The ship departed Victoria Dock in Melbourne on 5 August 1914, with Williamstown-based pilot Captain Montgomery Robinson aboard.[4] As the ship passed Portsea it was momentarily stopped by the SS Alvina but allowed to proceed.[5][6]
Just before the ship approached Port Phillip heads, the Royal Australian Garrison Artillery stationed at Fort Nepean was informed of the declaration of war with Germany and received an order to "stop her or sink her". Signals were hoisted, commanding the ship to halt. As the warning had no effect, a shot was fired across the bow of the ship from one of the fort's 6-inch Mk VII guns. This was the first British Empire shot of the war.[7][8]
The pilot convinced the ship's master that a second round would likely be directed at the ship itself, and the ship was turned around. The ship was taken back to Portsea where the crew was placed under arrest.[3][4][7]
Later in the war, the ship was torpedoed twice in the English Channel. The first time, on 20 March 1918, she was struck near Beachy Head and was towed to Newcastle for extensive repairs.[9] The second time she was struck near Whitby on 23 July 1918 when the ship was leaving port after being repaired.[9] The ship was torpedoed in the exact same area as the previous damage to the ship[9]
In 1919, The HMT Boorara was used to repatriate Australian troops.[11] The ship caught fire at Dunkirk and was repaired at Antwerp.[9]
In 1926, the E. Hadjilias shipping line of Athens in Greece bought her, renamed her Nereus and registered her on the Cycladean island of Syra in the Aegean Sea.[citation needed]
Loss
In August 1937, Nereus sailed in ballast from Moji in Japan for Port Alberni to load a cargo of lumber for the United Kingdom under charter to the Anglo-Canadian Shipping Co.[14] On 8 August, in heavy fog, she ran aground on rocks about 1,000 feet (300 m) south-east of Cape Beale on Vancouver Island.[14] The salvage steamer SS Salvage King from Victoria rescued her crew.[14] Within 48 hours of grounding, Nereus broke her back and was lost.[14]
^ abcdef"Torpedoed Twice". The Brisbane Courier. No. 20, 924. Queensland, Australia. 14 February 1925. p. 20. Retrieved 18 January 2023 – via National Library of Australia.
^Flewell-Smith, John (1916) [August to December 1919]. August–December 1916. p. 3. Retrieved 18 January 2023.