Naval Base Darwin

Major World War 2 base in Australia
12°28′15″S 130°50′54″E / 12.4708°S 130.8483°E / -12.4708; 130.8483TypeNaval baseSite informationOperator United States NavySite historyBuilt1942 (1942)In use1942 – 1945 (1945)
Naval Base Darwin at Port Darwin
Map
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Location
Coordinates12°28′15″S 130°50′54″E / 12.4708°S 130.8483°E / -12.4708; 130.8483
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Second Sino-Japanese War

Darwin Harbour with the sunken ship MV Neptuna and burnt-out wharf of Darwin Harbour following the attack on February 19, 1942
Map of the 1942 American-British-Dutch-Australian Command
USS Holland with (left to right: Cachalot, Dolphin, Barracuda, Bass, Bonita, Nautilus, Narwhal)

Naval Base Darwin was a United States Navy base built during World War II at Darwin, Northern Territory, Australia. The first US operations at Darwin was Naval mine depot, built to supply Australia with mines to support the Pacific War. As the US Navy expanded in the Island hopping campaign, Naval Base Darwin expanded to include a Port Darwin submarine base, PT boat Bases, and other facilities. US Navy operations started in 1942 and ended after the war in 1945.[1][2]

History

The US Navy received an Australian government contract to provide Naval mines for the protection of Australian ports and to disrupt Japanese shipping. As such the Navy built a Naval mine depot at the port of Darwin, in Darwin Harbour. Due to Japan's southern advance in the Pacific War into the Southwest Pacific the US Navy also built a submarine base and PT boat Bases on the northwest coast of Australia, to patrol and protect the shipping lanes. The city of Darwin is on a peninsula between Clarence Strait and Frances Bay in the northern coast of Australia. Naval Base Darwin was part of the 1942 American-British-Dutch-Australian Command (ABDACOM). With ABDACOM the Allies tried to limit the advance of Japan. ABDACOM did not have enough troops or supplies to carry out the mission in 1942.[3][4]

The submarine started with the arrival of the submarine tender USS Otus (ARG-20) worked at the base from December 10, 1941 to January 1942.[5] The submarine tender USS Holland (AS3) arrived on January 2, 1942 and began around the clock service to US submarines. A land submarine repair base with docks and depots was built to support the operations. In February 1943 Holland departed Australia for Mare Island Navy Yard for overhaul.[6] The USS Coucal (ASR-8) worked at the base from August 12, 1943 to October 29, 1944. USS Chanticleer (ASR-7) worked at the base from October 1944 to January 1945.[7]

The USS Black Hawk (AD-9) a destroyer tender operated out of Naval Base Darwin from January 3 to February 1942.[8] USS Langley (CV-1), the US Navy's first aircraft carrier, assisted the Royal Australian Air Force in running anti-submarine patrols out of Darwin from January 1 to 11 1942.

Much of the Darwin submarine base operations was moved to the Fremantle submarine base in Western Australia, as this was out of range of land-based Japanese aircraft. Darwin also had a high tide problem.[9]

In January 1945 US Navy Seabees built a Seabees base camp at Darwin. The other large US Naval Advance Bases in Australia were at Naval Base Brisbane and Naval Base Sydney. The Royal Australian Navy operated bases in Darwin and worked with the US Navy. Royal Australian Navy base around Darwin: HMAS Coonawarra Naval Base, HMAS Melville Naval Base. *After Victory over Japan Day the base closed and the US Navy started taking Troops home in Operation Magic Carpet.[10][1]

Bases and facilities

Fleet Radio Unit Radio Station

Radio station near Adelaide River, 77 miles from Darwin The post was called USN Supplementary Radio Station Adelaide River and U.S. Naval Attachment, Fleet Radio Unit, Navy 136. It was run under the United States Seventh Fleet for the Naval Intelligence Center and opened in March 1943. A teleprinter line was run to Naval Intelligence Center so the info picked up could get to Naval Intelligence Center quickly. A DAB-3 HFDF was installed, a radio Direction Finding System, or Radio Direction Finder (RDF). The site was abandoned after the war. The Fleet Post Office FPO was 179 SF Adelaide River, Australia.[12][13]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "Building the Navy's Bases, vol. 2 (part III, chapter 26)". US Navy.
  2. ^ a b "Pacific Wrecks". pacificwrecks.com.
  3. ^ Klemen, L (1999–2000). "General Sir Archibald Percival Wavell". Dutch East Indies Campaign website.
  4. ^ Roberts, Andrew (2009). Masters and Commanders: The Military Geniuses Who Led the West to Victory in World War II (1 ed.). London: Penguin Books. pp. 66–68. ISBN 978-0-141-02926-9 – via Archive Foundation.
  5. ^ US Navy, USS Otus (ARG-20)
  6. ^ "USS Holland (AS-3)". US Navy.
  7. ^ "Chanticleer III (ASR-7)". US Navy.
  8. ^ "Black Hawk II (Id. No. 2140)". US Navy.
  9. ^ Sturma, Michael (2015), Fremantle's Submarines – How Allied Submariners and Western Australians Helped Win the War in the Pacific, Naval Institute Press, ISBN 978-1-61251-861-9
  10. ^ "Beans, Bullets, and Black Oil". US Navy.
  11. ^ "Pacific Wrecks - Darwin Harbor, Northern Territory, Australia". pacificwrecks.com.
  12. ^ DAB-3 HFDFcryptomuseum.com
  13. ^ USN Supplementary Radio Station Adelaide Riverozatwar.com

External links

  • youtube, The Bombing Of Darwin - 19 Feb 1942
  • youtube, WW2 Bombing Of Darwin
  • youtube, American naval fleet welcomed in Australia
  • Photo gallery of USS Holland at NavSource Naval History


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