AHS Centaur

|Ship armament=Installed in 1939:
1 x 4-inch (100 mm) Mark IX naval gun, 2 x .303 Vickers machine guns, 2 x paravanes, degaussing equipment

alt=A single-funnelled merchant ship at rest. The ship is painted white, with a dark horizontal band along the hull, interspersed by dark crosses. The number "47" is painted near the bow, in a black box above the line.
AHS Centaur following her conversion to hospital ship. The Red Cross designation "47" can be seen on the bow.
Career (British Merchant Navy) British Red Ensign<tr valign="top"><td>Name:</td><td>

Centaur</td></tr><tr valign="top"><td>Namesake:</td><td> The Greek mythological creature</td></tr><tr valign="top"><td>Owner:</td><td> Ocean Steamship Company
(Alfred Holt's Blue Funnel Line)</td></tr><tr valign="top"><td>Ordered:</td><td> 1923</td></tr><tr valign="top"><td>Builder:</td><td> Scotts Shipbuilding and Engineering Company, Greenock</td></tr><tr valign="top"><td>Laid down:</td><td> 16 November 1923</td></tr><tr valign="top"><td>Launched:</td><td> 1924</td></tr><tr valign="top"><td>Completed:</td><td> 29 August 1924</td></tr><tr valign="top"><td>Homeport:</td><td> Liverpool, England (registered)
Fremantle, Western Australia (actual)</td></tr>

General characteristics as merchant vessel

<tr valign="top"><td>Tonnage:</td><td> 3,222 gross tonnes</td></tr><tr valign="top"><td>Length:</td><td> 96 metres (310 ft)</td></tr><tr valign="top"><td>Beam:</td><td> 14.7 metres (48 ft)</td></tr><tr valign="top"><td>Draught:</td><td> 6.1 metres (20 ft)</td></tr><tr valign="top"><td>Propulsion:</td><td> Single screw; 4-stroke, 6 cylinder Burmeister and Wain diesel oil engine providing 1,400 bhp</td></tr><tr valign="top"><td>Speed:</td><td> 12.5 knots (23.2 km/h)</td></tr><tr valign="top"><td>Capacity:</td><td> 72 passengers (50 first class, 22 second class)
450 cattle
Cargo in four holds</td></tr><tr valign="top"><td>Crew:</td><td> 39 officers, 29 ratings</td></tr><tr valign="top"><td>Armament:</td><td> Installed in 1939:
1 x 4-inch (100 mm) Mark IX naval gun, 2 x .303 Vickers machine guns, 2 x paravanes, degaussing equipment</td></tr>

Career (2nd Australian Imperial Force) Flag of Australia<tr valign="top"><td>Name:</td><td>

AHS Centaur</td></tr><tr valign="top"><td>Acquired:</td><td> 4 January 1943</td></tr><tr valign="top"><td>Reclassified:</td><td> Hospital ship</td></tr><tr valign="top"><td>Homeport:</td><td> Sydney, New South Wales</td></tr><tr valign="top"><td>Identification:</td><td> Red Cross Ship 47</td></tr><tr valign="top"><td>Fate:</td><td> Torpedoed by Japanese submarine I-177 on 14 May 1943</td></tr>

General characteristics as hospital ship

<tr valign="top"><td>Capacity:</td><td> 252 bed-patients</td></tr><tr valign="top"><td>Crew:</td><td> 75 crew, 65 permanent Army medical staff</td></tr><tr valign="top"><td>Armament:</td><td> All weapons removed, degaussing equipment remained</td></tr>

Australian Hospital Ship (AHS) Centaur(I) was a hospital ship which was attacked and sunk by a Japanese submarine off the coast of Queensland, Australia, on 14 May 1943. Of the 332 medical personnel and civilian crew aboard, 268 were killed.

The Scottish-built vessel was launched in 1924 as a combination passenger liner/freighter and operated a trade route between Western Australia and Singapore via Indonesia, carrying passengers, cargo, and livestock. Centaur served in both civilian and military capabilities during her career, and she was involved in recovering German survivors of the engagement between Kormoran and HMAS Sydney.

Following her early-1943 conversion to a hospital ship, Centaur served as a medical transport between New Guinea and Australia. Before dawn on 14 May 1943, while on her second voyage, Centaur was torpedoed and sunk by a Japanese submarine off North Stradbroke Island, Queensland. The majority of the 332 aboard died in the attack; the 64 survivors had to wait for 36 hours before they were rescued. The attack resulted in public outrage as it was considered to be a war crime. Protests were made by the Australian and British governments to Japan and efforts were made to discover the people responsible so they could be tried at a war crimes tribunal. Despite this, it was not until the 1970s that identity of the attacking submarine, I-177, became public.

The reason for the attack is unknown, and the events surrounding the sinking of Centaur are controversial because it has been attested that she may have been in breach of the international conventions that should have protected her. Claims of discovery were made in 1995, but the wreck was later proven to be another ship. The wreck of Centaur was found on 20 December 2009.

Design and construction

Original design

In early 1923, the Ocean Steamship Company (a subsidiary of Alfred Holt's Blue Funnel Line) decided that a new vessel would be required to replace the aging Charon on the West Australia to Singapore trade route.<ref name=Smith9>Smith, Three Minutes of Time, p. 9</ref> The vessel had to be capable of simultaneously transporting passengers, cargo, and livestock. She also had to be capable of resting on mud flats out of the water as the tidal variance in ports at the northern end of Western Australia was as great as eight metres.<ref name=Jenkins281>Jenkins, Battle Surface, p. 281</ref>

Scotts Shipbuilding and Engineering Company in Greenock, Scotland was chosen to build Centaur. The ship's keel was laid on 16 November 1923, with the ship ready for collection by 29 August 1924. Constructed at a cost of £146,750 sterling, Centaur was designed to carry 72 passengers and 450 cattle.<ref name="Mill5-6">Milligan and Foley, Australian Hospital Ship Centaur, pp. 5–6</ref> Cargo was carried in four holds, and while the two decks within the hull were primarily for livestock, they could instead be used as additional cargo space.<ref name=Smith22>Smith, Three Minutes of Time, p. 22</ref> The hull of the ship was a 'turret deck' design; decks below the waterline were wider than those above water, and a flat, reinforced hull allowed the ship to rest on the bottom. Centaur was amongst the first civilian vessels to be equipped with a diesel engine.<ref>Milligan and Foley, Australian Hospital Ship Centaur, p. 2</ref> One of the most visible characteristics was the 35-foot (11 m) smokestack, the extreme size was more a concession to tradition than of practical advantage on a diesel-powered vessel.

