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Lieutenant Page, Major Lyons and Lieutenant Davidson enjoy a beer after Operation Jaywick
Lieutenant Page, Major Lyons and Lieutenant Davidson enjoy a beer after Operation Jaywick

Lieutenant Page, Major Lyons and Lieutenant Davidson enjoy a beer after Operation Jaywick

Date1943
Object numberANMS1379[021]
NamePhotograph
MediumBlack and white photographic print on paper.
DimensionsOverall: 211 x 158 mm
ClassificationsPhotographs
Credit LineANMM Collection Gift from Joe Millane, image supplied by the Australian War Memorial
DescriptionMembers of Operation Jawick celebrate after the success of the raid from HMAS KRAIT. From left to right; Lieutenant R.C. Page, AIF, Medical Officer and operative; Major Ivan Lyon MBE, the Gordon Highlanders, Officer Commanding and operative; Lieutenant D.M.N. Davidson, Royal Navy Volunteer Reserve, Second-in-Command and operative. Major Lyons was the instigator and leader of Operation Jaywick both he and Lieutenant Page would be killed as a result of a subsequent mission, Operation Rimau. HistoryOriginally a fishing vessel named KOFUKU MARU, KRAIT was built in 1934 in Japan and collected fish from fishermen and ports around the Rhio Archipelago, transporting the catch to markets in Singapore. In early World War II the vessel was confined to port and was used by Captain Bill Reynolds to evacuate hundreds of civilians to Sumatra and rescue survivors of ships sunk along the coastline of Sumatra and Malaya. It was renamed KRAIT, a deadly species of snake, and soon was central to the highly successful covert Operation Jaywick in September 1943. Under the cover of darkness and disguised as a Japanese fishing vessel, it took 14 men, 5 British and 9 Australian commandos and Z Special Force personnel, to within 20 miles of Japanese occupied Singapore undetected. Three pairs of operatives in folboats (folding canoes) used limpet mines to blow up and damage seven Japanese tankers and freighters, totalling 37,000 tonnes. A few days later the raiders and KRAIT met the rendezvous point successfully and all members of the unit were returned safely. It was commissioned HMAS KRAIT in 1944. After the war KRAIT was sold to a British saw miller for the Borneo timber trade and was renamed PEDANG (Sword). In the late 1950s two Australians, in Borneo for a business trip, recognised the vessel and set up a public appeal and trust fund to purchase the vessel. It returned to Australia in 1964 and was operated by the Royal Volunteer Coastal Patrol. In 1985 it was transferred to the Australian War Memorial and restoration work was completed by the Sydney Maritime Museum to return it to its wartime appearance. It has been on display at the Australian National Maritime Museum since 1988 and is the focal point for an annual Remembrance Day ceremony. In July 2011 one of the last surviving members of Operation Jaywick, RAN Leading Telegraphist Horace "Horrie" Stewart Young passed away.SignificanceThe KRAIT has a long history of service in Australia and was very successful in WWII in an attack on Singapore Harbour known as Operation Jaywick. Despite its small size and age, KRAIT came to symbolise the extraordinary courage and resilience that characterised much of Australia's involvement in the war in the Pacific.