German New Guinea German New Guinea () was an Imperial German protectorate from 1884. German New Guinea consisted of the territories of the northeastern part of New Guinea () and the nearby
Bismarck Archipelago, consisting of
New Britain () and New Ireland (). Together with the other Western Pacific German islands, excluding German Samoa, they formed the Imperial German Pacific Protectorates. The protectorate included the
German Solomon Islands, the
Caroline Islands,
Palau, the
Mariana Islands (except for
Guam), the
Marshall Islands and
Nauru. Imperial Germany had a paramilitary police force, the
Polizeitruppe, in New Guinea; generally used to keep up order and put down rebellions. The Polizeitruppe at Bita Paka consisted of about 50 German officers, NCOs and reservists and 240 native police soldiers. Rabaul was well stocked with the coal for use by the German
East Asia Squadron.
Australian Military situation At the outbreak of World War I, the East Asia Squadron, consisting of the
armored cruisers and and the light cruisers , , and , under the command of Vice-Admiral
Maximilian von Spee, was cruising in the Pacific Ocean. Britain had already severed all German undersea cables passing through British controlled areas. Concerned about possible attacks against Allied merchant shipping in the region, Britain requested that Australia destroy the German wireless stations and coaling stations in the Pacific. Australia hurriedly raised the Australian Naval & Military Expeditionary Force (ANMEF), consisting of one
battalion of
infantry of 1,000 men enlisted in
Sydney, known as the 1st Battalion, ANMEF and 500 naval reservists and ex-sailors who would serve as infantry. Another battalion of
militia from the
Queensland based
Kennedy Regiment, which had been hurriedly dispatched to garrison
Thursday Island, also contributed 500 volunteers to the force. The ANMEF was tasked with the capture of the Imperial German Pacific Protectorates within six months. This included capturing or destroying the radio stations and coal stations supporting the East Asia Squadron. Reconnaissance of the area was undertaken by the
Australia Squadron, consisting of the battleship , the second-class protected cruiser , the light cruisers and and the destroyers , , and . Under the command of Vice Admiral Sir
George Patey, the destroyers entered
Blanche Bay on 12 August. HMAS
Australia captured
Sumatra and HMAS
Encounter captured
Zambesi while patrolling
St Georges Channel on 12 August. HMAS
Melbourne requisitioned the cargo of coal of the collier
Alconda off
Rossel Island on 13 August. The destroyers entered
Simpson Harbour and
Matupi Harbour at night searching for the East Asia Squadron. Landing parties from the destroyers were sent ashore to demolish the telephones in the post offices in
Rabaul and at the German gubernatorial capital of Herbertshöhe (now
Kokopo), located to the south-east. Unable to locate the radio station, the Australian warships threatened to bombard nearby settlements if the radio station continued to transmit, before withdrawing. == Military engagements==