News
Back
Foundation Day oration

October 15, 2001

The following is an edited version of the speech given by CDRE Jim Dickson during a Navy Foundation Day oration in Victoria...

In the circumstances we enjoy today, it is very difficult for us to picture life in Melbourne in 1901 when Federation came about.

My mother was born in 1900 in Beechworth with an eye defect and from the age of three or four had to come to Melbourne every few months for treatment. Her siblings envied her and when she returned home a couple of days later they all wanted to know how many cars she had seen.

Compare that with today and it will give you some sense of perspective on the magnitude of change which has taken place. The change which has taken place in relation to matters maritime is also of similar magnitude.

The sea was this fledgling nation's link with the rest of the world; its highway for trade and commerce; its medium for transporting commodities, materials, produce, mail, passengers and cargo between ports within Australia and overseas; its major communication line, and its protective ring.

One-hundred years of extraordinary progress, development and invention including air travel and transport, computers, satellites and an explosion in communications and weaponry have seen alternative means introduced for many of these vital functions - but it is salutary and prudent to be mindful that even today 96% of our trade is still transported by sea.

Because the sea was such a lifeline for the nation a century ago, the maritime environment was far better known and understood than it is today and the Navy, its guardian and protector, was appreciated, respected and supported.

The sea was the key to international power and influence. In 1901 it was not in dispute that Britannia ruled the waves and it was that fact, and the authority and capability of the Royal Navy which had enabled Britain to reach out, find, develop, nurture and exploit the potential of the British empire.

The gold rush (which had seen Melbourne grow from humble beginnings in 1835 to the nation's principal centre), de-facto political capital and focus for immigration, inevitably attracted elements who were keen to avail themselves of any opportunity to relieve shipping of some of the precious cargo it transported.

Port Phillip was busy not only with traders and commercial vessels but also with scores of vessels bringing settlers and prospectors. That is why Victoria had the biggest Navy of six ships, the major unit being HMVS Cerberus, an iron-clad monitor, the hulk of which now resides as a breakwater at Black Rock.

Notwithstanding the paucity of men-o-war, the Navy was the primary instrument of Defence - a fact recognised by both the populace and, importantly, by those who wielded the power, the politicians.

So, what did Australia have by way of maritime Defence assets in 1901?

New South Wales had two decrepit second class torpedo boats. Victoria had the Cerberus and five torpedo boats. South Australia had the cruiser Protector and one torpedo boat. Queensland had two gun boats, one torpedo boat and a picket boat.

This was not really surprising. From the earliest days of settlement, Britain had accepted responsibility for safeguarding the nation's (and thus the British empire's) interests. The colonial states viewed this with different perspectives and some states, particularly Victoria, saw the need to make provision for their own maritime forces which could cope with a localised contingency.

Our founding fathers were very mindful of their responsibilities concerning Defence.

On March 1, 1901, only two months after the proclamation of Federation, the Australian Commonwealth Defence Act was passed, transferring the several colonial naval forces and establishments to the Commonwealth. For practical reasons the states were permitted to administer the units of the new Commonwealth Naval Force under the previous colonial state acts and regulations up until February 1904 when the Commonwealth was ready to assume full control.

Commonwealth Navy Headquarters were established in Melbourne and remained for 61 years. There are some in this audience who would be aware of this fact, but outside here I doubt that 1% of the population would know it.

It was partly because Melbourne was Australia's Defence headquarters that this city developed such an affection for the military establishment overall.

For the Navy this was particularly so. Visits by fleet units were frequent and welcome, the Reserve prospered, Navy uniforms were seen at all manner of ceremonies and functions and a close affinity grew between the public and the Navy.

This had its spin-off in support for the Navy and impact on recruiting and no-one will ever convince me that the move to Canberra, the closure of HMAS Lonsdale and the abandonment of the Melbourne Port Division have not had a very adverse impact on the Navy's public image and its attractiveness to the people of Melbourne. However, that is another hobby-horse that I won't ride today.

Prime Minister Edmund Barton selected the Australian national flag on September 3, 1901. Until this time, vessels of the Commonwealth naval forces had flown the Naval blue ensign. The ANF was used as the ensign from 1901 until 1911, when the Royal charter was granted and permission given to fly the UK White Ensign. This situation continued until 1967.

The 1902 Colonial Conference agreed that two Royal Navy cruisers, HMS Challenger and HMS Psyche, would be manned exclusively by Australians under RN command. My interpretation from readings of the history of this period is that Britain was keen to retain control and was happy as long as Australia developed a Navy which was a microcosm of the RN, whereas even in these early days, there were those here who wanted Australia to develop an independent stance.

In British eyes, Australian branches of the Royal Naval Reserve should be formed. Recruits to the permanent force would do their new entry training in HMS Psyche and their advanced training in HMS Challenge before being drafted to ships of the Commonwealth Naval Forces.

