HMAS Fremantle (I)
Class |
Bathurst Class |
---|---|
Type |
Australian Minesweeper |
Pennant |
J246/M246 |
Builder |
Evans Deakin & Co Ltd, Brisbane |
Laid Down |
11 February 1942 |
Launched |
18 August 1942 |
Launched by |
Mrs J Curtin, wife of the Prime Minister |
Commissioned |
24 March 1943 |
Decommissioned |
22 June 1959 |
Dimensions & Displacement | |
Displacement | 650 tons |
Length | 186 feet |
Beam | 31 feet |
Draught | 8 feet 6 inches |
Performance | |
Speed | 15 knots |
Complement | |
Crew | 85 |
Propulsion | |
Machinery | Triple expansion, 2 shafts |
Horsepower | 2000 |
Armament | |
Guns |
|
Other Armament |
|
Awards | |
Battle Honours |
HMAS Fremantle was one of sixty Australian Minesweepers (commonly known as corvettes) built during World War II in Australian shipyards as part of the Commonwealth Government's wartime shipbuilding programme. Twenty were built on Admiralty order but manned and commissioned by the Royal Australian Navy. Thirty six (including Fremantle) were built for the Royal Australian Navy and four for the Royal Indian Navy.
HMAS Fremantle was laid down at Evans Deakin & Co Ltd, Brisbane, Queensland on 11 February 1942. She was launched on 18 August 1942 by Mrs J Curtin, wife of the Prime Minister, and was the first RAN warship to carry the name of the major Australian port city in WA, located at the mouth of the Swan River.
Fremantle commissioned at Brisbane on 24 March 1943 under the command of Lieutenant Albert N Boulton RANR(S).
On completion of her trials in April 1943, Fremantle was assigned duty as an escort vessel on the east coast of Australia. At this period Japanese submarines were active in Australian waters and in the month preceding Fremantle's first operational duty, seven ships had been sunk in coastal areas.
In August 1943 Fremantle left the east coast and proceeded to Darwin where she was based as an escort vessel, operating mainly between Darwin and Thursday Island, until April 1945. During this period on 21 months in northern waters the tide of war was steadily receding from the Australian theatre and her duties were confined mainly to routine uneventful merchant ship protection.
In June 1945 she arrived at Manus to begin a period of escort and guard ship duty in the New Guinea area which occupied the ship until the end of hostilities.
On 31 August 1945 Fremantle arrived at Hong Kong and while based there as a unit of the 21st Minesweeping Flotilla, took part in a series of clearing sweeps in Chinese waters. On 18 November 1945 she entered her name port Fremantle for the first time en route from Hong Kong to Melbourne. Fremantle paid off into Reserve in Melbourne on 25 January 1946.
Fremantle recommissioned at Melbourne on 10 December 1952 under the command of Lieutenant Commander George C Rance RN. On 8 March 1953 she reached Fremantle and commenced service as a training ship for the Western Australian area. In this role, until the scheme was abandoned, Fremantle introduced large numbers of National Service Trainees to naval life afloat.
In addition to her training duties, Fremantle also acted at times as a fisheries protection vessel with the Japanese Pearling Fleet in the Arafura Sea, and on survey and general fleet duties in the Western Australian area.
Fremantle finally paid off at Sydney for disposal on 22 June 1959. She had steamed 113,654 miles since recommissioning in 1952. In all, including her war time service, she had steamed 190,776 miles. Fremantle was sold on 6 January 1961 to Kinoshita (Australia) Pty Ltd to be broken up.
Note: This video is hosted on YouTube. Department of Defence users will not be able to view this video on the Defence Protected Network.
This cine film has been placed online as part of the Sea Power Centre - Australia’s ongoing archival digitisation program.
Further reading
- Notable Service to the Empire: Australian Corvettes and the British Pacific Fleet, 1944-45, by Hugh Campbell - published by the Naval Historical Society of Australia Inc, Garden Island, 1995.
- Corvettes - Little Ships for Big Men, by Frank B Walker - published by Kingfisher Press, NSW, 1996.
- The Australian Centenary History of Defence Volume III, The Royal Australian Navy, edited by David Stevens, Oxford University Press, South Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, 2001.