Listaplanow Aktualna

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Listaplanow Aktualna List of big modelplans (double format A1) published in MODELARSTWO OKRETOWE" No issueName of ship YearScale Sheets 1 Japanish destroyer "YUKIKAZE" 1945 1:200 2 2 Russian battleship "SISOJ VIELIKIJ" 1904 1:150 2 11-12 British heavy cruiser HMS "HAWKINS" 1942 1:200 3 12-13 Polish rocket boat ORP "SWINOUJŚCIE" (proj. 205, OSA-I class) 2006 1:72 3 16 Irish search vessel "CELTIC VOYAGER" 2007 1:72 2 17 Dutch coastal defence battleship "EVERTSEN" 1905 1:150 2 18 London dock's steam tug "HOTSPUR" 1897 1:48 2 19 Schooner "BLUENOSE" 1912 1:100 2 20 Italian destroyer "DARDO" 1940 1:200 2 21 Finnish torpedo boat "VIHURI" (russian G-5 class) 1941 1:35 2 22-23 American landing ship USS "TARAWA" LHA-1 1976 1:200 4 24-25 Cliper "FLYING CLOUD" 1851 1:125 4 26-27 American heavy cruiser USS "VINCENNES" CA-44 1942 1:250 4 9 Spec. British submarines "M" class: M-1, M-2, M-3 1925 1:150 1 9 Spec. Cannonboat from American Cyvil War USS "CHOSTAW" 1863 1:150 1 28 British torpedo boat MTB-34 (Vosper'71 class) 1942 1:50 2 29 Bulk carrier s/s "JOHN ERICCSON" 1930 1:200 1 29 Italian cruiser "LIBIA" 1913 1:200 1 30-31 Polish rocket boat ORP "METALOWIEC" (proj. 1241, Tarantul class ) 2010 1:50 4 32-33 Brigantine "GALLETA GIGINA" 1930 1:75 4 11 Spec. Polish submarine ORP "JASTRZĄB" (ex-USS S-25 , "S" class) 1941 1:100 1 11 Spec.-35 British modern tug "SD EILEEN" 2010 1:36 3 34 Italian battleship "BENEDETTO BRIN" 1905 1:200 2 36-37 British aircraft transport HMS "ATHENE" 1942 1:200 3 37 Polish submarine ORP "WILK" 1939 1:150 1 38-39 Sailng ship type POLACCA from Mediterranean Sea 1696 1:100 3 39 Polish steam tug "SOKÓŁ" 1946 1:50 1 13 Spec. Kuwait fire & rescue boat "MUBASHIR" 2010 1:25 2 40-41 British heavy cruiser HMS "SUSSEX" 1942 1:200 4 42-43 Polish rocket boat ORP "ORKAN" (proj. 660) 2012 1:50 4 14 Spec. Yacht CONRAD 45 class 1980 1:50 2 44 Four-masted venice CARRACK XVI 1:100 2 45-46 British seaplanes tender HMS "ALBATROSS" 1942 1:200 4 15 Spec. Polish fishing boat SWI-50 (ex-KFK class) 1950 1:40 2 47 US Coast Guard cutter USCG-20 ex. CG-83401 1944 1:25 2 16 Spec. British four guns cutter HMS "FLY" 1763 1:96 2 48-49 British battleship HMS "RODNEY" 1942 1:200 4 50 Polish submarines ORP "SOKÓŁ" and ORP "DZIK" (british U-class) 1944 1:100 2 51 German Kriegsfishkutter KFK-363 1944 1:36 2 17 Spec. Polish motor gun boat ORP S-4 (ex MTB-432 ) 1943 1:25 2 52 Korean "turtle ship" KWI-SON 1592 1:96 2 53-54 Russian corvette proj. 20380 "STEREGUSHCHY" 2013 1:100 4 18 Spec. French tartan "LA DILIGENTE" 1738 1:100 2 55 Japanese escort ships "ISHIGAKI" (Shimushu-class) 1941 1:150 2 56 Polish small coastal cargo ship type N3-S-A2 s/s "KIELCE" 1945 1:200 2 57-58 Arleigh Burke class Flight IIA destroyer USS "OSCAR AUSTIN" DDG-79 2014 1:200 4 19 Spec. Sailing ship type LAUTELLO from Mediterranean Sea XIX 1:100 2 59-60 Bathurst-class corvette HMAS "WALLAROO" 1943 1:100 3 60 German submarine "DEUTSCHLAND" and submarine cruiser U-155 1916 1:200 1 20 Spec.