HMAS
Oenone

Pennant
504
Commissioned
8 March 1944
Dimensions & Displacement
Length 42 feet 9 inches
Beam 12 feet 6 inches
Draught 6 feet 9 inches
Performance
Speed 8 knots
Armament
Guns 1 x .303 inch Vickers machine gun
Other Armament 2 x Mk VII depth charge, 4 x 25lb depth charge

With much of the Royal Australian Navy fleet deployed to foreign waters in the early years of World War II, the defence of Australia’s coastlines became a primary concern for the Naval Board. The Naval Auxiliary Patrol (NAP) was a war-raised unit approved on 25 June 1941, charged with patrolling and safeguarding Australia's inner harbours, ports, rivers and estuaries against enemy sabotage or attack. The NAP fleet was comprised primarily of former pleasure craft, offered freely by their owners.

In May 1942, the NAP was transferred to the Royal Australian Naval Volunteer Reserve (RANVR) and was thereafter known as the RANVR NAP. By October 1942 the total strength of the NAP had increased to over 3000 mobilised and unmobilised reserves. This was to remain the case until early 1944 when it was considered that the danger of enemy attack was remote enough to reduce the strength of the NAP to a minimum.

Oenone was a 42 foot Auxiliary Schooner that served as a Naval Auxiliary Patrol Vessel. The boat was requisitioned for naval service on 26 July 1942, before being commissioned into the RAN on 8 March 1944, under the command of Naval Auxiliary Patrol Skipper Colin V Munro. The boat was purchased by the Australian Government on 22 March 1944. HMAS Oenone was decommissioned and later sold in March 1946.

HMAS Oenone first appeared in the April 1944 edition of the Navy List: https://seapower.navy.gov.au/sites/default/files/documents/Navy_List-April-1944.pdf
HMAS Oenone first appeared in the April 1944 edition of the Navy List: https://seapower.navy.gov.au/sites/default/files/documents/Navy_List-April-1944.pdf