In December 1939, Centaur underwent a minor refit in Hong Kong, receiving a new propeller and having a supercharger fitted to the engine.<ref>Milligan and Foley, Australian Hospital Ship Centaur, p. 14</ref> The supercharger broke down in April 1942, but could not be repaired due to equipment shortages and restricted dockyard access caused by World War II.<ref name=Mill25>Milligan and Foley, Australian Hospital Ship Centaur, p. 25</ref>

Hospital ship refit

At the beginning of 1943, Centaur was placed at the disposal of the Australian Department of Defence for conversion to a hospital ship. The conversion was performed by United Ship Services in Melbourne, Australia, and was initially estimated to cost AU£20,000.<ref name=Smith21>Smith, Three Minutes of Time, p. 21</ref>

The cost increased to almost AU£55,000, for a variety of reasons. It was originally intended for the ship to travel between ports in New Guinea and Townsville, Queensland, Australia. Increasing casualty numbers in the New Guinea campaign meant that the hospitals in Queensland would quickly become unable to deal with the quantity of the casualties and the nature of their injuries, so a longer voyage to Sydney was required. The Army demanded that additional facilities and conversions be added to the original plans such as expanded bathing and washing facilities, hot water made available to all parts of the ship through installation of a calorifier, the rerouting of all steam pipes away from patient areas, and ventilation arrangements suitable for tropical conditions. The unions representing the ship's crew requested improved living and dining conditions, including new sinks in the food preparation areas and the replacement of flooring in the quarters and mess rooms.

One of Centaur’s wards shortly after her conversion to a hospital ship When AHS Centaur was relaunched on 12 March 1943, she was equipped with an operating theatre, dispensary, two wards (located on the former cattle decks), and a dental surgery, along with quarters for seventy five crew and sixty five permanent Army medical staff.<ref name=Mill51>Milligan and Foley, Australian Hospital Ship Centaur, p. 51</ref><ref>Smith, Three Minutes of Time, pp. 21–2</ref> To maintain the ship's mean draught of 6.1 metres (20 ft), 900 tons of ironstone were distributed through the cargo holds as ballast. AHS Centaur was capable of voyages of 18 days before resupply and could carry just over 250 bedridden patients.<ref>Milligan and Foley, Australian Hospital Ship Centaur, p. 40</ref>

Operational history

1924 to 1938

When Centaur entered service at the end of 1924, the Fremantle–Java–Singapore trade route was being serviced by two other Blue Funnel Line vessels; Gorgon (which remained in service until 1928) and Charon (which Centaur was replacing).<ref name=Smith13>Smith, Three Minutes of Time, p. 13</ref> Centaur’s route ran from Fremantle up the Western Australian coast to the Bali Strait, Surabaya, Semarang, Batavia and Singapore. Centaur operated as a cross between a tramp steamer and a freight liner; as while she travelled a set route, stops at ports located along that route varied between journeys. From 1928 until sometime in the 1930s, Centaur remained alone on her route, but the increase in trade along this route prompted Blue Funnel Line to reassign Gorgon and assign the new Charon to work alongside Centaur.<ref>Smith, Three Minutes of Time, pp. 13, 15</ref>

A highlight of Centaur's pre-war career was the rescue of the 385 ton Japanese whale-chaser Kyo Maru II in November 1938.<ref name=Mill13>Milligan and Foley, Australian Hospital Ship Centaur, p. 13</ref> Kyo Maru II had developed boiler problems while returning from the Antarctic and was drifting towards the Houtman Abrolhos Archipelago, where she was in danger of being wrecked by the reefs in the area. Centaur responded to the distress signal and towed Kyo Maru II to Geraldton, Western Australia.

1939 to 1942

As a vessel of the British Merchant Navy, Centaur was affected by the British Parliament's 1939 outline of how the Merchant Navy would respond to the declaration of war, primarily submission to the Admiralty in all matters excluding the crewing and management of vessels.<ref name=Smith15>Smith, Three Minutes of Time, p. 15</ref> Following the outbreak of World War II on 3 September, 1939, Centaur was equipped with a stern-mounted 4-inch (100 mm) Mark IX naval gun and two .303 Vickers machine guns located on the bridge wings for protection against Axis warships and aircraft. She was also fitted with port and starboard paravanes and degaussing equipment for protection against naval mines.<ref name=Smith18>Smith, Three Minutes of Time, p. 18</ref> The weapons were removed during the hospital ship refit, although the anti-mine countermeasures remained.<ref>Milligan and Foley, Australian Hospital Ship Centaur, pp. 21, 53</ref> Centaur initially remained in service on her original trade route.

On 26 November 1941, a damaged lifeboat carrying 62 Kriegsmarine sailors and officers was spotted by an aircraft looking for the missing Australian cruiser HMAS Sydney; the aircraft directed Centaur to the lifeboat.<ref>Milligan and Foley, Australian Hospital Ship Centaur, p. 18</ref> Upon encountering the lifeboat, food was lowered to its occupants, while one person was allowed onboard to explain the situation. Initially posing as a Norwegian merchant navy officer, the man quickly revealed that he was the first officer of the German auxiliary cruiser Kormoran and that the lifeboat contained German survivors from Kormoran’s battle with HMAS Sydney seven days earlier, including Captain Theodor Detmers.

