Mar. 15, 1950: A collection of photos from a joint RAN, RNZN exercise as the ships came into Auckland Harbour.

HMAS SYDNEY leads a fleet entry into Auckland after combined RAN and RNZN exercises.
HMAS SYDNEY [III] leads 11 RAN and RNZN ships into Waitemata Harbour, Auckland
HMAS SYDNEY [III] and HMAS AUSTRALIA [II] lead ceremonial entry into Auckland Harbour
F625 HMNZS Rotoiti, F517 HMNZS Tutira, F424 HMNZS Pukaki and ahead of Pukaki, HMNZS Taupo (no Penant number)

In March 1950, a series of combined naval exercises occurred in the Auckland area, involving four Royal New Zealand Navy Loch-class frigates (HMNZS Taupo, Rotoiti, Tutira, and Pukaki) alongside the Australian frigate HMAS Murchison. These exercises also included the Australian aircraft carrier HMAS Sydney, destroyers, and cruisers, though the focus was on the frigates operating in Akaroa Harbour.  

Details of the Exercise 

  • Participants: The Royal New Zealand Navy and Royal Australian Navy participated.
  • RNZN Loch-class frigates: The specific frigates involved were HMNZS Taupo, Rotoiti, Tutira, and Pukaki.
  • Other ships: The Royal Australian Navy contributed HMAS Murchison, the aircraft carrier HMAS Sydney, and destroyers HMAS Bataan and Warramunga.
  • Location: The activities took place in Akaroa Harbour.
  • Significance: The exercises were a significant event for the RNZN and RAN, highlighting cooperation between the two navies in the post-World War II era.

Context

  • These exercises occurred just months before the outbreak of the Korean War, which would soon see several RNZN Loch-class frigates deployed to the theatre. 
  • The presence of an aircraft carrier like HMAS Sydney underscored the increasing importance of naval aviation in combined operations. 

Courtesy of Reddit post – https://www.reddit.com/r/WarshipPorn/comments/qyidpe/mar_15_1950_a_collection_of_photos_from_a_joint/

Following several weeks of joint exercises, the port entry into Auckland of the combined RAN and RNZN fleets in mid-March, 1950, was a significant local event – the largest gathering of warships in Auckland since WWII.

Seen in the first image, HMAS Sydney [III] leads the cruiser HMNZS Bellona, destroyer HMAS Warramuga, heavy cruiser HMAS Australia [II], Bay class frigate HMAS Murchison and four RNZN frigates, indistinguishable at this distance.

In the second image seven of the 11 ships involved in the Mar. 1950 Fleet Entry at Auckland are seen here itself, with HMAS SYDNEY with the Modified Dido Class cruiser HMNZS BELLONA astern, with heavy cruiser HMAS AUSTRALIA [II] fourth in line amidst two RAN destroyers, WARRAMUNGA [I] AND BATAAAN, and two RNZN frigates following, with the remaining vessels out of the image.

The third image just shows the aircraft carrier HMAS Sydney and heavy cruiser HMAS Australia

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HMNZS Hinau, first NZ Built Castle-class trawler and first RNZN ship to be built in New Zealand.

 

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HMNZS Rotoiti – 4-inch gun aboard the Loch class frigate HMNZS Rotoiti (F625) 1965.

 

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HMNZS Canterbury (F421), HMNZS Southland (F104), HMNZS Endeavour (A11), HMNZS Waikato (F55) and HMNZS Wellington (F69).

 



HMNZS Canterbury (F421), HMNZS Southland (F104), HMNZS Endeavour (A11), HMNZS Waikato (F55) and HMNZS Wellington (F69).

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. Royal Navy and Royal New Zealand Navy aircrew who tragically lost their lives here. Avengers remembered: wartime aircraft crew honoured with memorial in Wales

The monument to the three naval fliers is blessed on a bleak day in mid-Wales

25 September 2025

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PeopleHonours and awards

A tall stone monolith with a brass memorial plaque stands as a reminder in mid-Wales to three WW2 naval aviators.

More than 81 years after they were killed, the crew of a Grumman Avenger torpedo bomber have been remembered close to where their plane came down.

A wet and windy day seemed fitting for the unveiling of the monument, which rises eight feet above a mound outside the village of Llangynog in Powys, for Avenger FN 821 of 848 Naval Air Squadron, which was lost in foul weather in February 1944.

The aircraft was making a lengthy transit flight from Gosport to Kirkwall in the Orkney Islands.

The crew – all sub lieutenants – died when the torpedo bomber crashed in Rhyd Y Felin woods on a hillside north of Lake Vyrnwy.

Pilots William Sneddon Appleby, aged 24, from New Zealand and Ernest Hartley Green, 22, from Norfolk, plus Joe Lupton, a 21-year-old observer from Morley, near Leeds, were killed instantly. 

The cause of the crash has never been fully established – one wing was found torn off the aircraft, some distance from the rest of the wreckage.

Given the remoteness of the crash site, the remains of the Avenger were left for many years until finally cleared.

But forest manager Jay Williams, whose grandfather served as a navigator in World War 2, was determined the crew should be remembered.

“I felt that we should not forget this generation,” he said. “The whole project snowballed from a small memorial into a community event.”

Mr Williams worked tirelessly alongside former Fleet Air Arm pilot Tim Nicholas, now an instructor at No.1 Flying Training School, to ensure the vision was fulfilled with a permanent monument and plaque.   

After a blessing from RAF Shawbury’s padre Squadron Leader Harrison, there was a minute’s silence, after which a modern-day Avenger – the Beechcraft King Air operated by 750 Naval Air Squadron used to train today’s Fleet Air Arm observers – flew over the site. 

Taking the salute was Commander ‘AJ’ Thompson, Officer Commanding 2 Maritime Air Wing based at Shawbury.

“It has been an honour for me representing the Royal Navy to formally recognise the crash site for the first time in 81 years,” he said.

“The memorial will be a lasting legacy to the young Royal Navy and Royal New Zealand Navy aircrew who tragically lost their lives here.”  

It has been an honour for me representing the Royal Navy to formally recognise the crash site for the first time in 81 years.

Commander ‘AJ’ Thompson, Officer Commanding 2 Maritime Air Wing based at Shawbury

Commander AJ Thompson salutes his fallen predecessors

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