The New Zealand Division of the Royal Navy also known as the New Zealand Station was formed in 1921 and remained in existence until 1941. It was the precursor to the Royal New Zealand Navy. Originally, the British Royal Navy was solely responsible for the naval security of New Zealand. The passing of the Naval Defence Act 1913 created the New Zealand Naval Forces as a separate division within the Royal Navy.
Contents
1History
2Ships of the New Zealand Division
3Commanders
4Transition to the Royal New Zealand Navy
5Notes
6References
7External links
History[edit]
Admiralty House, Auckland, used from 1902 to 1903 when it became the Glenalvon Hotel: it was demolished in 1915
At its establishment in 1848, the Australia Station encompassed Australia and New Zealand.[1] Under the Australasian Naval Agreement 1887 the colonial governments of Australia and New Zealand secured a greater naval presence in their waters, agreed that two ships would always be based in New Zealand waters and agreed contributions to funding that presence.[2]
The Australian Squadron was disbanded in 1911 and the Australia Station passed to the Commonwealth Naval Forces. The Australia Station was reduced to cover Australia and its island dependencies to the north and east, excluding New Zealand and its surrounds, which became part of the China Station and called the New Zealand Naval Forces.[3]
On 1 January 1921, the New Zealand Naval Forces, which had formerly been under the command of the China Station, were renamed the New Zealand Division of the Royal Navy.[4] Funded by Wellington and increasingly manned by New Zealanders, it operated 14 ships over a period of 21 years, including the cruisers HMS Achilles and HMS Leander, the training minesweeper HMS Wakakura, and the cruiser HMS Philomel which was recommissioned as a base training establishment.[5]
The Commodore's appointment was abolished and forces brought directly under the New Zealand Chief of the Naval Staff from October 1940.[6] The New Zealand Division of the Royal Navy became the Royal New Zealand Navy (RNZN) from 1 October 1941, in recognition of the fact that the naval force was now largely self-sufficient and independent of the Royal Navy.[7]
Ships of the New Zealand Division[edit]
Historic ships of the Royal New Zealand Navy
Cruisers
Frigates
Corvettes
Minesweepers
Patrol boats
Motor Launches
Logistic support
Survey and research
Diving tenders
Training ships
Port vessels
Naval bases
Alphabetical list
1921–41
1913–21
Earlier
Sortable list covering the period from the inception of the New Zealand Division of the Royal Navy in 1921 to the formation of the Royal New Zealand Navy on 1 October 1941.
Name
Pnt
Type
Class
Com
Decom
Notes
HMS Achilles
70
Cruiser
Leander-class
1936
1941
1941–1946 was HMNZS Achilles in the RNZN
HMS Auckland
L61
Convoy sloop
Egret-class
1938
1939
Nominated only.
HMS Chatham
Cruiser
Town-class
1920
1924
Replaced by Dunedin in 1924
HMS Diomede
D92
Cruiser
Danae-class
1926
1935
Replaced by Achilles in 1936
HMS Dunedin
D93
Cruiser
Danae-class
1924
1937
Replaced by Leander in 1937
HMS Laburnum
T48
Convoy sloop
Acacia-class
1922
1935
Flower class sloop
HMS Leander
Cruiser
Leander-class
1937
1941
1941–1944 was HMNZS Leander in the RNZN
HMS Leith
L36
Convoy sloop
Grimsby-class
1934
1939
Acquired by the Royal Danish Navy in 1949 and renamed HDMS Galathea.[8] Circumnavigated the world in 1950–52 doing deep-sea oceanographic research.
RFA Nucula
L61
Fleet oiler
1924
1937
oil hulk 1937–1947
HMS Philomel
Cruiser
Pearl-class
1921
1941
"Cradle of the Navy." 1914–1921 was HMS Philomel in the NZ Naval Forces. 1941–1947 became HMNZS Philomel in the RNZN
HMS Puriri (T02)
T02
Minesweeper
Converted merchant ship
1941
1941
14 May 1941 struck a German mine 9 miles NE of the Whangarei heads and sank with the loss of five crew members.[9][10]
HMS Torch
Convoy sloop
1921
1924
1914–1921 was HMS Torch in the NZ Naval Forces. Also called a gunboat. Wrecked in Chatham Islands.
