Wednesday, 20 June 2018

WHERE DID IT ALL START?

The West Australian, 19 March, 1900

THE -NOR'-WEST TRADE.
ACTION BY THE ADELAIDE S.S. CO.
BULLARRA PLACED ON THE ROUTE.

To residents of the North and Nor'-West
portions of the colony the steamer Albany
had become an institution, so long had she
plied between Fremantle and the northern
ports. Now, however, to meet the demands
of trade the Albany has had to give way to
the much larger steamer Bullarra, which
on Wednesday will leave Fremantle for
Wyndham and other ports. To celebrate
the opening of the new service the Adelaide 
Steamship Company on Saturday
afternoon gave a luncheon on board the
Bullarra, lying at the South Quay, Fremantle. 
Between 40 and 50 gentlemen
were present.

Mr. W. E. Moxon, manager for the Adelaide Steam.
ship Company in Western Australia, occupied the 
chair.

Mr. M. L. Moss proposed "The Mercantile 
Interests of Western Australia" In doing so, 
he said that he desired to heartily congratulate 
the Adelaide Steamship Company upon their 
enterprise in placing such a magnificent steamer 
as the Bullarra on the Nor'-West trade, and he 
also desired to congratulate Captain O. Odman 
(formerly of the Albany) upon his succession to the
new command. It went without saying that the people 
of the Nor'-West would cordially appreciate what the 
Adelaide Steamship Company had done for them.

Similar words were to ring out 9 years later when the magnificent Koombana joined the Nor'-West run and Bullarra was referred to as the 'old bull'.

It was during the last seven or eight years
that the mercantile interests of Western
Australia had so materially advanced, and
it must be confessed that the mercantile
men of the colony had been fully equal to
the occasion. Those in power, too had
done much to push ahead the mercantile
interests of the colony.  

In response, after congratulating the Adelaide SS,
Company upon the enterprise they were
showing in connection with the North-west
trade, said that he agreed that the body
controlling the harbour works should be
located at Fremantle, 

He was Intimately connected with the trade 
of the northern portion of the colony and 
expressed the firm opinion that great as 
had been the progress of that trade, it 
was nothing to what it's future would be, 
In this connection he desired to point out 
that while our  government placed restrictions 
on vessels which were engaged in carrying cattle
from the north to the south of Western
Australia, those vessels could go freely to
the other colonies, where no embargo was
placed upon them, It seemed strange to
him that the fear of spreading sore foot
or disease should lead the Government to
hamper vessels trading between our own
ports, while those vessels, when they went
elsewhere, were made welcome.

The Adelaide Steamship Company had 
advanced by great strides with
the prosperity of the colony, and such of
the success of the company had been
due to the efforts of their manager, Mr,
Moxon,

The fact that the Adelaide Steamship Company 
is placing upon the northern coast that fine
steamer the Bullarra--he might call her a
magnificent steamer, considering the trade
in which she is engaged - instead of the
old Albany (which had been very useful
ship in her time), showed that the Nor'
West trade of the colony had progressed
as to deserve something better at the
hands of the company than they had
hitherto given to it. 

Almost the same approach employed to describe Koombana taking over the mantle of flagship from Bullarra, 9 years later. Clearly Mr. Moxon was more than effective, efficient manager, he was a Nor'-West marketeer to boot.
But he was pleased  to think that he had decided to 
allow the bringing  of our own cattle to our own 
markets for consumption  by our own people down 
here, who were absolutely  longing for them.. 

...and patriotic!

He agreed with Mr. Holmes that  we had a good country, 
which had splendid prospects,  and that advantage had 
been taken of those prospects.  But he had known cases 
where even with a good  business and good prospects, 
it was even then quite possible to make a mess of things. 

A word of warning from the great man to whom; the competition?....

Although we had great resources, and were In a good 
position, he still thought that good management had 
had something to do with their prosperity. He considered 
that the good management of the Government had had 
something to  do with placing the colony in the proud 
position it held that day. 

