The U.S. -registered Liberty Ship Starr King sinking after being attacked near Port Macquarie on 10 February 1943.
This is a list of Allied ships sunk by Axis warships operating in Australian waters during the Second World War .
Fifty four Axis surface raiders and submarines (both German and Japanese) carried out these attacks, sinking 53 merchant ships and three warships within the Australia Station , resulting in the deaths of over 1,751 Allied military personnel, sailors and civilians. A further 88 civilians were killed in air raids.
The definition of "Australian waters" used in this list is the area designated the Australia Station prior to the outbreak of war. This vast area consisted of the waters around Australia and eastern New Guinea , and stretching south to Antarctica . From east to west, it stretched from 170° east in the Pacific Ocean to 80° east in the Indian Ocean , and from north to south it stretched from the Equator to the Antarctic.[ 1]
A full account is given in Axis naval activity in Australian waters
Ships sunk by surface raiders
The six German and three Japanese surface raiders that operated within Australian waters sank 18 ships and killed over 826 sailors.
Date
Ship
Tonnage (GRT )
Location
Sunk by
Remarks
16 Aug 40
Notou
2,489
Noumea
Orion
20 Aug 40
Turakina
9,691
Tasman Sea
Orion
7 Oct 40
Storstad
8,998
Christmas Island
Pinguin
captured; converted to auxiliary minelayer
7 Nov 40
Cambridge
10,846
Bass Strait
Passat
sunk by mines laid
9 Nov 40
City of Rayville
5,883
Bass Strait
Passat
sunk by mines laid
5 Dec 40
Nimbin
1,052
Off Norah Head
Pinguin
sunk by mines laid
26 Mar 41
Millimumul
287
33 MILES EAST OF BROKEN BAY, NSW[ 2]
Pinguin
sunk by mines laid
19 Nov 40
Nowshera
7,920
Indian Ocean
Pinguin
20 Nov 40
Maimoa
10,123
Indian Ocean
Pinguin
21 Nov 40
Port Brisbane
8,739
Indian Ocean
Pinguin
30 Nov 40
Port Wellington
8,303
Indian Ocean
Pinguin
6 Dec 40
Triona
4,413
Nauru
Orion , Komet
7 Dec 40
Vinni
5,181
Nauru
Orion , Komet
8 Dec 40
Triadic
6,378
Nauru
Orion , Komet
8 Dec 40
Triaster
6,032
Nauru
Orion , Komet
7 Dec 40
Komuta
3,900
Nauru
Orion , Komet
26 June 41
Velebit
4,153
Indian Ocean
Kormoran
26 June 41
Mareeba
3,472
Indian Ocean
Kormoran
26 Sept 41
Stamatios G Embirikos
3,941
Indian Ocean
Kormoran
19 Nov 41
HMAS Sydney
n/a
Carnarvon , W Aust
Kormoran
both sunk in naval engagement
15 June 43
Hoegh Silverdawn
7,715
W Australia
Michel
17 June 43
Ferncastle
9,940
W Australia
Michel
9 Mar 44
Behar
6,100
Indian Ocean
Tone
survivors massacred
Ships sunk by submarines
The following table has been adapted from Appendix V of A Critical Vulnerability: The impact of the submarine threat on Australia's maritime defence 1915 - 1954 by David Stevens. Stevens' appendix lists all known Axis submarine activity in Australian waters during World War II and includes data on unsuccessful submarine attacks on Allied shipping, attacks made in Papuan and Netherlands East Indies waters and Japanese patrols in Australian waters which did not result in any attacks on Allied ships.
The 28 Japanese and German submarines that operated in Australian waters between 1942 and 1945 sank a total of 30 ships with a combined tonnage of 151,000 long tons (153,000 t); 654 people, including 200 Australian merchant seamen, were killed on board the ships attacked by submarines.[ 3]
Date
Submarine
Ship
Tonnage
Location
Remarks
20/1/42
I 159
Eidsvold
4184
Christmas Island
1/3/42
I 154
Modjokerto
8806
South of Christmas Island
1/3/42
I 2
Parigi
1172
Off Fremantle
3/3/42
I 1
Siantar
8867
200 nm NW of Shark Bay
4/3/42
I 7
Le Maire
3271
NW of Cocos Islands
5/5/42
I 21
John Adams
7180
120 nm SW of Noumea
7/5/42
I 21
Chloe
4641
35 nm from Nouméa[ 4]
31/5/42
M 24
HMAS Kuttabul
448
Sydney Harbour
Midget launched from I 24
3/6/42
I 24
Iron Chieftain
481
27 nm E of Sydney
4/6/42
I 27
Iron Crown
3353
40 nm SW of Gabo Island
12/6/42
I 21
Guatemala
5527
40 nm NE of Sydney
Straggling from a convoy
20/7/42
I 11
George S. Livanos
4883
15 nm E of Jervis Bay
21/7/42
I 11
Coast Farmer
3290
25 nm E of Jervis Bay
22/7/42
I 11
William Dawes
7176
15 nm E of Tathra Head
24/7/42
I 175
Murada
3345
85 nm NE of Newcastle
Torpedoed/undamaged (Wrongly claimed as sunk by I-175's captain, it was Allara badly damaged, but not sunk, that day. ),.[ 5]
25/7/42
I 175
Cagou
2795
NE of Sydney
25/7/42
I 169
Tjinegara
9227
92 nm SE of Nouméa
30/8/42
I 175
Dureenbee
233
20 nm off Moruya
Trawler
18/1/43
I 21
Kalingo
2047
110 nm E of Sydney
18/1/43
I 21
Mobilube
10222
60 nm E of Sydney
Tanker
22/1/43
I 21
Peter H. Burnett
7176
420 nm E of Sydney
29/1/43
I 10
Samuel Gompers
7176
500 nm NE of Brisbane
30/1/43
I 21
Giang Ann
?
30 nm E of Newcastle
8/2/43
I 21
SS Iron Knight
4812
21 nm off Montague Island[ 6]
Sunk while sailing in an escorted convoy, 36 of complement of 50 lost[ 7]
10/2/43
I 21
Starr King
7176
150 nm E of Sydney
11/4/43
I 26
Recina
4732
20 nm off Cape Howe
Sunk while sailing in an escorted convoy
24/4/43
I 26
Kowarra
2125
160 nm N of Brisbane
26/4/43
I 177
Limerick
8724
20 nm SE of Cape Byron
27/4/43
I 178
Lydia M. Childs
7176
90 nm E of Newcastle
29/4/43
I 180
Wollongbar II [ 8]
2239
Off Crescent Head
5/5/43
I 180
Fingal
2137
Off Nambucca Heads
14/5/43
I 177
Australian Hospital Ship Centaur
3222
24 nm ENE of Point Lookout
Hospital ship
16/6/43
I 174
Portmar
5551
250 nm NE of Sydney
Sunk while sailing in an escorted convoy
22/6/43
I 17
Stanvac Manila
10245
Off Nouméa
Two PT boats also destroyed
24/12/44
U 862
SS Robert J. Walker
7180
Off Moruya, two of crew lost[ 9]
The only ship sunk during the war by a German U-boat in the Pacific Ocean.[ 10] Attack on ship, sinking and rescue of crew described in the Australian Official Histories of the Second World War.[ 11] (Liberty ship )
6/2/45
U 862
SS Peter Silvester
7176
820 nm SW of Fremantle
In the Indian Ocean, 32 of crew lost[ 12] (Liberty ship )
See also
Notes
Battle Surface: Japan's Submarine War Against Australia 1942-44 by David Jenkins (1992, Random House, NSW Australia) ISBN 0-09-182638-1