Kormoran under tow in two of Centaur’s lifeboats. The German lifeboat can be seen behind them.]] Unwilling to leave the shipwrecked men at sea, but afraid of having his ship captured by the Germans, Centaur’s Master decided to take the lifeboat in tow, after allowing nine wounded men aboard.<ref name=Smith16>Smith, Three Minutes of Time, p. 16</ref> During the tow towards Carnarvon, Western Australia, the lifeboat was swamped and partially sunk by rough seas: two of Centaur’s lifeboats were lowered to carry the Germans. On arrival in Carnarvon, the Germans were relocated to the number one cargo hold, where they were joined by another hundred Kormoran survivors collected by other ships and 40 Australian Army guards, which were then transported by Centaur to Fremantle.<ref name=Mill19>Milligan and Foley, Australian Hospital Ship Centaur, p. 19</ref>

Following the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor and the beginning of the Malayan Campaign on 7 December 1941, Centaur’s run was curtailed to Broome, Western Australia. On 6 October 1942, Centaur was ordered to sail to Queensland, where she began runs between the east coast of Australia and New Guinea, carrying war materiel.<ref>Milligan and Foley, Australian Hospital Ship Centaur, p. 26</ref>

1943

Following Japan's entry into World War II, it became clear that the three hospital ships currently serving Australia—Manunda, Wanganella, and Oranje—would not be able to operate in the shallow waters typical of Maritime Southeast Asia, so a new hospital ship would be required.<ref name=Smith19>Smith, Three Minutes of Time, p. 19</ref> Of the Australian Merchant Navy vessels able to operate in this region, none were suitable for conversion to a hospital ship, and a request to the British Ministry of Shipping placed Centaur at the disposal of the Australian military on 4 January 1943. The conversion work began on 9 January and Centaur was commissioned as an Australian Hospital Ship on 1 March. Data on the ship's identifying markings and the layout of features such as funnel and masts was provided to the International Committee of the Red Cross during the first week of February 1943, who passed this on to the Japanese on 5 February. This information was also circulated and promoted by the press and media.<ref>Goodman, Our War Nurses, p. 194</ref>

During her conversion, Centaur was painted with the markings of a hospital ship as detailed in Article 5 of the 10th section of the Hague Convention of 1907; white hull with a green band interspersed by three red crosses on each flank of the hull, white superstructure, multiple large red crosses positioned so that the ship's status would be visible from both sea and air, and the identification number 47 on her bows.<ref>Milligan and Foley, Australian Hospital Ship Centaur, pp. 43–4</ref> At night, the markings were illuminated by a combination of internal and external lights.<ref>Milligan and Foley, Australian Hospital Ship Centaur, p. 44</ref>

Centaur entered operation as a hospital ship on 12 March 1943.<ref name=Smith23>Smith, Three Minutes of Time, p. 23</ref> The early stages of Centaur's first voyage as a hospital ship were test and transport runs; the initial run from Melbourne to Sydney resulted in the Master, Chief Engineer, and Chief Medical Officer composing a long list of defects requiring attention.<ref>Milligan and Foley, Australian Hospital Ship Centaur, p. 52</ref> Following repairs, she conducted a test run, transporting wounded servicemen from Townsville to Brisbane to ensure that she was capable of fulfilling the role of a medical vessel. Once this had been ascertained, Centaur was tasked with the delivery of medical personnel to Port Moresby, New Guinea, returning to Brisbane with Australian and American wounded along with a small number of wounded Japanese prisoners of war.<ref name=Smith24>Smith, Three Minutes of Time, p. 24</ref>

Arriving in Sydney on 8 May 1943, Centaur was re-provisioned at Darling Harbour, before departing for Cairns, Queensland on 12 May 1943.<ref name=Smith25>Smith, Three Minutes of Time, p. 25</ref> From there, her destination was again New Guinea. On board at the time were 74 crew, 8 Army officers, 12 female Army nurses, 45 other Army personnel, 192 soldiers from the 2/12th Field Ambulance, and 1 Torres Strait ship pilot.<ref name=Jenkins278>Jenkins, Battle Surface, p. 278</ref><ref name=Smith27>Smith, Three Minutes of Time, p. 27</ref> Most of the female nurses had transferred from the hospital ship Oranje,<ref>Adam-Smith, Australian Women at War, p. 176</ref> while the male Army personnel assigned to the ship aboard were all medical staff.<ref>Milligan and Foley, Australian Hospital Ship Centaur, p. 198</ref> During the loading process there was an incident when the ambulance drivers attached to the 2/12th attempted to bring their rifles and personal supplies of ammunition aboard. This was met with disapproval from Centaur’s Master and Chief Medical Officer, and raised concerns amongst the crew and wharf labourers that Centaur would be transporting military supplies or commandos to New Guinea: the rifles were not allowed onboard until Centaur’s Master received official reassurance that the ambulance drivers were allowed to carry weapons under the Hague Convention (specifically Article 8), as they were used "for the maintenance of order and the defence of the wounded."<ref name="Mill76-7">Milligan and Foley, Australian Hospital Ship Centaur, pp. 76–7</ref> The remaining cargo was searched by the crew and labourers for additional weapons and munitions.

Sinking

Events

At approximately 4:10 a.m. on 14 May 1943, while on her second run from Sydney to Port Moresby, Centaur was torpedoed by an unsighted submarine<ref name=Smith28>Smith, Three Minutes of Time, p. 28</ref> The torpedo struck the portside oil fuel tank approximately two metres below the waterline, creating a hole 8 to 10 metres (26 to 33 ft) across, igniting the fuel, and setting the ship on fire from the bridge aft.<ref>Milligan and Foley, Australian Hospital Ship Centaur, p. 104</ref> Many of those onboard were immediately killed by concussion or burned to death.<ref>Milligan and Foley, Australian Hospital Ship Centaur, p. 105</ref> Centaur quickly took on water through the impact site, rolled to port, then began to sink bow-first in 2,000 metres (6,600 ft) of water,(II) submerging completely in less than three minutes. The rapid sinking prevented the deployment of lifeboats, although two broke off from Centaur as she sank, along with several damaged liferafts.<ref>Milligan and Foley, Australian Hospital Ship Centaur, p. 128</ref>