..oh, to the Government...

He wished to tell doubters, to tell the croakers,
that the colony was still progressing, if not rapidly, very 
satisfactorily. The revenue was increasing, and everyone
-if he excepted the agitators for separation on the goldfields -
seemed to be fairly contented! The Government had plenty of
money even for the great Coolgardie water scheme. We had, 
as they would have seen, a loan on the market. Our credit 
was good, as we were in a thoroughly solvent condition, and 
he predicted he could confidently assure them that the loan 
would be a great success

Government's business and money was indeed in the right hands.

We had great assets, and those who would lend us money 
were well aware of that, Again, he, as manager of the public 
business, still thought that a little credit was due to the 
management for the condition of the colony. 

And finally a pat on the back..

It was pleasing to see such a fine steamer as the 
Bullarra safely moored within the harbour, but agreed that 
the work was not yet completed, It had been suggested that 
there should be local control, such as a harbour board. He 
for one would be glad to see a harbour board established. 
Boards were handy things for governments, as they acted 
as government buffers between the Government and the 
people. In his opinion, however, boards did not always do 
as well as was expected of them. Very often they were an 
irresponsible lot.

Is there an element of arrogance or am I imagining it? No doubt part of the success of a harbour board was its favourable relationship with the shipowners.  

In again congratulating the Adelaide
Steamship Company on resolving to
place such a fine steamer as the Bullarra
on the Nor'-West trade, he would say that
the company in its capacity of mail contractor 
had always given satisfaction.
Little or no cause of complaint had arisen,
and the greatest good feeling had always
existed between the company and the
Government.

He certainly wanted the arrangement to continue!

.. and it gave him much pleasure to
testily to the most fair and generous manner
in which the company had always treated its
customers and employees. 

Further self-congratulatory pats on the back. We are forming an impression of the man who would be confronted by the greatest maritime disaster to strike the developing Nor'-West coast, 9 years later.

Speaking of the Nor'-West, he expressed the 
firm opinion that although Kimberley had not yet
justified the hopes that had been formed
about its gold-producing capabilities, it
would yet become one of the greatest gold
mining centres in Australia. 

'Western Australia produced over 50% ($69.5 billion) of all Australian mineral and petroleum sales, which made up 88% of the state's merchandise exports in 2015-16. In 2015-16, gold was ranked third in the list of resources exported by Western Australia with regard to value.' (wikipedia)

Mr. Moxon was certainly a visionary! 

Again, if Kimberley did have tick or disease there,
which idea he combatted, it could always
produce the best of cattle in large quantities, 
and thus the southern parts of the
colony could procure from within our own
borders that which it required meat to
feed the masses. The Nor'-West had
always been modest in its demands upon
the Government, and it might not now be
out of place to suggest to the Premier
that there was no railway communication
there. (Laughter.)

Illustrating that the Nor'-West was most certainly a work in progress.

A railway from Port Hedland to Marble Bar 
would, the speaker added, prove of great 
benefit, and in time it could be made to 
connect with Geraldton, and so open the 
fine Nor'-West portions of the colony. The 
placing of the Bullarra on the trade was an 
era in the commercial progress of the north, 
The company would have no reason to regret 
their action.
If from humane views alone, it would be 
gratifying to know that on the service was 
a magnificent steamer which would call at 
the ports where facilities prevailed for the 
proper shipping of stock and that care would 
be taken in the handling of the beasts. Only 
the other day at Port Hedland, out of a 
shipment of bullocks, no less than 16 died 
soon after they had been hoisted up by the 
horns on to the steamer's deck. He gave the 
Adelaide Company and their manager every 
credit for their able and painstaking efforts,
so far as the mail service was concerned,
as that was under his more immediate
control. Captain Odman had had to navigate 
a difficult coast in the past, and had
managed successfully, and he (Mr. Randell)
hoped that equal success would attend
him in the future.