The Commonwealth Defence Act 1903, amending that of 1901, came into operation on March 1, 1904. From this date Australian Commonwealth naval forces were administered by the Commonwealth collectively. In 1904, the state's various Naval brigades were disbanded and a Commonwealth Naval Forces militia, the forerunner of the RAN Reserve, was born.

In 1905, the 1903 Defence Act was further amended to establish an Australian Naval Board of Administration with CAPT WR Creswell as director. This board provided centralised command and control of the 12 ageing Australian Naval Force vessels acquired from the colonies immediately after Federation.

The original 14 had been reduced by two as New South Wales' torpedo boats were found to be in such poor condition that they had been sold off.

CAPT Creswell, from the outset, proved a forceful director. He proposed a local squadron of three 3000-tonne cruiser/destroyers, 16 destroyers and 13 torpedo boats within five years, plus the manufacture of the necessary munitions in Australia (I like his style!).

The Australian government referred the Creswell proposals to the Imperial Committee on Defence, who received them less than warmly. CAPT Creswell was not assisted by the division apparent within Australia. Some politicians of vision, notably Alfred Deakin and Andrew Fisher, supported Creswell in his desire to establish a Naval force independent of the Royal Navy and able to safeguard the Commonwealth's interests in its own right.

Others were happy to leave the responsibility to the Royal Navy and see the Commonwealth's meagre economic resources used for the development of matters other than Defence. It is interesting to note that New South Wales, which had always enjoyed protection from the Royal Navy, was very happy to continue to rely on the mother Navy.

After a frustrating and fairly fruitless visit to England in 1906, CAPT Creswell returned to Australia and in 1907 submitted revised proposals for a flotilla of nine first class torpedo boats and six submarines. Even this he could not get the Australian government to agree upon, although Prime Minister Deakin put aside sufficient funds to build the boats if and when Parliament finally agreed.

In 1908 Andrew Fisher replaced Alfred Deakin as Prime Minister. Notwithstanding Deakin's provision of money for the building of torpedo boats, Fisher ordered two Australian destroyers from British shipyards.

CAPT Creswell proceeded with administrative and organisational arrangements to set the Australian Navy on a firm footing: like his successors down the line he needed the hardware to go with them.

By 1910, Andrew Fisher had come round to supporting Creswell's modified proposals of 1906 which recommended 19 destroyers. Construction commenced immediately using some of the money that Alfred Deakin had set aside.

In this year, the first two destroyers built in England, Commonwealth Naval Ships, CNS Parramatta and Yarra, arrived in Australia. In the following year, His Majesty King George VI consented to a submission proposing that the naval forces of the dominions of Canada and Australia should have the prefix Royal attached to the official title of their forces and from this time onwards the force became known as the Royal Australian Navy and the vessels known as Her Majesty's Australian Ships.

In the same year a universal training scheme was adopted calling for elementary training for boys under military age followed by some years of intensive training as adult members of a citizen's Naval or Army Reserve.

Commonwealth Navy office was established in Lonsdale Street, opposite the law courts in 1911, a four-member Australian Commonwealth Naval Board appointed, and after a decade of difficult groundwork, the Navy gathered steam and started to really make headway.

The now RADM Creswell was appointed first Naval member, a position he was to hold for the next eight years. The 'recommendations' of ADML Henderson, sent out from UK to advise on the strategic infrastructure needed for development of the RAN, were acted upon; and the first steps were taken to establish a Royal Australian Naval College.

The imperative for action on matters of Defence was emphasised by mounting concerns over the situation in Europe where tension between Britain and Germany was increasingly apparent, and uncertainty over the intentions of Japan.

That Australia moved with increased momentum from 1911 onwards proved very fortuitous - but it in no way justifies the fact that the years of frustrating endeavour between 1901 and 1911 have been virtually banished from the nation's Naval history.

The birth and infancy of the nation's Navy and the military forces required input from many. Men like Edmund Barton, John Forrest, George Reid and Walter Thring (the latter a Royal Navy officer of brilliant potential who was cast aside when Jackie Fisher became first sea lord). All, at times, made contributions of note, but in my view three men stand out clearly as men of vision - two of them influential political figures and one a Naval officer.

Alfred Deakin and Andrew Fisher, prime ministers several times in the first decade of the Commonwealth, were both very strong advocates of the development of an independent national Defence capability (ie what we now call self-reliance). They differed in terms of what they saw as the desirable composition of an Australian Defence Force, but they shared the same strategic concept, displayed a sound understanding of the need for strong maritime defence, and it seems to me to be a pity that many of their successors have had a lesser understanding of the importance of building and maintaining naval forces, capable not only of defending our trade links and sea lines of communication, but capable at the same time of exerting powerful influence in support of our foreign policy.

