Australian navy ships Success, Newcastle retired from service

HMAS Success in 2018 Image: US Navy Photo by Mass Communication Specialist 1st Class Holly L. Herline
HMAS Success in 2018 Image: US Navy Photo by Mass Communication Specialist 1st Class Holly L. Herline
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Image: US Navy Photo by Mass Communication Specialist 1st Class Holly L. Herline – HMAS Success in 2018
Image: US Navy Photo by Mass Communication Specialist 1st Class Holly L. Herline – HMAS Success in 2018

The Royal Australian Navy (RAN) retired two of its oldest vessels from active service in separate ceremonies held last week.

The first of the two to be decommissioned was the Auxiliary Oiler Replenishment (AOR) ship HMAS Success, which was retired at a ceremony at Garden Island in Sydney on Saturday, June 29. The vessel's decommissioning will make way for a new oil replenishment ship, the future HMAS Supply, scheduled to enter service in 2020.

The following day at Garden Island, it was the turn of HMAS Newcastle, one of two 1980s-era Adelaide-class frigates remaining in RAN service. The vessel had steamed around 815,000 nautical miles, deployed on operations to the Middle East six times, earned battle honours for her service in East Timor and the Middle East, and conducted peacekeeping operations in the Solomon Islands.

HMAS Newcastle in 2010 (Image: US Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Jon Dasbach)

Newcastle has been decommissioned to make way for the Hobart-class guided missile destroyers. Sister ship HMAS Melbourne is scheduled to be retired later this year.

Success and Newcastle had served Australia for 33 and 25 years, respectively.

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