The Adelaide Steamship Company was the future and more importantly, humane!

Mr. W. E. Moxon responded. He said
that the mail service to the North-West
of Western Autralia was the most arduous
mail contract in Australia. This would be
understood when he stated that the old
mail liner Albany, which had grown old
with the colony and in her service, had
under mail contract for many years past
journeyed 2014, say 3000 miles, Derby
and back every 20 days, and called at 18
ports during the time, waited at them, 
landed and loaded cargoes: and the next
trip in 26 days had travelled 4000 miles to
Wyndham and back, and called at 19
different ports, subject to delay by tides
whose velocity was a mill race, delays
through dangerous reefs on a practically
unlighted coast, injuries by cyclones
which carried away and demolished towns,
altered navigable channels and destroyed
leading marks, while the steamer groped
along a dark coast day or night, fine or
thick calling at ports, roadsteads, where
work was sometimes impossible and delays
were frequent yet a zealous State official
expected the ship to leave on her next trip
up to time, Such had been the work of
the Albany, and such was to be the work
of the Bullarra, for which she received a
very modest subsidy as a small auxiliary
to her earning power as a cargo and
passenger boat.

This is an important description of a challenging schedule and route. 9 years later Koombana had her work cut out for her. The point is very well made by Mr. Moxon that 'zealous state officials expected the ship to leave on her next trip up to time'. No wonder Captain Allen felt pressurized to depart Port Hedland on schedule that fateful March morning. This, in my opinion, confirms the State's hand in the circumstances leading up to the Koombana disaster.

The decision of the Adelaide Steamship 
Company, Ltd., to introduce the Bullarra to the 
Nor'-West trade and mail service was entirely
due to the expansion of that trade, no assistance 
having been obtained from the State, and her 
retention in the trade was equally dependent upon
the growth and maintenance of the same
conditions. The steamer had been fitted
up especially for the work in which she was
to be engaged in the future, which itself
spoke for the opinion of the directors of
the Adelaide Steamship Company of the
promising future of this colony. 

She was fitted as a first-class passenger boat, 
and could take 120 passengers in both classes
without crowding. She had had between decks 
fitted throughout, and on deck and below she 
could accommodate large shipments of stock 
in fittings which could be erected or dismantled 
at will.
Two powerful steam rotary fans made a
forced indraught, which was intended to
withdraw from the holds all hot air and
fumes from the stock, while for the
traveller in the tropics a powerful "Hercules" 
engine manufactured ice, producing
"Jack Frost" in a 20ft. space, for preserving 
the ship's stores and keeping her liquid 
refreshments cool. All these fittings had 
cost much money, and the owners looked 
to the trade of Western Australia, and that 
alone, to reimburse them and give them a 
profitable revenue.

Adequate ventilation for stock was humane and good business sense.

The home coasting trade of a colony was
one of its prime industries, and it paid the
seaports to get as much as they could of
that class of business, leaving as it did so
much money at their doors. The Ballarra's
terminal and home port was Fremantle,
where she paid her wages, took her stores,
loaded the bulk of her cargoes, and repaired 
any damages or made renewals and alterations, 
and victualled the ship, trip by trip (13 in a year). 
For the information of those present he
might state that a steamer like the
Bullarra paid fully £4,000 every year in
Fremantle in wages to her crew, left
£1,000 per annum with the wharf
labourers coaling her bunkers and in
handling her coal alone, besides further
thousands in labour to the lumpers and
wharf hands handling her cargoes, and
other trade expenses of various sorts. He
was well within the mark in saying that
independently of the cost of her coal a
steamer like the Bullarra would pay into
circulation at Fremantle fully £7,000 every
year, This was good evidence of the
importance to the colony of the
home coast trade of Western Australia,
and in our interests as well as of
these who lived by labour and trade in
Fremantle the company claims the 
attention for it that it deserves. There seemed
to be an idea prevalent that steamships
earned enormous profits, He might tell
them that a steamer costing so low a
figure to run as £2 per hour was a very
much inferior vessel to the Bullarra, and
while they lunched or while they slept the
expense of a ship still went on. The
profitable running of steamships was
closely regulated by competition, and
owners were ever allowed by their
friends in the same trade to make 
unusually large profits.

