‘We’re sure it’s the wreck of the Sydney’
Picture: HMAS Sydney
This report from the West Australian
The 66-year search for the wreck of HMAS Sydney on which 645 Australians lost their lives is almost certainly over.
A group of West Australians using just a grappling hook and an underwater camera last weekend found what they are sure is the Sydney, which sank after a battle with the German raider Kormoran on November 19, 1941.
Sydney was also the largest vessel of any country to be lost with no survivors during the war.
The 645 Australian’s are all shipmates of my father who was hospitalized whilst stationed on the Sydney. He and another shipmate were sent to Flinders Naval Hospital on the day prior to the Sydney sailing to it’s fatal appointment with the German raider ‘Kormoran’.
My very existence is thus based on the stroke of the ship’s Medical Officer’s pen as I was born after the war.
If it is the Sydney, then a 66 year old mystery can be cleared up and many a family can hope for closure on the death of their loved ones. It will, of course, be declared a war grave but cameras should give sufficient images to help us understand how a capital ship was clobbered by a merchant raider.
Just pause for a moment and think of the last minutes of those 645 Australians. Fathers, brothers, lovers, sons….dreams, aspirations, hopes…. all extinguished in a short 150 metre descent to the seabed.
Horror, terror, screams, cries, prayers….silence