According to the position extrapolated by Second Officer Richard G. Rippon from the 4:00 a.m. dead reckoning position, Centaur was attacked approximately 24 nautical miles (44 km) east-northeast of Point Lookout, North Stradbroke Island, Queensland.<ref name=Stevens358>Stevens, David (2005). A Critical Vulnerability, p. 358</ref><ref>Smith, Three Minutes of Time, p. 38</ref> Doubts were cast on the accuracy of both the calculated point of sinking and the dead reckoning position, but the 2009 discovery of the wreck found both to be correct, with Centaur located within 1 nautical mile (1.9 km) of Rippon's coordinates.<ref name=Mill238.9>Milligan & Foley, Australian Hospital Ship Centaur, pp. 238-9</ref><ref name=Fraser>Fraser, Discovery proves maligned navigator got it right</ref>

Survivors

Survivor breakdown<ref>Numerical comparison of crew and survivor statistics. Smith, Three Minutes of Time, pp. 27, 34</ref>
Group Embarked Survived
Crew(III) 75 30
Army officers 8 0
Army nurses 12 1
2/12th Field Ambulance 192 32
Other Army 45 1
Total 332 64

Of the 332 persons onboard at the time of the sinking, only 64 survivors were rescued. At the time of the attack, most of the crew and passengers were asleep and had little chance to escape. It was estimated that up to 200 people may have been alive at the time Centaur submerged.<ref name=Mill122>Milligan and Foley, Australian Hospital Ship Centaur, p. 122</ref> Several who made it off the ship later died from shrapnel wounds or burns, while others were unable to find support and drowned.<ref>Jenkins, Battle Surface, p. 279</ref>

The survivors spent 36 hours in the water, using barrels, wreckage, and the two damaged lifeboats for flotation. During this time, they drifted approximately 19.6 nautical miles (36.3 km) north east of Centaur’s calculated point of sinking and spread out over an area of 2 nautical miles (3.7 km).<ref name=Gill258>Gill, Royal Australian Navy, 1942–1945, p. 258</ref><ref>Smith, Three Minutes of Time, p. 26</ref> At least four ships and several aircraft were seen by the survivors, but their attention was not attracted.<ref name=Good195>Goodman, Our War Nurses, p. 195</ref>

At the time of rescue, the survivors had gathered into two large and three small groups, with several more floating alone. Amongst those rescued were Sister Ellen Savage, the only surviving nurse from twelve aboard, Leslie Outridge, the only surviving doctor from eighteen aboard, Richard G. Rippon, second officer and most senior surviving crewmember, and Richard Salt, the Torres Strait ship pilot.<ref>Smith, Three Minutes of Time, pp. 34, 54–7</ref><ref>Milligan and Foley, Australian Hospital Ship Centaur, p. 156</ref> In 1944, Ellen Savage was presented with the George Medal for her role during the 36-hour wait for rescue; providing medical care, boosting morale, and displaying great personal courage.<ref>Milligan and Foley, Australian Hospital Ship Centaur, p. 250</ref><ref>Шаблон:LondonGazette</ref>

Rescue

Sister Ellen Savage was the sole survivor of the 12 female nurses on board Centaur at the time of the ship's sinking On the morning of 15 May 1943, the American destroyer USS Mugford departed Brisbane to escort the 11,063 ton New Zealand freighter Sussex on the first stage of the latter's trans-Tasman voyage.<ref>Milligan and Foley, Australian Hospital Ship Centaur, pp. 144–5</ref> At 2:00 p.m., a lookout aboard Mugford reported an object on the horizon, and at the same time a Royal Australian Air Force Avro Anson of No. 71 Squadron flying ahead on anti-submarine watch dived towards the object. The aircraft returned to the two ships and signalled that there were shipwreck survivors in the water requiring rescue. Mugford’s commanding officer ordered Sussex to continue alone while Mugford collected the survivors.<ref name=Gill257>Gill, Royal Australian Navy, 1942–1945, p. 257</ref><ref name=Smith33>Smith, Three Minutes of Time, p. 33</ref> Marksmen were positioned around the ship to shoot sharks, while seamen stood ready to dive in and assist the wounded.<ref name=Mill149>Milligan and Foley, Australian Hospital Ship Centaur, p. 149</ref> Mugford’s medical staff was present to inspect each person as they came aboard and provide necessary medical care. The American crew learned from the first group of survivors that they were from the hospital ship Centaur.

At 2:14 p.m., Mugford made contact with the Naval Officer-in-Charge in Brisbane, and announced that the ship was recovering survivors from Centaur at 27°03′S 154°12′E / 27.05°S 154.2°E / -27.05; 154.2, the first that anyone in Australia had knowledge of the attack on the hospital ship.<ref name=Smith34>Smith, Three Minutes of Time, p. 34</ref><ref>Milligan & Foley, Australian Hospital Ship Centaur, p. 150</ref> The rescue of the 64 survivors took an hour and twenty minutes, although Mugford remained in the area until dark, searching an area of approximately 7 by 14 nautical miles (13 by 26 km) for additional survivors.<ref>Milligan and Foley, Australian Hospital Ship Centaur, p. 153</ref> After darkness fell, Mugford returned to Brisbane, arriving shortly before midnight. Further searches of the waters off North Stradbroke Island were made by USS Helm during the night of 15 May until 6:00 p.m. on 16 May, and by HMAS Lithgow and four motor torpedo boats from 16 to 21 May, with neither search finding more survivors.<ref>Smith, Three Minutes of Time, p. 35</ref>

Attacker

At the time of the attack, none of Centaur’s crew witnessed who or what had attacked the ship. However, due to the position of Centaur at the time of the attack, the distance from shore, and the depth, it was concluded that she was torpedoed by one of the Japanese submarines known to be operating off the Australian east coast at the time.<ref name=Gill259>Gill, Royal Australian Navy, 1942–1945, p. 259</ref> Several survivors later claimed to have heard the attacking submarine moving on the surface while they were adrift, and the submarine was seen by the ship's cook, Francis Martin, who was floating alone on a hatch cover, out of sight from the main cluster of survivors.<ref name=Smith29>Smith, Three Minutes of Time, p. 29</ref> Martin described the submarine to Naval Intelligence following the survivors' return to land; his description matched the profile of a KD7 type Kaidai class submarine of the Imperial Japanese Navy.

