Encyclopedia
Centaur (Hospital ship)
Sinking of the Centaur
The Centaur, 2/3rd Australian Hospital Ship, was a motor passenger ship converted in early 1943 for use as a hospital ship. In November 1941 it had rescued survivors of the German auxiliary cruiser Kormoran after it had sunk and been sunk by HMAS Sydney.
On 12 May 1943 the Centaur sailed unescorted from Sydney at 0945 hours carrying her crew and normal staff, as well as stores and equipment of the 2/12th Field Ambulance but no patients. It was sunk without warning by a torpedo from a Japanese submarine on 14 May 1943 at approximately 0400 hours, its position being approximately 27°17' S, 153°58' E about 50 miles east north-east of Brisbane.
Of the 332 persons on board, only 64 survived. These survivors spent 35 hours on rafts before being rescued. Sister Ellen Savage, the only one of twelve nursing sisters on board to survive, though injured herself, gave great help to the other survivors and was awarded the George Medal for this work.
The ship had been appropriately lit and marked to indicate that it was a hospital ship and its sinking was regarded as an atrocity. The Australian Government delivered an official protest to Japan over the incident. The Japanese did not acknowledge responsibility for the incident for many years and the War Crimes Tribunal could not identify the responsible submarine. However, the Japanese official war history makes clear that it was submarine 1-177, under the command of Lt Commander Nakagawa who had sunk the Centaur. Lt Commander Nakagawa was convicted as a war criminal for firing on survivors of the British Chivalry which his ship had sunk in the Indian Ocean.

Sydney, NSW. 1943. Starboard bow view of the Hospital Ship Centaur.
Prominent red crosses and green lines are painted on her hull. Red crosses
are also attached to her funnel and stern with another lying horizontally
on the after deckhouse.
AWM 302800
Sources
- Peter Dennis et al., The Oxford companion to Australian military history (Melbourne: Oxford University Press, 1995)
- R.D. Goodman, Hospital ships (Brisbane: Boolarong Publications, 1992)
More About:
- List
of survivors and casualties [1.6Mb PDF file]
Extract from the official record AWM54 409/9/1. Please note as this item is an original record it may contain errors or omissons. - Australia under attack: 1942-1943
This online exhibition depicts the reality of life when the Japanese forces were literally on Australia's doorstep and barbed wire stretched across Bondi Beach. - Document: Large figures
on the walls of the Hall of Memory
Describes the significance of the four large figures located on the walls in the Hall of Memory. The sinking of the Centaur is symbolised in the figure representing the women's services. - Transcript of evidence given at inquiry into the sinking of HMAS CENTAUR
Digitised copy of the National Archives of Australia's record A4311 658/3 - The
sinking of the Centaur
Department of Veteran's Affairs online publication.

