HMAS Melbourne by Timothy Hall
Sydney: George Allen & Unwin, 1982 ISBN 0868612847
A nice little time-capsule of a book, if somewhat slapdash in execution. Written by a journalist, this book was published just as HMAS Melbourne was being prepared for decommissioning, and is a combination of reportage and potted history.
In a series of intertwined chapters, Hall relates what it was like for the sailors and airmen to live and work on what was by 1980 an obsolescent ship, that was kept running more by hope, will and ingenuity than anything else. He also delves into the history of the ship, initially constructed as a "disposable" wartime asset, but like many of her contemporaries, sent off to new lives all around the world. There are of course chapters on the collisions with HMAS Voyager and the USS Frank E. Evans.
In a fairly businesslike manner, Hall describes the lives of the sailors and airmen when they are on board at sea. Explaining the watches, the roles of the officers and men, and the ironically cramped conditions for those aboard. He describes in detail the immense power and responsibility vested in the Captain, and how difficult it is to coordinate flying activities from a rolling pitching deck moving at over twenty knots. In the case of HMAS Melbourne, everything is made more difficult because the ship itself was never designed to last forty years, so by 1980 everything was breaking.
A large part of the book is devoted to the two accidents, and the subsequent Royal Commissions and inquiries. Hall himself seems to have no love for the Navy particularly, but he describes the first Royal Commission into the sinking of the HMAS Voyager in a very scathing tone, pointing out that an inquiry into a naval accident is not a trial, and the facts of the matter (that the Voyager was in the wrong and there was little the Melbourne could do to avoid the collision) should have exonerated Captain Robertson. Hall holds much the same scorn for the US Navy inquiry into the sinking of the Frank E. Evans, which was the worst type of political stitch-up.
There are better books to read than this one on both of those disasters, and the sometimes flippant tone that Hall uses when describing life at sea can be grating. The fact that this book falls between the posts of a history of the ship, and reportage of what sailing on her was like is also frustrating, as there is not really enough of either. The captions on many of the photographs are obviously wrong, which makes me wonder how much of the rest of the text might also be inaccurate.
One other irony: this book was I imagine written quite quickly after the decision by the Australian Government to purchase HMS Invincible as a replacement for the Melbourne, and the final few pages look forward to the passing on of status of flagship, which never happened as the sale fell through. So when she was decommissioned in May 1982, the Melbourne ended Australia's dalliance with aircraft carriers.
This book was a trip down memory lane, but I can't really recommend it as worth hunting out.
Cheers for now, from
A View Over the Bell