HMAS Barcoo (K375) - definição. O que é HMAS Barcoo (K375). Significado, conceito
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O que (quem) é HMAS Barcoo (K375) - definição

RIVER-CLASS FRIGATE OF THE ROYAL AUSTRALIAN NAVY
HMAS Barcoo (K375)
  • West Beach]] in April 1948
  • Morshead]] War Veterans Home, [[Lyneham, Australian Capital Territory]].

HMAS Barcoo (K375)         
HMAS Barcoo (K375/F375/A245) was a of the Royal Australian Navy (RAN). One of twelve frigates constructed in Australia during World War II, Barcoo (named after the Barcoo River), was laid down by Cockatoo Docks & Engineering Company, Sydney in 1942, and commissioned in early 1944.
Barcoo         
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Barcoo (disambiguation)
[b?:'ku:]
¦ adjective Austral. informal relating to the remote inland area of Australia: Barcoo sickness.
Origin
C19: from the name of a river and area in western Queensland.
HMAS Stuart (FFH 153)         
  • RIMPAC training exercise]]
ANZAC-CLASS FRIGATE OF THE ROYAL AUSTRALIAN NAVY
HMAS Stuart (FFH-153); HMAS Stuart (F153); HMAS Stuart (III)
HMAS Stuart (FFH 153) is an Anzac-class frigate of the Royal Australian Navy (RAN). She was built at Williamstown in Victoria, and commissioned into the RAN in 2002.

Wikipédia

HMAS Barcoo

HMAS Barcoo (K375/F375/A245) was a River-class frigate of the Royal Australian Navy (RAN). One of twelve frigates constructed in Australia during World War II, Barcoo (named after the Barcoo River), was laid down by Cockatoo Docks & Engineering Company, Sydney in 1942, and commissioned in early 1944.

Most of the ship's wartime service was spent in New Guinea waters; with primary duties including patrol, convoy escort, troop transport, along with the shelling of Japanese positions. In April 1945, Barcoo was attached to the Borneo campaign. She was the command ship for a landing craft division at the Tarakan landings in May, and directly supported the North Borneo landings in June, before being assigned to general escort and fire support roles.

After World War II, Barcoo was converted into a survey ship. In 1948, the ship spent over a week aground on West Beach, South Australia after bring driven ashore by a storm. Barcoo spent the rest of her career surveying the waters of Australia and New Guinea, except for periods of deactivation from 1949 to 1951, and from 1956 to 1959. She was decommissioned for the final time in 1964, and sold for scrapping.