, 1944, wearing
Measure 22 camouflage Following her commissioning,
Tromp carried out working up manoeuvres until early January 1939 when she departed Rotterdam, bound for the Mediterranean. Transiting via Lisbon, in Portugal, on 15 January, she was lightly damaged when she accidentally collided with the German passenger ship
Orinoco. She returned to the Netherlands in April to take part in the fleet review at Scheveningen, before participating in a cruise to Norway, where she stopped over at
Oslo. In July 1939, Commander J. W. Termijtelen took over command of the ship from Captain L.A.C.M. Doorman and under Termijtelen's command the ship sailed for the
Netherlands East Indies in August 1939, arriving just after the outbreak of
World War II in Europe. In mid-September 1939, the ship searched several German merchantmen in
Padang, before proceeding to
Surabaya for a refit. Throughout 1940, the ship undertook patrol and escort duties as part of the Netherlands East Indies Squadron before escorting ships of the Java–New York Line in a convoy to the
Gilbert Islands in early 1941. A new captain, Commander J.B. de Meester, arrived in July. In the final months of 1941, tensions in the region began to heighten amidst concerns about war with Japan and in November 1941
Tromp was involved in searches of Vichy French merchant vessels operating in the area. In late November and early December 1941,
Tromp moved to the western
Java Sea to help search for , which was missing after
encountering the German raider
Kormoran. Following the outbreak of fighting against the Japanese in the Pacific, she was assigned to the Combined Striking Force,
ABDA Command, in January 1942 for the defence of the East Indies.
Tromp was badly damaged off
Bali on 18 February 1942 during the
Battle of Badung Strait, when she was hit by eleven 5-inch (127 mm) shells from the Japanese destroyer . Her return fire hit two Japanese destroyers, killing four men on
Asashio and seven on . The ship was then sent to Australia for repairs in February 1942, sailing firstly to
Fremantle and then on to
Sydney. Repairs were completed by May 1942, at which time she began a period of sea trials. These were interrupted by anti-submarine patrols off
Newcastle in the middle of the month after the Soviet steamer
Wellen was attacked, but these patrols proved uneventful. On 18 May 1942, in company with ,
Tromp escorted convoy "ZK.8" out of Sydney composed of the Dutch ships , , and bound for
Port Moresby with 4,735 troops of the
Australian 14th Brigade. Afterwards,
Tromp escorted several more north-bound convoys before completing its sea trials in early June. The following month she departed Sydney bound for Fremantle, escorting a westward-bound convoy. She remained in Fremantle until October 1942 when the ship returned to Sydney to replace her radar. Upon completion, she undertook a visit to New Zealand before returning to Fremantle at the end of the year in concert with a British troopship,
Nestor. In February 1943, while based out of Fremantle,
Tromp was assigned to the
US Seventh Fleet, tasked with conducting convoy escort around Australia and in the Indian Ocean. Throughout the year,
Tromp undertook further convoy escorts until October when Commander F. Stam arrived to take over command. In January 1944,
Tromp was assigned to the
British Eastern Fleet based at
Colombo, in Ceylon. A short time later, she was transferred to the fleet base at
Trincomalee. The ship then participated in
raids on Sabang in April and Surabaya in May 1944, undertaking escort duty in between. She transferred to Sydney for a refit in September 1944, remaining there until February 1945, when
Tromp returned to Trincomalee to undertake further escort duty. In the final months of the war,
Tromp was part of the Allied fleet that bombarded Japanese positions prior to the
Australian 7th Division's landing at Balikpapan during operations to recapture Borneo from the Japanese. Following the end of the hostilities,
Tromp was assigned to the
British Pacific Fleet and in September 1945 deployed to
Jakarta where she landed marines who re-occupied the governor's residence as Allied forces arrived to disarm the Japanese garrison. She then ferried liberated Dutch prisoners-of-war between Singapore, Bangkok and Sydney during the final months of the year. She remained in Sydney until February 1946 when she sailed for the Netherlands to return over 150 former prisoners-of-war. Upon her return to the Netherlands in May 1946, the ship underwent a significant refit which lasted until mid-1948. From 1949,
Tromp was used mainly as a training or accommodation ship, before being decommissioned in 1955 and scrapped in 1969. ==Notes==