-61 Large fishing freezer trawler proj. B-418 "HUMBAK" ŚWI-206 1970 1:150 4 62-63 German battleship SMS "BADEN" 1917 1:200 4 21 Spec. British 12-gun cutter HMS "TRIAL" 1790 1:100 2 64 Polish patrol boat OP-204 (proj. 9) 1958 1:72 2 65 Polish small cargo ship m/s "PILICA" 1953 1:100 2 66-22 Spec. British Kil-class sloop HMS "KILLYBEGS" 1918 1:100 3 22 Spec. German submarine minelayer U-boat type XB U-118 1943 1:150 1 67-68 Polish fishing trawler type B-410 WŁA-305 2000 1:50 4 69-70 Polish minesweeper proj. 254K ORP "TUR" 1958 1:50 4 23 Spec. Polish fishing trawler "ŁAWICA" 1953 1:100 2 71-72 French light cruiser "GLOIRE" 1944 1:200 4 24 Spec. German battleship "GNEISENAU" 1942 1:350 2 73-74 British Modified Black Swan-class sloop HMS "STARLING" 1943 1:150 3 74 German submarine U-boat type XIV (milk cow ) U-459 1943 1:100 1 75 Schooner "SCOTTISH MAID" 1839 1:100 2 25 Spec. Japanese heavy cruiser "TAKAO" 1945 1:350 2 76-77 Polish destroyer ORP "GARLAND" 1942 1:75 4 78-79 American seaplanes tender USS "CURRITUCK" AV-7 1944 1:250 4 26 Spec. Japanese light cruiser "YAHAGI" 1945 1:250 2 80-81 Icelandic fishing vessel "HAFBORG" EA 152 2017 1:75 3 1914 81 French submarine "CURIE" / Austro-Hungarian SMS U-14 1:100 1 1917 27 Spec. German heavy cruiser "ADMIRAL HIPPER" 1943 1:350 2 82-83 Ticonderoga-class guided-missile cruiser USS "NORMANDY" CG-60 2015 1:250 4 84-86 Polish destroyer ORP "PIORUN" 1942 1:75 5 28 Spec. German battleship "SCHARNHORST" 1943 1:350 2 86 Swedish submarine "SÖDERMANLAND" 2018 1:100 1 87-88 Fairmile D motor torpedo boat MTB 736 1944 1:50 3 29 Spec. Japanese battleship "KONGO" 1944 1:350 2 88-89 Damen ADS tug 2411 "ATLAS" 2019 1:100 3 30 Spec. German anti-aircraft submarine U-441 / U-flak 1 1944 1:100 1 30 Spec. British submarine T-class HMS TURPIN 1945 1:150 1 90-91 Swedish Sverige-class coastal defence ship "GUSTAF V" 1944 1:200 4 92-93 American schooner USS "HANNAH" 1775 1:100 3 31 Spec. Japanese Akizuki-class destroyer "SUZUTSUKI" 1945 1:200 2 93-94 Polish coast guard ship proj. 918 SG-164 1995 1:50 3 95-96 Canadian modified Flower-class corvette HMCS "TRENTONIAN" 1944 1:100 3 Submarine Sailing ship.
Recommended publications
  • Durham E-Theses
    Durham E-Theses Battleships and Dividends: The Rise of Private Armaments Firms in Great Britain and Italy, c. 1860-1914 MARCHISIO, GIULIO How to cite: MARCHISIO, GIULIO (2012) Battleships and Dividends: The Rise of Private Armaments Firms in Great Britain and Italy, c. 1860-1914, Durham theses, Durham University. Available at Durham E-Theses Online: http://etheses.dur.ac.uk/7323/ Use policy The full-text may be used and/or reproduced, and given to third parties in any format or medium, without prior permission or charge, for personal research or study, educational, or not-for-prot purposes provided that: • a full bibliographic reference is made to the original source • a link is made to the metadata record in Durham E-Theses • the full-text is not changed in any way The full-text must not be sold in any format or medium without the formal permission of the copyright holders. Please consult the full Durham E-Theses policy for further details. Academic Support Oce, Durham University, University Oce, Old Elvet, Durham DH1 3HP e-mail: [email protected] Tel: +44 0191 334 6107 http://etheses.dur.ac.uk 2 Battleships and Dividends: The Rise of Private Armaments Firms in Great Britain and Italy, c. 1860-1914 Giulio Marchisio This thesis analyses the rise of private armaments firms in Great Britain and in Italy from mid-19th century to the outbreak of the First World War, with a focus on naval armaments and military shipbuilding. During this period, the armaments industry underwent a radical transformation, moving from being based on public-owned arsenals and yards to being based on private firms – the system of military procurement prevalent today.