I-176, a KD7 type Kaidai class submarine — the three suspected attackers were all of this type. At the time of the attack, three KD7 Kaidais were operating off Australia's east coast: I-177 under the command of Hajime Nakagawa, I-178 under Hidejiro Utsuki, and I-180 under Toshio Kusaka.<ref>Milligan and Foley, Australian Hospital Ship Centaur, p. 201</ref> None of these submarines survived the war; I-177 was sunk by USS Samuel S. Miles on 3 October 1944,<ref>Milligan and Foley, Australian Hospital Ship Centaur, p. 247</ref> I-178 by USS Patterson on 25 August 1943,<ref name=Gill260>Gill, Royal Australian Navy, 1942–1945, p. 260</ref> and I-180 by USS Gilmore on 26 April 1944.<ref>Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships, vol 3, p. 100</ref> Kusaka and Nakagawa were transferred to other submarines before the loss of I-180 and I-177 respectively, but Utsuki and I-178 were sunk while returning from the patrol off the coast of Australia.<ref>Milligan and Foley, Australian Hospital Ship Centaur, pp. 201–2</ref>

In December 1943, following official protests, the Japanese government issued a statement formally denying responsibility for the sinking of Centaur.<ref name=Frame188>Frame,. No Pleasure Cruise, p. 188</ref> Records provided by the Japanese following the war also did not acknowledge responsibility. Although Centaur’s sinking was a war crime, nobody was tried for sinking the hospital ship. Investigations into the attack were conducted between 1944 and 1948, and included the interrogation of the commanders of the submarines operating in Australian waters at the time, their superiors, plus junior officers and crewmen from the submarines who had survived the war. Although several of the investigators suspected that Nakagawa and I-177 were most likely responsible, they were unable to establish this beyond reasonable doubt, and the Centaur case file was closed on 14 December 1948 without any charges laid.<ref name="Mill196-214">Milligan and Foley, Australian Hospital Ship Centaur, pp. 196–214</ref>

Historians were divided on which submarine was responsible.<ref name="Mill214-5">Milligan and Foley, Australian Hospital Ship Centaur, pp. 214–5</ref> In Royal Australian Navy, 1942–1945, published in 1968 as part of the series detailing the Australian official history of World War II, George Hermon Gill concluded that either I-178 or I-180 was responsible; the former was more likely as she had served in Australian waters the longest of any Japanese submarine at the time, but had claimed no kills in the three-month period surrounding Centaur’s sinking. However, in 1972, Jürgen Rohwer made the claim in Chronology of the war at sea that I-177 torpedoed Centaur, based on a Japanese report stating that I-177 had attacked a ship on 14 May 1943 in the area the hospital ship had sunk.<ref>Rohwer and Hümmelchen, Chronology of the war at sea, 1939–1945, p. 201</ref> Rear Admiral Kaneyoshi Sakamoto, who had shown Rohwer the report, stated that Nakagawa and I-177 were responsible for the attack on Centaur in his 1979 book History of Submarine Warfare.

As an official history of the Japanese Navy, Sakamoto's work was considered to be official admission of the attacking submarine's identity. Subsequently, most sources assumed as fact Nakagawa's and I-177’s role in the loss of Centaur.<ref>Dennis et al, The Oxford Companion to Australian Military History, p. 124</ref> Nakagawa refused to speak on the subject of the attack on Centaur following the war crimes investigation at the end of World War II, even to defend himself or deny the claims made by Rohwer's and Sakamoto's works, and died in 1991.<ref name="Jenkins284-5">Jenkins, Battle Surface, pp. 284–5</ref>

Reaction

A propaganda poster calling for Australians to avenge the sinking of Centaur

Public reaction

The media were notified of Centaur’s sinking on 17 May 1943, but were ordered not to release the news until it had been announced in the South West Pacific Area's General Headquarters dispatch at midday on 18 May, and in Parliament by Prime Minister John Curtin that afternoon.<ref>Milligan and Foley, Australian Hospital Ship Centaur, pp. 169–71</ref> News of the attack made front pages throughout the world, including The Times of London, The New York Times, and the Montreal Gazette.<ref>Milligan and Foley, Australian Hospital Ship Centaur, p. 175</ref> In some newspapers, the news took precedence over the 'Dambuster' raids performed in Europe by No. 617 Squadron RAF.<ref name=Wil23>Wilson, Sunken Hearts, p. 23</ref>

The initial public reaction to the attack on Centaur was one of outrage, significantly different to that displayed following the loss of Australian warships or merchant vessels.<ref name="Frame186-7">Frame, No Pleasure Cruise, pp. 186–7</ref> As a hospital ship, the attack was a breach of the tenth section of the Hague Convention of 1907, and as such was a war crime.<ref name=Frame187>Frame, No Pleasure Cruise, p. 187</ref> The sinking of Centaur drew strong reactions from both Prime Minister Curtin and General Douglas MacArthur. Curtin stated that the sinking was "an entirely inexcusable act, undertaken in violation of the convention to which Japan is a party and of all the principles of common humanity.",<ref>Adam-Smith, Australian Women at War, p. 174</ref> while MacArthur reflected the common Australian view when he stated that the sinking was an example of Japanese "limitless savagery".<ref>McKernan, All In:, pp. 134–5</ref> Politicians urged the public to use their rage to fuel the war effort, and Centaur became a symbol of Australia's determination to defeat what appeared to be a brutal and uncompromising enemy.<ref name=Mill179>Milligan and Foley, Australian Hospital Ship Centaur, p. 179</ref><ref name=DVA>Department of Veteran's Affairs, Sinking of the Centaur - Commemoration</ref> The Australian Government produced posters depicting the sinking, which called for Australians to "Avenge the Nurses" by working to produce materiel, purchasing war bonds, or enlisting in the armed forces.

