After her commissioning in 1942,
Anson was sent to the
Arctic Sea with most of the
Home Fleet as an escort ship for Russian convoys. On 12 September 1942
Anson was part of the distant covering force for
Convoy QP 14, along with her sister ship , the light cruiser and the destroyers , , and . On 29 December
Anson provided distant cover for
Convoy JW 51B along with the cruiser and the destroyers , and . On 23 and 24 January 1943
Anson provided distant cover for
Convoy JW 52 along with the cruiser and the destroyers , , , ,
Montrose, , and the Polish destroyer . On 29 January,
Convoy RA 52 departed from the
Kola inlet, with distant cover provided by
Anson, the cruiser
Sheffield and the destroyers
Inglefield, , and the Polish destroyer
Orkan from 30 January. In June 1942, the pre-
First World War battleship was disguised as
Anson in the
Mediterranean Sea, acting as a decoy during
Operation Vigorous. In July 1943
Anson took part in the diversionary moves designed to draw attention away from the preparations for
Operation Husky, and in October that year, with
Duke of York and the US cruiser , provided cover for
Operation Leader, in which the US aircraft carrier mounted air strikes against German shipping off Norway. In February 1944, in company with the and a force of cruisers and destroyers,
Anson stood by in the same capacity while aircraft from the aircraft carrier carried out air strikes against German targets in Norway during Operation Bayleaf, and on 3 April she provided cover for
Operation Tungsten, a successful air strike against the , during which she served as flagship for
Vice Admiral Sir Henry Moore.
Anson was decommissioned for a refit in June 1944 and did not return to the fleet until March 1945, when she sailed with
Duke of York to join the
British Pacific Fleet. By the time she arrived in the theatre, hostilities were all but over. She left Sydney on 15 August for
Hong Kong with
Duke of York, and along with a task force of other ships from Britain and the Commonwealth, accepted the surrender of the Japanese forces occupying Hong Kong. She was also present in
Tokyo Bay during the
official Japanese surrender aboard .
Post-war era Following the war
Anson was the flagship of the 1st Battle Squadron of the British Pacific Fleet and helped to liberate Hong Kong. After a brief refit,
Anson sailed from
Sydney to
Hobart in February 1946 to collect the
Duke and
Duchess of Gloucester (the Duke was then Governor-General of Australia) and return them to Sydney.
Anson arrived back in British waters on 29 July 1946 and after a short refit was returned to peacetime duties. In July 1949
Anson took part in
Exercise Verity. November 1949,
Anson was placed in reserve and in 1951 she was towed to
Gare Loch. On 17 December 1957 she was purchased for scrap by Shipbreaking Industries, Faslane. == Refits ==