    [Show full text]
  • WIFR Did Battleship Bismarck Try to Surrender?
    WIFR OCT 2010 FRONT COVER _WIFR OCT 2010 FRONT COVER 15/09/2010 13:28 Page 1 INTERNATIONAL FLEET REVIEW www.warshipsifr.com UK DEFENCE REVIEW & THE RN SPECIAL DID BATTLESHIP BISMARCK TRY TO SURRENDER? CHINA RISES AS USA FALTERS? WHY THE October 2010 £3.95 AUSTRALIANS NEED A SSTTRROONNGG RRAANN DANISH FLEET REVIEW...PORTUGAL’S PIRACY WAR...NAVIES LOOK NORTH...PAKISTAN’S FLOODS writing, alters perspective, and is Lef t , main image: ‘The End of therefore potentially controversial. the Bismarck’ by leading UK maritime artist Paul Wright RSMA. Having found the surrender angle I © Paul Wright. asked myself what else had gone For further information e-mail: untold? [email protected] In looking at already published Lef t , inset : HMS Rodney’s accounts of the Bismarck Action I Tommy Byers, w ho saw signs t hat realised that, while they covered Bismarck sailors w ere t rying t o DID BATTLESHIP surrender. the final battle - some quite vividly - none of them, in my opinion, quite Photo: Byers Collection. conveyed the full horror. When Tommy Byers wrote to Baron von Müllenheim-Rechberg, the senior mind by the time they had been BISMARCK TRY TO surviving German officer, in the chased and harassed by the Royal early 1990s to ask if any Bismarck Navy for several days. On the day of survivors had seen signs of battle it only took 40 minutes, or surrender attempts aboard their less, to reduce Bismarck to a own ship, the Baron could not floating hell. It was understandable help. Nobody among those who that while some of the German could have revealed the truth had battleship’s crew fought on - being survived.
    [Show full text]
  • NAVIGA 14. WELTWETTBEWERB Im Schiffsmodellbau "C" NAVIGA 14Th WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP of Ship Models Section „C“
    14. MISTROVSTVÍ SVĚTA modelů lodí kategorie "C" NAVIGA 14. WELTWETTBEWERB im Schiffsmodellbau "C" NAVIGA 14th WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP of ship models Section „C“ 20. - 27. 8.2008 Jablonec nad Nisou Czech Republic JURY Hauptschiedsrichter MATYSIK Dieter D-18/A/OS Deutschland NAVIGA Vertreter ŠVORČÍK Vratislav CZ-07/A/OS Tschechien Sekretär: TOMÁŠEK Martin CZ-09/A/OS Tschechien SM ČR Vertreter HANZLÍK Zdeněk CZ-16/A Tschechien Technischer Leiter TOMÁŠEK Zdeněk sen. CZ-02/A/OS Tschechien Kommission Nr. 1 Oberschiedsrichter QUINGER Wolfgang D-21/A Deutschland Schiedsrichter CIRHAN Bohuslav CZ-22/A Tschechien Schiedsrichter Van GELDEREN Martin NL-19/A/OS Holland Sekretär BITNER Aleš Tschechien Kommission Nr. 2 Oberschiedsrichter BONEV Georgi BG-01/A/OS Bulgarien Schiedsrichter TOMÁŠEK Zdeněk CZ-20/A Tschechien Schiedsrichter GIRALDI Giuseppe I-02/A/OS Italien Sekretär HOLAN Otakar CZ-11/B Tschechien Kommission Nr. 3 Oberschiedsrichter NOVAK Jouri UKR-01/A/OS Ukraine Schiedsrichter POZNAŃSKI Maciej PL-19/A/OS Poland Schiedsrichter KALMYKOV Dimitri BY-01/B Weiβrussland Sekretär ŽANTA Štěpán Tschechien Kommission Nr. 4 Oberschiedsrichter MIARKA Miroslaw PL-05/A/OS Poland Schiedsrichter HANUŠKA Ladislav CZ-25/B Tschechien Schiedsrichter CAUTY Jean-Claude F-26/B Frankreich Sekretär KOZDERKA Michal Tschechien Reserve Schiedsrichter BOGDANOV Alexander RU-17/A Russland Hospitant FABJANIC Mladen HR- Croatia C-1 No Name Surname Jun Country Ship Name Type of the Ship Scale Judge1 Judge2 Judge3 Total Score Medal C-1 121 Guosheng ZENG CHN VICTORY Sailing ship 100 100 99 99 298 99,33 GOLD Medal C-1 138 Yuriy KAZILO UKR PALLADA Fregate 100 100 98 100 298 99,33 GOLD Medal C-1 112 Pavel BRABLC CZ VICTORY Sailing ship 100 99 99 96 294 98,00 GOLD Medal C-1 139 Oleksandr MERKUSHEV UKR TRI IERARHA Ship of the line 66 guns 100 98 96 100 294 98,00 GOLD Medal C-1 140 Sergey POSTYKIN UKR ST.