People also expressed their sympathy towards the crew, with several efforts to fund a new hospital ship established. The councillors of Caulfield, Victoria organised a fund to replace the lost medical equipment, opening with a donation of AU£2,000. Those who worked on Centaur’s conversion contributed money towards a replacement, and employees of Ansett Airways pledged to donate an hour's pay towards the fitting out of such a replacement.

With some people unable to believe that the Japanese would be so ruthless, rumours began to spread almost immediately after news of the attack was made public. The most common rumour was that Centaur had been carrying munitions or commandos at the time of her sinking, with the Japanese made aware of this prior to her departure.<ref name=Frame177>Frame, No Pleasure Cruise, p. 177</ref> This stemmed from the incident involving the ambulance drivers' weapons during loading in Sydney.

Military reaction

The attack was universally condemned by Australian servicemen, who commonly believed that the attack on Centaur had been carried out deliberately and in full knowledge of her status.<ref name=Jenkins282>Jenkins, Battle Surface, p. 282</ref> Similar reactions were expressed by other Allied personnel; United States Army Air Force General George Kenney recalled having to talk a sergeant bombardier out of organising a retaliatory bombing run on a Japanese hospital ship known to be in their area.<ref>Kenney, General Kenney Reports, pp. 245–6</ref>

A war loan poster depicting the sinking of Centaur displayed at an Australian Army workshop in Lae, New Guinea in September 1944. Six days after the attack on Centaur, a request was made by the Australian Department of Defence that the identification markings and lights be removed from Australian hospital ship Manunda, weapons be installed, and that she begin to sail blacked out and under escort.<ref name="Mill189-92">Milligan and Foley, Australian Hospital Ship Centaur, pp. 189–92</ref> The conversion was performed, although efforts by the Department of the Navy, the Admiralty, and authorities in New Zealand and the United States of America caused the completed conversion to be undone. The cost of the roundabout work came to £12,500, and kept Manunda out of service for three months.<ref name=Mill192>Milligan and Foley, Australian Hospital Ship Centaur, p. 192</ref> On 9 June 1943, communications between the Combined Chiefs of Staff on the subject of hospital ships contained a section referring to the Manundra incident as a response to the attack on Centaur, with the conclusion that the attack was the work of an irresponsible Japanese commander, and that it would be better to wait until further attacks had been made before considering the removal of hospital ship markings.<ref>Milligan and Foley, Australian Hospital Ship Centaur, p. 191</ref>

When the consideration was made that the ambulance drivers' weapons incident just prior to Centaur's voyage may have been partially responsible for the attack, it led to the tightening of rules regarding who was allowed to travel on a hospital ship. Some quasi-medical staff, including repatriation teams, were no longer permitted on hospital ships. Ambulance drivers had to transfer from the regular Army to the Australian Army Medical Corps before they were allowed aboard, although they were still permitted to carry their unloaded weapons and ammunition.<ref name=Good197>Goodman, Our War Nurses, p. 197</ref>

Official protests

After consultation with the Australian armed forces, General MacArthur, the Admiralty, and the Australian Government, an official protest was sent.<ref name=Mill187>Milligan and Foley, Australian Hospital Ship Centaur, p. 187</ref> This was received by the Japanese Government on 29 May 1943. At around the same time, the International Committee of the Red Cross sent a protest on behalf of the major Allied Red Cross organisations to the Japanese Red Cross.

On 26 December 1943, a response to the Australian protest arrived. It stated that the Japanese Government had no information justifying the allegation made, and therefore took no responsibility for what happened. The reply counter-protested that nine Japanese hospital ships had been attacked by the Allies, although these claims were directed against the United States, not Australia. Although several later exchanges were made, the lack of progress saw the British Government inform the Australian Prime Minister on 14 November 1944 that no further communications would be made on the loss of Centaur.<ref>Milligan and Foley, Australian Hospital Ship Centaur, p. 194</ref>

Reasons for attack

The torpedo attack on Centaur was not an isolated incident. Between June 1942 and December 1944, 27 Japanese submarines operated in Australian waters.<ref name=Jenkins286>Jenkins, Battle Surface, p. 286</ref> These submarines attacked almost 50 merchant vessels, with 20 ships confirmed to be sunk as result of a Japanese attack, plus 9 more unconfirmed. This was part of a concentrated effort to destroy supply convoys from Australia to New Guinea.<ref>Milligan and Foley, Australian Hospital Ship Centaur, p. 68</ref>

Several actions on Centaur’s part may have contributed to her demise. Centaur was under orders to sail well out to sea until reaching the Great Barrier Reef; her course keeping her between 50 and 150 nautical miles (90 and 280 km) from shore.<ref>Milligan and Foley, Australian Hospital Ship Centaur, p. 87</ref> Centaur’s Master, believing he had been given a route intended for a merchant vessel, set a course closer to land, but on the seaward side of 2,000 metres (6,600 ft) in depth.<ref>Milligan and Foley, Australian Hospital Ship Centaur, p. 88</ref> Also, Centaur was sailing completely illuminated, with the exception of the two bow floodlights, which had been switched off as they interfered with visibility from the bridge.