HMS Veronica
T67
Convoy sloop
Acacia class
1920
1934
Flower class sloop
HMS Wellington
L65
Convoy sloop
Grimsby class
1935
1939
HMS Wakakura
T00
Minesweeper
Castle-class
1926
1941
1941–1945 was HMNZS Wakakura in the RNZN
Commanders[edit]
HMS Diomede and HMS Dunedin berthed in Wellington, ca 1928
Officers who commanded the New Zealand Division/Station include:[11]
Rank
Name
Term began
Commodore
Alan Hotham
March 1921
Commodore
Alister Beal, CMG, DSO
August 1923
Commodore
George Swabey, DSO
18 June 1926
Commodore
Geoffrey Blake, CB, DSO
19 July 1929
Rear Admiral
Fischer Watson, DSO
26 February 1932
Rear Admiral
The Hon. Edmund Drummond, MVO
March 1935
Commodore
Irvine Glennie
June 1938
Commodore
James Rivett-Carnac
December 1938
Commodore
Henry Horan, DSC
December 1939
Commodore
Edward Parry
May 1940
Transition to the Royal New Zealand Navy[edit]
When Britain went to war against Germany in 1939, New Zealand promptly declared war and expanded its naval forces. In recognition that the naval force was now largely self-sufficient and independent of the Royal Navy, the New Zealand Division of the Royal Navy became the Royal New Zealand Navy (RNZN) in 1941.
In 1941 there were:[12]
2 Cruisers
2 Escort Vessels
1 Survey Vessel
1 Minesweeping Vessel
The prefix "royal" was granted by King George VI on 1 October 1941, and ships thereafter were prefixed with HMNZS (His/Her Majesty's New Zealand Ship).
^Tonson, A.E. HMS Puriri 1938, NZ Navy, article in Naval Historical Review – March 1983
^HMNZS Puriri Archived 24 November 2009 at the Wayback Machine.
^Senior Royal Navy Appointments Archived 11 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine.
^"Royal Navy History". Retrieved 12 August 2016.
References[edit]
Dennis, Peter; Grey, Jeffrey; Morris, Ewan; Prior, Robin (2008). The Oxford Companion to Australian Military History (2nd ed.). South Melbourne: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-551784-2. OCLC 271822831.
Hocken Collections, 75 Years of the New Zealand Navy bulletin 17, August 1996
McDougall, R J (1989) New Zealand Naval Vessels. Page 9-21. Government Printing Office.
ISBN 978-0-477-01399-4
McGibbon, Ian (2000). The Oxford Companion to New Zealand Military History. Auckland: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-558376-0.
Walters, Sydney David (1956) The Royal New Zealand Navy: Official History of World War II, Department of Internal Affairs, Wellington. Chapter 1b: Genesis of Royal New Zealand Navy
External links[edit]
New Zealand Navy Museum 1921 The New Zealand Division of the Royal Navy
The Jellicoe Report
Royal Navy History The Royal New Zealand Navy
HMS Chatham New Zealand's first cruiser
v
t
e
Admiralty Department
Direction and control of Admiralty and Naval affairs
Office of First Lord of the Admiralty and President of the Board of Admiralty
Lord High Admirals Council
Boards and offices under the First Lord
Board of Admiralty
Navy Board
Office of the Naval Secretary
Office of the First Naval Lord
Office of the First Sea Lord
Office of the Senior Naval Lord
Office of the Parliamentary and Financial Secretary to the Admiralty
Office of the Permanent Secretary to the Admiralty
Office of the Private Secretary to the First Lord of the Admiralty
Direction of Admirals Naval/Sea Lords War and Naval Staff
Office of the Senior Naval Lord
Office of the First Naval Lord
Office of the First Sea Lord
Secretariat and staff under the First Sea Lord
Office of the Naval Assistant to the First Sea Lord
Office of the Additional Naval Assistant to the First Sea Lord
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