    [Show full text]
  • Polish Contribution to World War II - Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia 12/18/15, 12:45 AM Polish Contribution to World War II from Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia
    Polish contribution to World War II - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia 12/18/15, 12:45 AM Polish contribution to World War II From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia The European theatre of World War II opened with the German invasion of Poland on Friday September 1, 1939 and the Soviet Polish contribution to World invasion of Poland on September 17, 1939. The Polish Army War II was defeated after more than a month of fighting. After Poland had been overrun, a government-in-exile (headquartered in Britain), armed forces, and an intelligence service were established outside of Poland. These organizations contributed to the Allied effort throughout the war. The Polish Army was recreated in the West, as well as in the East (after the German invasion of the Soviet Union). Poles provided crucial help to the Allies throughout the war, fighting on land, sea and air. Notable was the service of the Polish Air Force, not only in the Allied victory in the Battle of Britain but also the subsequent air war. Polish ground troops The personnel of submarine were present in the North Africa Campaign (siege of Tobruk); ORP Sokół displaying a Jolly the Italian campaign (including the capture of the monastery hill Roger marking, among others, at the Battle of Monte Cassino); and in battles following the the number of sunk or damaged invasion of France (the battle of the Falaise pocket; an airborne ships brigade parachute drop during Operation Market Garden and one division in the Western Allied invasion of Germany). Polish forces in the east, fighting alongside the Red army and under Soviet command, took part in the Soviet offensives across Belarus and Ukraine into Poland, across the Vistula and towards the Oder and then into Berlin.
    [Show full text]
  • Monitoring of Underwater Archaeological Sites with the Use of 3D Photogrammetry and Legacy Data Case Study: HMS Maori (Malta)
    Monitoring of Underwater Archaeological Sites with the use of 3D Photogrammetry and Legacy Data Case study: HMS Maori (Malta) By Djordje Cvetkovic Monitoring of Underwater Archaeological Sites with the use of 3D Photogrammetry and Legacy Data Case study: HMS Maori (Malta) Author: Djordje Cvetkovic Supervisors: Dr Timmy Gambin Dr Kotaro Yamafune Thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts in Global Maritime Archaeology Word Count: 25,499 words Department of Classics and Archaeology University of Malta March, 2020 Abstract A photogrammetric survey has proven to be a reliable method for documenting underwater archaeological sites. Still, the potential which photogrammetry could have in the monitoring of underwater cultural heritage has been just briefly discussed in the past. The purpose of this dissertation is to test if a cost-effective and time-efficient monitoring scheme can be created, for a modern shipwreck site such as HMS Maori, by using photogrammetry and legacy data. The credibility of legacy data (old video footage) was explored, alongside software capable of producing deviation analysis (Cloud Compare). Some of the key findings of this research confirmed that it is possible to geo-reference and extract information from legacy data 3D models by using the method of ‘common points’ (PhotoScan/Metashape). Also, a comparative study confirmed that deviation analysis could generate quantitative data of an underwater archaeological site. This research demonstrated that a reliable monitoring scheme could be constructed with the help of legacy data and deviation analysis. The application of this methodology provided a better understanding of the change that is continuously happening at the shipwreck site of HMS Maori.