There are three main theories as to why Centaur was attacked:

Centaur was believed to be a legitimate target

This theory stems from the various rumours spreading after Centaur’s sinking. If Centaur had been in breach of the Hague Convention of 1907, and someone had informed the Japanese of this, I-177 may have been under valid orders to attack.<ref name=Mill232>Milligan and Foley, Australian Hospital Ship Centaur, p. 232</ref> When Centaur left Sydney, her decks were packed with green-uniformed men, and as Field Ambulance uniforms were only distinguishable from other Army uniforms by badge insignia and the colouration of the cloth band ringing the hat, a distant observer could have concluded that the hospital ship was transporting soldiers.<ref>Milligan and Foley, Australian Hospital Ship Centaur, pp. 75, 85</ref> Those witnessing the loading in Sydney would have seen the ambulance drivers bring their weapons aboard, and could have come to a similar conclusion. If a spy or informant had passed this information to the Japanese, I-177 could have been lying in wait. The main flaw in this theory is the question of how Nakagawa and his crew were able to predict that Centaur was taking an alternative route and how they were able to determine the new route selected.<ref name=Mill233>Milligan and Foley, Australian Hospital Ship Centaur, p. 233</ref>

Similar but later rumours included that during her first voyage, Centaur had transported soldiers to New Guinea, or Japanese prisoners of war back to Australia for interrogation, and consequently had been marked as a legitimate target by the Japanese.<ref>Milligan and Foley, Australian Hospital Ship Centaur, p. 227</ref> Centaur had carried 10 prisoners of war on her return voyage from New Guinea, but they were all wounded personnel; transporting them on a hospital ship was legal.<ref>Milligan and Foley, Australian Hospital Ship Centaur, p. 65</ref>

Nakagawa was unaware that Centaur was a hospital ship

This theory states that Nakagawa was unaware that the vessel he was attacking was a hospital ship, and that the sinking was an unfortunate accident.<ref name=Jenkins280>Jenkins, Battle Surface, p. 280</ref> This view was supported by several Japanese officers, both before and after the revelation that Nakagawa was responsible. Amongst them was Lieutenant Commander Zenji Orita, who took command of I-177 after Nakagawa. Orita did not hear anything from the crew about having sunk a hospital ship, not even rumours, and believed that if I-177 had knowingly attacked Centaur, he would have learned this from the crew's gossip.

When compared to the other contemporary Australian hospital ships, Centaur was the smallest, approximately a third of the size of Manunda or Wanganella. Centaur was also slightly shorter than I-177. The observation of Centaur was made through a periscope, and submarine officers attest that at 1,500 metres (4,900 ft), the optimum range of attack for World War II–era Japanese submarines, some officers would not be able to clearly identify a target ship's profile or hull markings.<ref name=Jenkins283>Jenkins, Battle Surface, p. 283</ref> With Centaur’s bow floodlights out, and with the observation of the target made through the periscope, there is a possibility Nakagawa would not have seen the hospital ship's markings if he had been in the right position.

However, apart from the two bow floodlights, Centaur was lit up brilliantly. To attack, I-177 would have had to approach from abeam of Centaur, which was illuminated by both its own lights and a full moon.

Nakagawa knowingly attacked a protected vessel

This theory states that Nakagawa was fully aware that his target was a hospital ship and decided to sink her regardless, either on his own initiative or a poor interpretation of his orders.<ref>Milligan and Foley, Australian Hospital Ship Centaur, p. 235</ref> Researchers speculate that as Nakagawa was approaching the end of his tour in Australian waters, and had only sunk a single enemy vessel, the 8,742 ton freighter Limerick, he did not want to return with the disgrace of a single kill. Other claims include that Nakagawa may have been acting in vengeance for Allied atrocities during the Battle of the Bismarck Sea, or may have expected praise for the sinking of an enemy naval vessel.<ref>Milligan and Foley, Australian Hospital Ship Centaur, p. 236</ref>

In February 1944, while in command of I-37, Nakagawa ordered the machinegunning of survivors from three British merchant vessels (British Chivalry, on 22 February; Sutlej, on 24 February; and Ascott on 29 February) torpedoed by his submarine. His defence, that he was acting under orders from Vice Admiral Shiro Takasu, was not accepted, and he was sentenced to four years imprisonment at Sugamo Prison as a Class B war criminal.<ref name=Jenkins284>Jenkins, Battle Surface, p. 284</ref> These incidents showed that Nakagawa was willing to ignore the laws of war.

Shipwreck

Following World War II, several searches of the waters around North Stradbroke and Moreton Islands failed to reveal Centaur’s location. It was believed that she had sunk off the edge of the continental shelf, to a depth the Royal Australian Navy did not, and still does not, have the capability to search for a vessel of Centaur’s size.<ref name="DOD29-6-03">Department of Defence, Navy findings of search for ex Army Hospital Ship (AHS) Centaur</ref> Some parties also believed that Rippon's calculated point of sinking was inaccurate, either through an intentional act or error.

Several points were incorrectly identified as the location Centaur sank at. The first was in the War Diary Situation Report entry for the hospital ship's sinking, which gives 27°17′S 154°05′E / 27.283°S 154.083°E / -27.283; 154.083, 7 nautical miles (13 km) east of Rippon's position.<ref name=Mill239>Milligan & Foley, Australian Hospital Ship Centaur, p. 239</ref> According to Milligan and Foley, this likely occurred because an estimated 50-nautical-mile (93 km) distance from Brisbane, included as a frame of reference, was interpreted literally. In 1974, two divers claimed to have found the ship approximately 40 nautical miles (74 km) east of Brisbane, in 60 metres (200 ft) of water, but did not disclose its exact location.<ref>Milligan & Foley, Australian Hospital Ship Centaur, p. 240</ref> Attempts to relocate the site between 1974 and 1992 were unsuccessful, with an associate of the divers claiming that the Navy destroyed the wreck shortly after its discovery.<ref>Milligan & Foley, Australian Hospital Ship Centaur, pp. 240-1</ref>

Dennis' claim

In 1995, it was announced that the shipwreck of Centaur had been located in waters 9 nautical miles (17 km) from the lighthouse on Moreton Island, a significant distance from her believed last position.<ref name="60mins18-5-03">A Grave Mistake [60 Minutes segment]</ref> The finding was reported on A Current Affair, during which footage of the shipwreck, 170 metres (560 ft) underwater, was shown. Discoverer Donald Dennis claimed the identity of the shipwreck had been confirmed by the Navy, the Queensland Maritime Museum, and the Australian War Memorial. A cursory search by the Navy confirmed the presence of a shipwreck at the given location, which was gazetted as a war grave and added to navigation charts by the Australian Hydrographic Office.

