Otranto Shields
At the end of each year the Royal Australian Navy Fleet Proficiency Awards are announced. One of the oldest of these is the Otranto Shield which is awarded annually in December to the fleet unit which, in the opinion of the Commander of the Australian Fleet, has achieved the best and most consistent gunnery and surface-to-air missile results during the year.
This, however, has not always been the case. Originally there were two Otranto Shields, one being for gunnery and the other being for torpedo gunnery. The provenance of the shields can be traced to 1910 when Australian sailors were taking passage in the Orient passenger liner Otranto on their way to pick up the new torpedo boat destroyers HMA Ships Parramatta (I) and Yarra (I). Recognising the uniqueness of the occasion, passengers in the Otranto donated a generous amount of money to fund two ornate presentation shields to be competed for by the men of the Australian Navy.
The shields were manufactured by a leading London firm and each contained 200 ounces of silver. The cost was £132 each which today equates to a staggering $18,000. Once made, the shields were conveyed to Melbourne by the Otranto, which had the pleasure of catching up with the two destroyers in Colombo during their passage to Australia.