    [Show full text]
  • CLASSE C1 Cometition World Championship for Ship Models Place Croatia, Dubrovnik Date
    CLASSE C1 Cometition World championship for ship models Place Croatia, Dubrovnik Date Competitor Model RB Country TOTAL SCORE MEDAL Name Surname Type Name Scale Judge1 Judge2 Judge3 Judge4 Judge5 150 Serhiy Postykin Ukraine Battle ship Ceasarevitch 1/96 99 97 97 98 98 293 97,67 gold 80 Celle Lucien France Fregate LA VENUS 97 96 97 95 92 288 96,00 gold 43 Zeng Guo Sheng China War Ship Victory 1:100 98 95 96 96 93 287 95,67 gold 149 Aleksander Merkushev Ukraine Battle ship Sviatoy Yevstafiy Plakida 1/100 98 96 95 95 95 286 95,33 gold 73 Josef Kopecký Czech Galeasse La ROYALE 1/85 90 95 95 95 95 285 95,00 gold 144 Yuriy Kazilo Ukraine Fregate Sv. Nicolay 1/96 94 95 95 94 91 283 94,33 silver 14 Anton Stoyanov Bulgaria Cutter Aldebaran 1/50 95 95 92 90 95 282 94,00 silver 81 Celle Lucien France Fregate LA FLORE 96 92 95 93 94 282 94,00 silver 235 Josip Rumora Croatia Yahta Royal yacht "Caroline" 1/48 91 96 93 93 96 282 94,00 silver 125 Lino Daziari Italy Fregata La Renommee 1/75 93 92 95 94 94 281 93,67 silver 20 Peter Ignatov Bulgaria Yacht Groβe Yacht 1/60 92 94 92 93 96 279 93,00 silver 21 Peter Ignatov Bulgaria Kutter Pollox 1/75 90 95 93 91 95 279 93,00 silver 17 Kolyo Guneshki Bulgaria Galeere Fulmen in hostes 1/100 92 94 93 90 93 278 92,67 silver 140 Vadym Goshko Ukraine Fishing Schooner Benjamin W.
    [Show full text]
  • Battleships and British Society, 1920-1960[1]
    A Global Forum for Naval Historical Scholarship International Journal of Naval History August 2004/ December 2004 Volume 3 Numbers 2/3 Battleships and British Society, 1920-1960[1] Mark Connelly University of Kent, United Kingdom This article will explore the image of the Royal Navy’s battleships in British society between 1920 and 1960. Although much of what follows might be said to apply to Royal Navy as a whole, particularly ‘glamorous’ vessels such as aircraft carriers, cruisers and destroyers, it is the contention of this piece that the Royal Navy’s battleships by virtue of their sheer size and power captured the public imagination more than any other type of warship. The study of the image of the battleship in popular culture provides a significant insight into the atmosphere of Britain helping to reveal and highlight attitudes not just towards the Royal Navy, but also towards politics, the empire and Britain’s role in the world. Christopher M. Bell’s recent work has revealed that the Admiralty had an ambiguous attitude towards propaganda and publicity in the inter-war years. Disdainful of what it regarded as cheap appeals to the popular imagination, at the same time the Admiralty realised that it had to maintain the profile of the Navy. As foreign navies expanded abroad and the RAF tirelessly highlighted its benefits at home, the Admiralty rather reluctantly became involved in publicity activities.[2] Ralph Harrington’s has recently the great importance of HMS Hood to the British people showing that it was far more than a utilitarian and functional piece of equipment.[3] This article seeks to expand Harrington’s thesis by looking at British battleships in general, and place them within the wider framework of British society between 1920 and 1960, the year in which the last British battleship, Vanguard, was scrapped.[4] The article will examine the political and military arguments behind British naval policy in general, and the attitude towards battleships in particular.
