider defence engagement opportunities.
The exposure was invaluable and resulted in Lieutenant Mara gaining his final qualification and officially finishing his time as a trainee watchkeeper.
Lieutenant Mara with the HMNZS Taupo’s sponsor Lady Susan Satyanand and members of the ship’s company
His posting to HMNZS Hawea as a Navigation Officer would ultimately put him in good stead to steer Taupo, he said.
“Having experience on Hawea, which is also an inshore patrol vessel, makes me very comfortable with pilotage and how the ship manoeuvres. I think it will set me up well to supervise new officers of the watch on their basic course,” he said.
Last year, Lieutenant Mara was posted to Bahrain to Counter Narcotics Task Force, which at the time was under French command. During his six months there the task force seized and destroyed about $US500 million worth of narcotics.
The most exciting part of taking command of Taupo is the 24-strong ship’s company, he said.
“This will provide me an opportunity to mentor junior officers, lead a small group of skilled sailors and take the ship around New Zealand to demonstrate to the wider community what the Navy is capable of.”