HMAS Vampire (D11)

HMAS Vampire (D11)

6 x QF 4.5-inch (113-mm) guns (3 dual turrets)
6 x 40-millimetre (1.6 in) Bofors anti-aircraft guns (2 twin mountings, 2 single mountings)
4 x 0.5-inch (13 mm) Browning machine guns
1 x 5-tube 21-inch (530 mm) Mark IV torpedo launcher
1 x Limbo anti-submarine mortar (later removed)

Sea Cat missile system (installed later)

HMAS Vampire was the third of three Australian-built Daring class destroyers serving in the Royal Australian Navy (RAN). One of the first all-welded ships built in Australia, she was constructed at Cockatoo Island Dockyard between 1952 and 1959, and was commissioned into the RAN a day after completion.

Vampire was regularly deployed to South East Asia during her career: she was attached to the Far East Strategic Reserve on five occasions, and escorted the troop transport HMAS Sydney on six of the latter's twenty-five transport voyages to Vietnam. In 1977, the destroyer was assigned to escort the Royal Yacht Britannia during Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Phillip's visit to Australia. In 1980, Vampire was reclassified as a training ship.

The warship remained in service until 1986, when she was decommissioned and presented to the Australian National Maritime Museum for preservation as a museum ship; the largest museum-owned object on display in Australia. Vampire remains part of the museum's collection as of 2012.

Read more about HMAS Vampire (D11):  Design, Construction, Decommissioning and Preservation, Footnotes