Joseph BURNETT

BURNETT, Joseph

Service Number: Commissioned Officer
Enlisted: 31 December 1912
Last Rank: Captain
Last Unit: HMAS Sydney (II) - D48 WW2
Born: Singleton, New South Wales, Australia, 26 December 1899
Home Town: Rose Bay, Woollahra, New South Wales
Schooling: Singleton Public School and the Royal Australian Naval College, New South Wales, Australia
Occupation: Naval Officer
Died: Killed In Action, Indian Ocean, 20 November 1941, aged 41 years
Cemetery: No known grave - "Known Unto God"
Memorials: Australian War Memorial Roll of Honour, Carnarvon HMAS Sydney II Memorial, Carnarvon Walk of Remembrance, Geraldton HMAS Sydney II Memorial, Plymouth Naval Memorial to the Missing / Lost at Sea
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Non Warlike Service

31 Dec 1912: Enlisted Royal Australian Navy, Cadet Midshipman

World War 1 Service

1 Jul 1917: Involvement Royal Australian Navy, Sub Lieutenant, Commissioned Officer, HMAS Australia (I) WW1

World War 2 Service

1 Oct 1939: Involvement Royal Australian Navy, Captain, Homeland Defence - Militia and non deployed forces, Assistant Chief of Staff Naval Office
14 May 1941: Involvement Royal Australian Navy, Captain, Commissioned Officer, HMAS Sydney (II) - D48 WW2, RAN Operations - 'SW Pacific / Indian Ocean 1941-43'

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Biography contributed by Steve Larkins

Captain Joseph BURNETT (1899-1941)

Joseph Burnett was born at Singleton, New South Wales, on 26 December 1899 and became captain of HMAS Sydney in 1941. As a youth he attended Singleton Primary School and in 1912 applied to enter the Royal Australian Naval College in Geelong, becoming one of its first entrants as a cadet midshipman on 31 December 1912.

Having graduated in 1917, he was sent to England where he joined HMAS Australia, on which he served until the end of the First World War, reaching the rank of sub-lieutenant. For much of the next seven years Burnett served with the Royal Navy in England, was promoted to lieutenant in January 1920, and qualified as a gunnery officer in 1922. During his time in England Burnett proved himself an excellent sportsman, representing the United Services and the Royal Navy in rugby and performing well in tennis, cricket, and athletics.

In 1924 he was appointed gunner officer on HMAS Adelaide, in the same year he married Enid Ward and returned to Australia. After three years in Australia he returned to England in 1927, was promoted to lieutenant commander in 1928, and began service on HMAS Canberra. Further service in England followed and Burnett attended the Naval Staff College at Greenwich in 1932-33. Having been promoted to commander in December 1932, he returned to Australia and began two years of service at the Navy Office in Melbourne in 1933.

Burnett returned to sea in 1936 with a posting to HMAS Canberra as Executive Officer. The following year he returned to England for the last time, becoming Executive Officer on the battleship HMS Royal Oak. In December 1938 he was promoted to captain and the following year completed the Imperial Defence College course. When the Second World War began he was recalled to Australia and appointed Assistant Chief of Naval Staff at the Navy Office in Melbourne.

A highly regarded officer who received uniformly good reports throughout his career, Burnett was sent to Singapore in October 1940 as senior RAN representative at an Allied conference considering the defence of the Asia-Pacific region. He was instrumental in the formation of the Naval Auxilliary Patrol, which was used to patrol harbour entrances during the war. In May 1941 he was given command of HMAS Sydney.

Having commanded the ship on convoy duties, Burnett was bringing Sydney back to Fremantle on 19 November 1941 when she encountered the German raider Kormoran. In the ensuing action Kormoran was sunk and a damaged Sydney was seen sailing over the horizon before she disappeared with the loss of all on board.

Its loss with all hands under mysterious circumstances in a duel with the German raider Kormoran, off the West Australian coast on the 19/20th November 1941, was a major shock to Australia and had a serious negative impact on the morale of the nation.  It also began a period in which the RAN sustained a string of major ship losses while fighting the Japanese who entered the war less than a month after the loss of the Sydney.

The search for the Sydney was large, increasingly desperate and as time went on, despondent when it became apparent that she had gone to the bottom with all hands. 


 

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Biography contributed by Faithe Jones

Son of Richard and Emily Burnett; husband of Enid Gwendoline Jill Burnett, of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.