Mr. Moxon was both intelligent and shrewd denying huge profits and promoting his company as an integral part of the development of the Nor'-West, contributing heavily to the economy of her home port, Fremantle = INDISPENSABLE.

"well at least until 1913 when the State Steamship Service usurped his crown'.

courtesy Trove.

MR BARKER.

Northern Times, 25 May, 1912

LOSS OF KOOMBANA
PORT HEDLAND EDITOR
ON THE BOARD'S FINDING,
CAPT. ALLAN UNEASY.
Perth, May 20.
It is reported that Mr. W. H. Barker, 
proprietor of the "Hedland Advocate", 
has stated that he has just read the 
finding of the Koombana Inquiry Board, 
and says that the statement - that the 
steamer when, she left Port Hedland 
was drawing 19 feet aft is not in accordance 
with what the harbourmaster told him. The 
harbourmaster made an assertion that the
Koombana was drawing 11 feet forward 
and 16 feet aft. As to the statement that there 
was no particular evidence regarding bad 
weather, Mr. Barker says for hours before the
Koombana sailed from Port Hedland people 
were battening down preparing for a gale, 
and forty luggers had run into the creek from 
outside for shelter.
Furthermore, Capt. Allan told him he
did not know whether to go out or
not, as he did not like the glass. He
was palpably uneasy and disinclined
to go. He remarked: "The passengers 
think they will get to Broome tomorrow 
(Thursday), but they will be lucky if they 
get there by Saturday. I am going right out 
to sea." Mr. Barker says - the Koombana 
rolled through the harbour entrance and 
had an ugly list to port. Mr. Barker was
not called upon to give evidence at
the inquiry.

No surprise that Mr. Barker was 'not called upon to give evidence at the inquiry'. 
Fix this text

In my opinion this sums up the truth of 20 March, 1912. Considering how quickly the Inquiry was convened how could it have been possible for Mr. Barker to get from Port Hedland to Fremantle on time? The Inquiry was a disgrace to the concept of 'seeing justice done' and Mr. Barker called it out for what it was. A whitewash is too kind a description!

courtesy Trove.

CAPTAIN ALLEN TOO POPULAR?

The Advertiser, Adelaide, 1 April, 1912

The Fremantle correspondent of the 
Melbourne "Herald," referring to the 
visiting steamer Koombana, telegraphed 
on Friday:

- Everyone in Western Australia connected 
with shipping knows Captain Thomas Allen, 
master of the Koombana.

Prospective passengers by the north-west
mailboat have often said, "I am sailing by
Tom Allen's boat," instead of mentioning
the steamer's name. The north-west coast
is dotted with communities in villages,
and should a vessel chance to miss 
unloading, say, a packet of tintacks at one
of these ports there are meetings of local
councils and vigilance committees, and 
telegrams are sent to Fremantle expressing 
indignation. 

Through these dangerous shoals of parochialism 
the masters of the north-west passenger and cargo 
steamers have to steer a safe course. 

And therein lies the rub.

It speaks well for the personal qualities of Captain 
Allen that he is generally recognised as the most
popular master that has ever traded to the 
north-west coast. 

Popularity might have come at the expense of safety and trying to meet demanding expectations instead of having the courage to put safety first and say 'NO! I am not going out today'.

Captain Allen is a native of  South Australia, 
and is about 48 years of age.  He is a single man, 
and when on his holiday  resides with his mother 
at Port Adelaide.


courtesy Trove.

Fix this text mother st Port Adelaide.

MAIL CONTRACT.