    [Show full text]
  • MARITIME Security &Defence M
    May MARITIME 2021 a7.50 Security D 14974 E &Defence MSD From the Sea and Beyond ISSN 1617-7983 • Seasn i Transition… • 1-to-1: Commander RNLN www.maritime-security-defence.com • • MCM Vessels & Mines MITTLER • The Adriatic & The Baltic May 2021 • Fuel Cells, BMD & Cyber REPORT Marine Systems The Netherlands’ HDW Class 212CD E. European scope. German quality. Built in Holland. Experience counts. thyssenkrupp Marine Systems is one of the world’s leading naval system providers. Our sub marines, naval surface vessels and maritime defence equipment is known for superior technological excellence, reliability and longevity. Based on over 100 years of submarine experience and cutting-edge technologies, we have already provided more than 160 highly capable and stealthy submarines to over 20 navies worldwide. Our engagement is not constrained to technological and developmental issues, but is founded on long-lasting co-operations with navies, procurement offices and industrial partners. See the benchmark for non-nuclear submarines at www.thyssenkrupp-marinesystems.com Editorial Britain’s Integrated Review: Photo: author Setting a Course for Change March 2021 saw the conclusion of a long-awaited review of the United Kingdom’s future security and defence policy with the publication of two important documents aimed at setting out a framework for the post-Brexit era. Whilst squarely directed towards defining “Global Britain’s” strategic relationship with the rest of the world, the review’s conclusions contain much of relevance to other western democ- racies struggling to chart a course against the backdrop of a fast-changing world order. Moreover, both documents provide some insights into the political and technological factors that will influence future global maritime developments.
    [Show full text]
  • Of Kagero PUBLISHING Books – 2019
    CATALOG of KAGERO PUBLISHING books – 2019 PUBLISHER OF HISTORICAL AND MILITARY BOOKS ORGANIZER OF AVIATION EVENTS Books published in 2019 by Kagero Publishing Top Drawings no. 68 – Curtiss P-40 B, C, D, E ISBN 978-83-66148-18-5 Language: English & Polish Pages: 28 Cover: soft Format: A4 Price: 18.99 € JANUARY2019 Naval X ISBN 978-83-66148-00-0 Language: English Pages: 80 Cover: soft Format: A4 Price: 15.50 € 2019 JANUARY Library of Armed Conflicts 06 – Spanish Air Force During World War II ISBN 978-83-66148-17-8 Language: English Pages: 182 Cover: soft Format: 170x240 mm Price: 20.50 € 2019 JANUARY Top Drawings no. 69 – The British Hunt-class Escort Destroyer HMS Badsworth ISBN 978-83-66148-19-2 Language: English & Polish Pages: 28 Cover: soft Format: A4 Price: 22.99 € 2019 JANUARY 2 Top Drawings no. 70 – The Soviet Light Bomber Petlyakov Pe-2 ISBN 978-83-66148-20-8 Language: English & Polish Pages: 20 Cover: soft Format: A4 Price: 18.99 € JANUARY2019 Top Drawings no. 71 – Macchi MC.202 ISBN 978-83-66148-22-2 Language: English & Polish Pages: 28 Cover: soft Format: A4 Price: 22.99 € FEBRUARY2019 Top Drawings no. 72 – Republic P-47 Thunderbolt XP-47B, B, C, D, G ISBN 978-83-66148-14-7 Language: English & Polish Pages: 28 Cover: soft Format: A4 Price: 18.99 € FEBRUARY2019 by Kageroby Publishingw Top Drawings no. 73 – Chance Vought F4U Corsair A,C,D,P, Mk I, Mk II, Mk III, Mk IV ISBN 978-83-66148-19-2 Language: English & Polish Pages: 20 Cover: soft Format: A4 Price: 18.99 € FEBRUARY2019 Books published in 2019 Connoisseur’s books – U-Boots’ escape to South America Secret Of The Gray Wolves ISBN 978-83-66148-23-9 Language: English Pages: 256 Cover: soft Format: 170x250 Price: 29.99 € FEBRUARY2019 Photosniper No.
    [Show full text]
  • Call the Hands
    CALL THE HANDS Issue No. 6 March 2017 From the President Welcome to the 6th edition of Call the Hands a newsletter for Society members and the broader Navy Family. If you feel others will enjoy it please pass it on. In many ways this edition is a tribute to the 758 RAN personnel who lost their lives in nine ships during 1942. That year has been described by the Sea Power Centre in a recent Semaphore (Issue 1, 2017) as the RAN’s darkest year. Last month we drew attention to the many significant 75th anniversary commemorative events planned for this year. The Occasional Paper circulated with this edition of Call the Hands provides full details of all vessels lost over the RAN’s 116 year history. 1 March 2017 marks the 50th anniversary of the introduction of the Australian White Ensign. To this end an article on the AWE and the history of its predecessor flags is featured in the Naval Historical Review (VOL 38 No 1, March 2017). It is currently being distributed to members. Another important story in The Review is the history of HDML 1321 which recently sank in Darwin harbour. Readers appreciative of a quality journal, free of advertising, may subscribe by joining the Society. Membership at $45 per annum represents extraordinary value. There are benefits. The Society is very successful at what it does and we are ambitious with a busy plan for 2017 and beyond. To achieve our many and varied tasks we need more volunteers near and remote. Our current team of dedicated regular volunteers is working at capacity.
