HMAS Parkes
Class |
Bathurst Class |
---|---|
Type |
Australian Minesweeper |
Pennant |
J361 |
Builder |
Evans Deakin & Co Ltd, Brisbane |
Laid Down |
16 March 1943 |
Launched |
30 October 1943 |
Launched by |
Mrs Brown, wife of the President of the Senate |
Commissioned |
25 May 1944 |
Decommissioned |
17 December 1945 |
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 | 2,000 |
Armament | |
Guns |
|
Other Armament |
|
Awards | |
Battle Honours |
HMAS Parkes 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 Parkes) were built for the Royal Australian Navy and four for the Royal Indian Navy.
HMAS Parkes was laid down at Evans Deakin & Co Ltd, Brisbane, Queensland on 16 March 1943. She was launched on 30 October 1943 by Mrs Brown, wife of the President of the Senate and was the first RAN warship to carry the name of the NSW regional city.
Parkes commissioned at Brisbane on 25 May 1944 under the command of Lieutenant Commander Norris O Vidgen RANR.
Following trials in Moreton Bay, the ship sailed for Milne Bay on 3 June. After three weeks in New Guinea waters Parkes returned to Australia, arriving at Thursday Island on 27 June. Most of July was occupied in the escort of convoys between Thursday Island and Darwin. At the end of the month the ship proceeded to the Eilanden River in Netherlands New Guinea to embark 78 troops for Merauke. With these personnel safely disembarked at their destination Parkes sailed for Thursday Island to resume convoy escort duties on the Darwin run.
This work occupied the ship until September 1944. On 18 September she rescued survivors of the SS Kintore which had been wrecked on Warrimist Reef (near York Island) four days earlier. On 23 September she sailed for Fremantle.
October and early November proved an uneventful period occupied by routine patrols off Fremantle, before Parkes returned to Darwin on 7 November to take up escort and patrol duties in the Arafura Sea. Throughout the rest of November and December Parkes operated in the Darwin area. On 20 December she rescued six Dutch former prisoners of war who had succeeded in escaping from enemy held territory in an outrigger canoe.
From then until the end of hostilities on 15 August 1945 Parkes continued to be based on Darwin. She was principally occupied with local escort and anti-submarine duties. It was a period of mainly routine activity. However, early in August the ship assisted in the successful extraction by HMAS HDML 1324 of Services Reconnaissance Department personnel from enemy occupied Timor after a clandestine operation.