HMAS Manoora (1935)
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HMAS Manoora after conversion to a Landing Ship Infantry |
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Career Australia | |
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Builder: | Alex Stephen and Son, Govan |
Laid down: | July 1934 |
Launched: | 24 October 1934 |
Commissioned: | 12 December 1939 |
Decommissioned: | 6 December 1947 |
Out of service: | 1972 |
Reclassified: | 2 February 1943 (from AMC to LSI) |
Status: | Scrapped |
General Characteristics | |
Displacement: | 10,856 tons gross |
Length: | 480 feet |
Beam: | 66 feet 3 inches |
Draught: | 24 feet |
Propulsion: | Diesels, twin screws |
Speed: | 15.7 knots |
Capacity: | 1,230 troops (as LSI) |
Complement: | 345 |
Armament: | As AMC: 7 x 6-inch guns 2 x 3-inch anti-aircraft guns 2 x Lewis light machine guns As LSI: 1 x 6-inch gun (later replaced by 2 x 4-inch guns) 2 x 3-inch anti-aircraft guns 8 x 20mm Oerlikon anti-aircraft guns 6 x 40mm Bofors anti-aircraft guns (added later) |
Aircraft carried: | 1 x Seagull V aircraft (as AMC) |
Motto: | "In War and Peace" |
Badge: |
The first HMAS Manoora was a motor vessel laid down for the Adelaide Steamship Company by Alex Stephen and Son at Govan in Scotland in July 1934, launched on 25 October 1935 and completed in 1935. The ship entered service on the Cairns to Fremantle run but was requisitioned by the Royal Australian Navy on 11 October 1939, outfitted at Sydney for service as an armed merchant cruiser and commissioned on 12 December 1939.
The ship arrived in Sydney on 30 September 1942 and was converted to a Landing Ship, Infantry (LSI) by 2 February 1943. HMAS Manoora paid off on 6 December 1947 and was returned to the owners on 31 August 1949. She was sold to an Indonesian company in 1961 and renamed Albulombo. The ship was finally sold for scrap to a Japanese firm in 1972.
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