Warrego sloop takes on board Australian soldiers at Port Moresby

Warrego sloop takes on board Australian soldiers at Port Moresby

Jul 14, 2021 #australians
Warrego sloop

 

The “Warrego” sloop of the Royal Australian Navy (HMAS Warrego) takes on board Australian soldiers in Port Moresby, New Guinea. The Second World War.
The Australian Warrego sloop had hull numbers U73 and L73 and belonged to the Grimsby class sloops.
HMAS Warrego, construction began on May 10, 1939, launched on February 10, 1940, accepted into the Royal Australian Navy on August 21, 1940. The cost of construction is 220 thousand British pounds.

Main characteristics: displacement – 1060 tons (standard), 1515 tons (full). Length 81 m, width 11 m, draft 2.29 m. Power plant – Parsons steam turbines, two propellers, power – 2 thousand hp. The maximum speed is 16 knots. Cruising range – 7500 miles at a speed of 10 knots. Crew – 135 people.

Armament: four 102-mm cannons (QF 4 inch Mk XVI) – Mk. XIX bow and stern; quad mount of 12.7 mm Vickers anti-aircraft machine guns – later replaced with seven 20-mm Oerlikon anti-aircraft guns, two torpedo tubes of 533 mm caliber, depth charges.

Warrego sloop served off the coast of Australia (1940-1941) and in the Pacific Ocean (1941-1945), including New Guinea (1942), Lingaen Bay (1945) and Borneo Island (1945).

The Warrego sloop was withdrawn from the Australian Navy in 1966.



Source: Australian Department of Defense.
Photo source: www.flickr.com




Location: Port Moresby, New Guinea
Photo time: September 1942

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