HMS PHOENIX entering Woolloomooloo Bay
Photographer
Samuel J Hood Studio
(Australian, 1899 - 1953)
DateFebruary 1939
Object number00020624
NameNitrate negative
MediumCellulose nitrate negative, black and white
ClassificationsPhotographs
Credit LineANMM Collection
DescriptionThis photograph shows HMS PHOENIX entering Woolloomooloo Bay with the sailors preparing to moor at Garden Island naval base. In the background are the Royal Botanic Gardens. One in a series of 13 photographs recording PHOENIX's visit to Sydney - some 16 months before the submarine was lost in battle in the Mediterranean with all hands.HistoryThe Parthian class submarine or P class was a class of six submarines built for the Royal Navy in the late 1920s. They were designed as long-range patrol submarines for the Far East. PHOENIX was built at the Cammell Laird Shipyard, Birkenhead, UK; laid down 23 July 1928; and launched on 3 October 1929. After completion in 1930 it was deployed on the China Station in the British 4th Submarine Flotilla. During this service PHOENIX visited Sydney (in 1939) and was photographed by Sam Hood.
In 1940 the Flotilla was transferred from Hong Kong to the Mediterranean where they arrived in May of that year. The first patrols were out of Alexandria to cover the major Italian fleet bases. PHOENIX was ordered to screen a supply convoy heading for Alexandria from Malta when it successfully sighted and reported the Italian battlefleet. On 8 July 1940 PHOENIX (LT CDR G H Nowell, RN) fired torpedoes at the Italian battleships GUILIO CESARE and CONTE DI CAVOUR some 200 nautical miles east of Malta in position 35º40'N, 18º20'E. The torpedoes however missed their targets.
HMS PHOENIX left Malta for a patrol of the Sicilian coast in July 1940. Nothing was heard from the submarine after a wireless message transmitted on the night of 14th/15th July. On 16 July the submarine fired torpedoes at the Italian torpedo boat ALBATROS off Augusta, south-east Sicily. The torpedoes again missed their target and it is believed ALBATROS sank PHOENIX during a depth charge counter attack (position 37º15'N, 15º15'E).
Motto - Resurgam - I shall rise again
Technical details of HMS PHOENIX include
Length: 289 ft (88 m)
Beam: 30 ft (9.1 m)
Draught: 16 ft (4.9 m)
Propulsion: Diesel-electric; 2 × Admiralty diesel engines, 4,640 hp; 2 × electric motors, 1,635 hp; 2 shafts
Speed: 17.5 knots (20.1 mph; 32.4 km/h) surfaced
8.6 kn (9.9 mph; 15.9 km/h) submerged
Complement: 53
Armament included 8 × 21 in (530 mm) torpedo tubes (6 bow, 2 stern) with 14 reloads; 1 × QF 4-inch (101.6 mm) Mk XII deck gun
And the class was equipped to lay mines through the torpedo tubes
PHOENIX was the 18th Royal Navy warship to carry the name, introduced in 1546 for a 20-gun ship bought in Scotland and last used for a 1911 destroyer lost in 1918. It had never been previously been used for a submarine. After this boat was lost in August 1940 the name was used for an RN Air Station in Egypt and in 1949 by the RN Damage Control School at Portsmouth. Ships carrying this name had been awarded 12 Battle Honours.
Those who died on the submarine were:
AYRES, Frederick R H, Petty Officer Cook
BARKLEY, Kenneth, Act/Lieutenant
BARNES, Eric B, Leading Signalman
BARTON, Sydney W C, Able Seaman
BEDFORD, William R, Able Seaman
BENNETT, Clifford F, Stoker Petty Officer
BUNKER, Wilfred S, Stoker Petty Officer
CADOGAN, Timothy, Act/Leading Stoker
CLARK, George L, Petty Officer
CLIFT, Albert E, Stoker 1c
COCKLE, Austin W, Telegraphist
COOPER, William, Leading Stoker
DAVIES, Walter J, Act/Petty Officer
DEE, James C, Stoker 1c
DIGGENS, George J, Petty Officer Telegraphist
FAIRHOLM, Matthew R, Act/Leading Stoker
FARLOW, Charles A J, Able Seaman
GREAVES, Cyril E, Engine Room Artificer 2c
GREAVES, Stewart M, Act/Leading Seaman
HADFIELD, Eric R, Act/Petty Officer
HALL, Kenneth G, Able Seaman
HANNA, William J, Able Seaman
HARRIS, Edwin R, Telegraphist
HENDERSON, Malcolm G, Lieutenant
HIGDON, Reginald T, Able Seaman
HIGGINS, Alfred G, Stoker 1c
HOLLINGWORTH, George A, Petty Officer
HOWELL, Norman L E, Engine Room Artificer 3c
HUMPHREY, James E, Leading Seaman
JAMES, Albert E, Leading Seaman
LEONARD, Francis, Leading Seaman
LIVERSIDGE, Grenville A, Lieutenant
MATTHEWS, Robert, Stoker 1c
MORTON, Thomas W, Leading Stoker
NOWELL, Gilbert H, Lieutenant Commander
OLIVER, Aubrey G, Engine Room Artificer 3c
PARKER, Christopher, Engine Room Artificer 4c
PARRY, Oswald, Leading Seaman
PAXFORD, Frank J, Stoker Petty Officer
PEGLER, Frank, Warrant Engineer
PHILLIPS, Albert D, Telegraphist
POWELL, John H, Act/Leading Seaman
RANDELL, Victor C, Chief Petty Officer
RELF, Jack H, Stoker
ROBINSON, Herbert, Act/Leading Seaman
SMYTHE, Harold A, Leading Telegraphist
SPOUSE, Abraham, Leading Stoker
STAVELEY, John R, Able Seaman
SUMMERS, James, Stoker
THOMPSON, Stephen W, Stoker 1c
WARREN, George E, Engine Room Artificer 2c
WILLIAMS, Christopher, Stoker
WILTSHIRE, Morgan R, Stoker 1c
WINGRAVE, George C, Leading Seaman
(Source: naval-history.net)SignificanceThe Samuel J Hood photographic collection records an extensive range of maritime activity on Sydney Harbour, including sail and steam ships, warships, crew portraits, crews at work, ship interiors, stevedores loading and unloading cargo, port scenes, pleasure boats and harbourside social activities from the 1890s through to the 1950s. They are also highly competent artistic studies and views - Hood was regarded as an important figure in early Australian photojournalism. Hood’s maritime photographs are one of the most significant collections of such work in Australia.