Men of HMAS Perth to be remembered

More than 74 years after HMAS Perth I was sunk by the Japanese in the Java Sea, HMAS Perth III will lay wreaths at the wreckage site.

Her remains have been submerged in Indonesian waters for more than 74 years but the story of HMAS Perth's demise and the history of her crew remain alive for those aboard her descendant.

On Wednesday the crew of HMAS Perth III will pay tribute to their ship's predecessor Perth and that of USS Houston, as they sail over the wreckages on their way to a six-month deployment in the Middle East.

Perth sunk just after midnight on March 1, 1942 after being torpedoed four times by the Japanese during a battle at the Sunda Strait - a channel between the islands of Java and Sumatra in Indonesia.

Houston went down soon after.

Of the 686-strong crew aboard Perth, only 218 were eventually repatriated; having gone down with the ship or died as prisoners of war.

Perth III captain Ivan Ingham told AAP the history of their ancestor Perth is recalled often on board, with pictures of it scattered throughout the latest vessel and the stories of the men told regularly.

After leaving Australia last week, Captain Ingham said they also scattered the ashes of Gavin Campbell, who died in December last year at the age of 94.

Mr Campbell broke his leg badly as he left Perth the night it was sunk, and having avoided drowning he managed to get ashore where he hobbled along with an improvised crutch and splints provided by a shipmate.

After three weeks he was rounded up and captured by the Japanese along with the rest of Perth's survivors and worked on the Thai-Burma railway.

In 2013 there were calls for the wrecks of Perth and Houston to be preserved after reports that scavengers were looting the Australian wreck.

Defence said at the time that there were indications of further scavenging on British, Dutch and American warship wrecks throughout the South East Asian region.

There is now a campaign to properly document and preserve the wrecks with a dive involving the Indonesian government and the Australian National Maritime Museum planned for later this year.


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Source: AAP


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