HMS Ajax Teak Memento From This Ships Teak Timber
Price: NZ$70.60
Code: BH043
This nice little piece of history is made from some of the teak timber used on this famous ship during WWII shaped like a marlin spike or fid it is 9 5/8” 244mm long and 5/16” 7-8mm thick with a plate fixed to one end saying; from the teak of H.M.S. AJAX Battle Of The River Plate
HMS Ajax was a Leander class light cruiser which served with the Royal Navy during World War II. She became famous for her part in the Battle of the River Plate, the Battle of Crete, the Battle of Malta and as a supply escort in the Siege of Tobruk. This ship was the eighth in the Royal Navy to bear the name. In February 1942, she was adopted by the civil community of Halifax.
Battle of the River Plate
When the German raider, the Admiral Graf Spee, became a threat, Force G was formed from Ajax (flagship, Commodore Henry Harwood), Exeter and Achilles, all cruisers. (Cumberland, also part of this force, was undergoing a refit at Port Stanley. Force G located and engaged the Graf Spee on 13 December, despite the German warship’s greater firepower. Ajax was hit seven times by the Germans: X and Y turrets were disabled, structural damage was sustained and there were 12 casualties including 7 killed. Exeter, more severely damaged, retired, leaving the two light cruisers to maintain contact with the Graf Spee when she withdrew to Montevideo. The reasons for the German ship’s withdrawal and her failure to exploit her advantage are unclear, but there was damage to her bows, that affected sea-worthiness and to her fuel systems. Ajax and Achilles, joined by Cumberland, awaited events and successfully bluffed the Germans into believing that a superior force was on hand. The Graf Spee was scuttled. Ajax refuelled at Port Stanley and resumed her patrol.
In January 1940, she returned to Britain for refit, via Montevideo, Rio de Janeiro and Freetown, Sierra Leone. She was joined en route by the aircraft carrier Ark Royal, the battlecruiser Renown and the destroyers Hasty, Hero, Dainty and Diamond. Ajax arrived at Plymouth at the end of January; the following month, she was handed over to Chatham Dockyard for refit.