    [Show full text]
  • Greenbank Naa Newsletter Grey Funnel Dits
    GREENBANK NAA NEWSLETTER GREY FUNNEL DITS Disclaimer: The material contained in this publication is in the nature of entertainment for the members. Contributions are acknowledged, with thanks, from service organisations. The editor expressly Disclaims all and any liability to any person, whether an association member or not. Views expressed may not necessary be those held by the Executive or the members. Editor: Tony Holliday [email protected] 0403026916 Series No. 3 Date: March 2020 Issue No3. GREENBANK NAVAL ASSOCIATION Sub Section Events: March 2020 - April 2020 March: Tuesday 3 March 2020 1900-2100 Normal Meeting RSL Rooms Wednesday 25 March 2020 1000-1030 Executive Meeti8ng RSL Rooms April: Tuesday 07 April 2020 1900-2100 Normal Meeting RSL Rooms Saturday 25 April 2020 0930 Anzac Day Service Wednesday 29 April 2020 1000-1030 Executive Meeting RSL Rooms Your Sub Section Executive : At the Sub Section AGM held on Sunday 9th February the following Executive Positions were filled; President: Michael Brophy Treasurer: Henk Winkeler Secretary: Tony Holliday Vice President 1 Terry McLean Vice President 2 vacant Social Committee Vacant Council Delegate Vacant Congratulations on those members who have been re-elected to the Executive Editors Request: Articles for the newsletter can be handed in at meetings, or by email: articles may be edited to fit the newsletter. The contents of this edition of the newsletter have been obtained from information provided from Len Kingston-Kerr whom I thank greatly, various publication publications and NAA information emailed in. 1 ROYAL AUSTRALIAN NAVY – PERSONALITY CPO C.S. Choules A former Royal Navy World War I and Royal Australian Navy World War II veteran, Claude’s life spanned the existence of the Australian Navy, which came into being on 1 March 1901, only two days before his birth.
    [Show full text]
  • Sikorski Collection Sik 001
    THE POLISH INSTITUTE AND SIKORSKI MUSEUM FILM AND AUDIO ARCHIVES Catalogue No. SIKORSKI COLLECTION SIK 001 The Polish Institute and Sikorski Museum Title: Warsaw 1935 – Roll 1 Production Date : 1935 Additional information : Length: Language: Black & white 843 feet Mute Description: Close-up of a child’s face, lying in a pram, women with children and prams strolling in the Saski Garden. Policeman on a traffic island, directing traffic, shot of a street (Aleje Ujazdowskie?) through a tram window, people at a tram-stop, street traffic, cross-roads of Aleje Jerozolimskie and Nowy Świat with a view towards the Poniatowski Bridge, shop windows (incl. Pakulski Brothers’ shop, Polish Textile Industry – Krucza Street, advertisement pillar on the street. Road traffic: pedestrians, passing horse carriaages, cars, newspaper stand, shop - fine foods, two men carrying several pairs of high boots. Plane and glider flying along the Vistula River, square in front of the Saski Palace, statue of Prince Józef Poniatowski, hansom cabs, motor cars, and bus passing in front of the Palace, passers-by crossing the Krakowskie Przedmieście, in long-coats and hats. City Tram Service tram stop, people inside the tram, policeman – number 1724 on his cap directing traffic; Crossroads of Marszałkowska and Krucza Streets (view of the Prudential building in the background), street traffic, street stalls (incl. newspapers and religious artefacts). Policeman with a cape directing traffic – rainy street with “K. Poznański S.A. of Łódź” store – people in front of the shop window. Three policemen smoking cigarettes, people in tram, women going in and out of the Pakulski Brothers’ shop, policeman directing traffic, cross-roads, passing bus, close-up of a woman’s face with a beret on her head talking.
    [Show full text]