William Rooke Creswell, the third of the trio, must have been a remarkable man. After a promising start to his career in the RN, where he did quite well for himself financially through 'bounty money', he left for medical reasons and migrated to Australia in 1879.

At the time of Federation, he was Naval Commandant in Queensland and as early as 1899, had gone on record advocating the centralising of the states' naval brigades under a national authority. He grew in influence in the early years of Federation, and this led to him being appointed in 1905 as the first director of the Australian Naval Board of Administration.

From this point on he steadily exerted a growing influence on all aspect of the development and growth of the fledgling Navy, and one can only look back with awe and amazement that one man could survive for 14 years the innumerable changes of political masters and the bureaucratic in-fighting which must have attended the nation's early years as the competing factions jostled for a share of the meagre resources available.

Not only did he survive, he achieved, and by the time he retired in 1919 after eight years as the Royal Australian Navy's first Chief of Naval Staff, he had set the Navy on a very firm course. Photos and images of RADM Creswell portray him as severe and autocratic, about as happy looking as WG Grace when given out for a duck, but Australia owes a great deal to this man who has been seriously under-celebrated by the service to which he gave so much.

It can hardly be regarded as surprising if Australians do not generally know that their Navy is 100 years old this year. For the service has been less than vigorous in making this fact known and I think it is likely that many of those interested in such matters see this year as its 90th birthday.

How and why has this come about? I suggest there are several reasons.

First, the 'silent service' syndrome was a very real factor in days gone by. The Navy took an almost perverse pride in keeping silent, letting its deeds and people outside the service extol and advertise it and make known its virtues. It has shed this custom now, and in a PR-driven, materialistic world it is up there with the rest, promoting itself, communicating what it does, explaining how it operates and selling itself to the community it serves. It has to, as if it doesn't, it runs the danger of being submarine-like and disappearing.

Secondly, to such an extent was the Australian Navy the child of the Royal Navy that it aped its parent for the first half of last century - well into the 1950's. In uniforms, administrative practices, operational procedures and across the whole spectrum of Naval activity it was almost an exact replica of its mother service. There was very little singularly Australian about it before 1911.

Believe it or not, this extended even to the curriculum at the RANC where those of who went through that institution as 13-year-old entries grew up learning Naval history, not of the sinking of the Emden or HMAS Sydney's glorious action against the Bartolomeo Colleoni, or the Battle of Coral Sea, or the action in Leyte Gulf, but rather of Nelson's victories in the battles of Trafalgar, the Nile and Copenhagen.

As a teenager in those days one did not query or question the judgement of one's superiors in such matters; it is only when one grows up and realises the opportunities missed that one reflects on how idiotic it all was.

Thirdly, by the last quarter of the 20th century, with no WWII, or Korea, or confrontation, or Vietnam War to keep the services in the spotlight and with the well-intentioned 'peaceniks' starting to influence public attitudes and incline a generation against support for the Defence Force, there was a need to take opportunity to gather publicity wherever one could.

This was one factor which led to the concept of the fleet review in Sydney Harbour in 1986, billed and put before the public as the 75th anniversary for the RAN. Technically, it was correct in that it was 75 years since the title Royal was conferred on the Australian Navy and it was a spectacular occasion which few who saw it will ever forget. Regrettably, however, it had the effect of instilling in the public mind the belief that the Australian Navy was born in 1911.

There are many other reasons, but time constrains me to limiting my observations to these three principal ones. This belief that the Australian Navy's history began in 1911, as well as being inaccurate and misleading, is in my view an insult to those who laid the foundations of the service from 1901 through 1910 and fought the bureaucratic battles which enabled the service to play the significant part it did in WWI, which broke out so soon thereafter.

Of the Navy's effort in that conflict, Billy Hughes, the then Prime Minister, was to say that, "But for the Navy, the great cities of Australia would have been reduced to ruins, coastwise shipping sunk and communications with the outside world cut off".

These were fitting and appropriate words to draw the public's attention to the contribution the Navy made to the 'Great War'. Though the Navy continued to make a major contribution through the rest of the first 100 years of Federation it is difficult to find other acknowledgements as generous as Billy Hughes'.

What can be done to set the record straight? The answer begins with those of us here. We must take every opportunity to right this wrong and to encourage recognition of the fact that the Australian Navy's true birth date was the same as the Army's - March 1, 1901.

In the fullness of time, constitutional change may have an influence, for I see it as inevitable that Australia will become a Republic in due course and when we do, the prefix 'Royal' will disappear.

Whether that is before 2011 - 100 years on from the conferring of that prefix - remains to be seen. I hope I am there to find out as I hope all of you here in this room today will also be.