Mitchell and Jackson return from the SS Kyogle Over the next eight years, there was growing doubt about the position of Dennis' wreck, due to the distance from both Second Officer Rippon's calculation of the point of sinking and where USS Mugford found the survivors.<ref name=Wil24>Wilson, Sunken Hearts, p. 24</ref> During this time, Dennis had been convicted on two counts of deception and one of theft through scams. Two wreck divers, Trevor Jackson and Simon Mitchell, used the location for a four hour world record dive on 14 May 2002, during which they examined the wreck and took measurements, claiming that the ship was too small to be Centaur.<ref name=Jackson>Jackson, Wreck diving in Southern Queensland, pp. 157–81</ref> Jackson had been studying Centaur for some time, and believed that the wreck was actually another, much smaller ship, the 55-metre (180 ft) long MV Kyogle, a lime freighter purchased by the Royal Australian Air Force and sunk during bombing practice on 12 May 1951. The facts gathered on the dive were inconclusive, but the divers remained adamant it was not Centaur, and passed this information onto Nick Greenaway, producer of the newsmagazine show 60 Minutes.

On the 60th anniversary of the sinking, 60 Minutes ran a story demonstrating that the wreck was not Centaur. It was revealed that nobody at the Queensland Maritime Museum had yet seen Dennis' footage, and when it was shown to Museum president Rod McLeod and maritime historian John Foley, they stated that the shipwreck could not be Centaur, as the rudder was incorrectly shaped. Following this story, and others published around the same time in newspapers, the Navy sent three ships to inspect the site over a two month period; HMA Ships Hawkesbury, Melville, and Yarra, before concluding that the shipwreck was incorrectly identified as Centaur. An amendment was made to the gazettal, and the Hydrographic Office began to remove the mark from charts.

Discovery

In April 2008, following the successful discovery of HMAS Sydney, several parties began calling for a dedicated search for Centaur.<ref name=Dart08>Dart, Shipwreck hunter offers to find Centaur remains</ref> By the end of 2008, the Australian Federal and Queensland State governments had formed a joint committee and contributed AU$2 million each towards a search, while tenders to supply equipment (including the search vessel, side-scan sonar systems, and a remotely operated inspection submersible) were opened in February 2009, and awarded during the year.<ref>Crutcher, Let Aussie shipwreck hunters find the Centaur</ref><ref>Atkinson, Companies show interest in Centaur search</ref><ref name=Berry>Berry, Search for sunken hospital ship to begin soon</ref> The search, to be conducted from the Defence Maritime Services vessel Seahorse Spirit and overseen by shipwreck hunter David Mearns, commenced during the weekend of 12-13 December 2009.<ref name=Tedmanson>Tedmanson, Search begins for wreckage of hospital ship Centaur destroyed in war</ref> The initial search area off Cape Moreton covered 1,365 square kilometres (527 sq mi), with the search team given 35 days to locate and film the wreck before funding dried up.

Six sonar targets with similar dimensions to Centaur were located between 15 and 18 December: as none of the contacts corresponded completely to the hospital ship, the search team opted to take advantage of favourable weather conditions and continue investigating the area before returning to each site and making a detailed inspection with a higher-resolution sonar.<ref name=AAPtarget>Australian Associated Press, Centaur searchers find 'target' off Qld</ref><ref name=Heger>Heger, Shipwreck hunter David Mearns confirms ship is the Centaur</ref> On the afternoon of 18 December, the sonar towfish separated from the cable, and was lost in 1,800 metres (5,900 ft) of water, forcing the use of the high-resolution sonar to complete the area search.<ref name=AAPsonar>Australian Associated Press, Centaur searchers lose vital equipment</ref> After inspecting the potential targets, Mearns and the search team announced on 20 December that they had found Centaur that morning

The wreck was found at 27°16.98′S 153°59.22′E / 27.283°S 153.987°E / -27.283; 153.987Coordinates: 27°16.98′S 153°59.22′E / 27.283°S 153.987°E / -27.283; 153.987 (30 nautical miles (56 km) east of Moreton Island, and less that 1 nautical mile (1.9 km) from Rippon's coordinates), resting 2,059 metres (6,760 ft) below sea level in a steep-walled gully, 150 metres (490 ft) wide and 90 metres (300 ft) deep.<ref name=AAPfound>Australian Associated Press, Hospital ship Centaur discovered off Queensland coast </ref> After returning to shore for Christmas and to install a remotely operated vehicle (ROV) aboard Seahorse Spirit, the search team commenced efforts to document the wreck, with the first photographs taken by the ROV in the early morning of 10 January 2010 confirming that the wreck is Centaur.<ref name=BarbelerLong>Barbeler & Long, First photos of hospital ship Centaur</ref> Conditions for documenting the hospital ship were not optimal on the first ROV dive, and three more dives were made during 11 and 12 January.<ref name=BarbelerAAP>Barbeler & Australian Associated Press, Memorial plaque laid on the Centaur</ref> During the four dives, over 24 hours of footage were collected, along with numerous photographs: features identified during the operation include the Red Cross identification number, the hospital ship markings, and the ship's bell. The Centaur wreck site has been marked as a war grave and protected with a navigational exclusion zone under the Historic Shipwrecks Act.

Memorials

Centaur plaque at Centaur Memorial Park in Caloundra, Queensland In 1948, Queensland nurses established the "Centaur Memorial Fund for Nurses" which used the money raised to purchase an establishment and name it "Centaur House"; a facility supporting nurses by holding convivial meetings and providing inexpensive accommodation for out-of-town nurses.<ref>Milligan and Foley, Australian Hospital Ship Centaur, p. 251</ref> The original Centaur House was sold in 1971, with a new building purchased and renamed.<ref name=Mill252>Milligan and Foley, Australian Hospital Ship Centaur, p. 252</ref> The second Centaur House was sold in 1979 and although the fund still exists, it no longer owns a physical facility. On 15 September 1968, a cairn was unveiled at Caloundra, Queensland, erected by the local

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