The Adelaide Steamship C.o.'s contract mail
service. S.s. Koombana under 1910 to 1913 
contract.

Serious trouble has occurred on
board the s.s. Koombana, belonging
to the Adelaide Steamship Company,
Ltd., which is the subsidised mail
boat for the Nor'-West ports, and
yesterday, it assumed such dimensions 
that instead of the Koombana
leaving for the Nor'-West last night
her sailing has been postponed indefinitely.
Fix this texfinitely.

Mr. Moxon:

"The contractors are liable to a fine of £5 per
hour if the mail steamer should run late and 
a satisfactory explanation is not given."


There is no doubt in my mind that this crucial factor contributed to Captain Allen making the hesitant decision to venture out into a troubled sea, 20 March, 1912. If he had elected to stay in port and the cyclonic event did not materialize as was alleged to have occurred a fortnight previously, the Adelaide Steamship Company might have been liable for this quoted £5 per hour fine. Surely this implies that the Federal Government contributed to the making of the disaster.

courtesy Trove.

DISGUSTED

The West Australian, 30 November, 1909

SHIPPING TELEGRAMS.

To the Editor.

Intelligence at the Perth G.P.O. leaves a
lot to be desired. Yesterday, for instance,
a number of persons interested in the move
ments of Nor'-West steamers were anxious
to ascertain the whereabouts of the Koombana 
and Minderoo, both known to be on
their way to Fremantle with an unusually
large number of passengers. The notice
board read:--Sharks Bay, November 27
Arrived: Koombana, from Carnarvon:
Koombana, from Sharks Bay. Then it was
notified from Sharks Bay that the Koombana 
had departed for Geraldton, also for
Fremantle. Nothing, however, was tele
graphed from Geraldton about the Koombana, 
and those desirous of meeting her at
Fremantle were in a quandary. Then the
board showed that the Koombana was sighted 
off Rottnest, but the intimation was
given too late to admit of Perth residents
being able to catch a Fremantle train soon
enough to meet the steamer on arrival. The
loose haphazard style of intimating that
a mail steamer arrived at Sharks Bay from
Sharks Bay on the same date naturally dis
counted the value of all the other notifications. 
As for the Minderoo travelling up and
down the coast, little or no information was
obtainable from the board, which ought
to be absolutely reliable and above all right
up to date.-Yours, etc.,
Fix this text
DISGUSTED

Nothing makes it clearer than this 'disgust' at the tardiness of the coastal service. Of course there was no insight into the immense challenges presented by tidal ports and weather conditions. No wonder Captain Allen was 'pressed on'.

courtesy Trove.

KOOMBANA NEAPED

Northern Times, 6 November, 1909.

The first tram to Point Sampson under the
new arrangement left on Tuesday, 20th
inst, to meet the Koombana, and was
availed of by a number, in addition to the
numerous passengers, and it is intended to
meet all steamers and also run as necessary
at other times till a regular time table is
required. The tramway service to Cossack
has been altered, and for the present a
day tram only will be run, leaving Roebourne 
at 10 a.m. The altered state of affairs will be 
much appreciated by the Roebourne public 
at all events, as now the despatch and 
receipt of mails will be greatly facilitated, 
and passengers will be able to remain 
at home till within a very few hours of the 
ship's arrival. Of course it will take some 
days to arrange matters, but Mr. Thomson 
is already showing himself ready to meet 
the wishes of the residents. Though the 
first tram left early in the morning yet a 
large number gathered to witness its 
departure, and later in the day, like the 
proverbial cat, "it came back" with a hungry 
and disappointed party, the cause being that
the Koombana had been neaped at Hedland. 
Word coming through later that the boat had 
left Hedland at about 6 p.m. the passengers 
left again for the boat, hoping for better luck.

The reality of Koombana being caught in Port Hedland by the tide. Inconvenience and a knock-on effect, potentially extending to other ports up and down the coast. One can understand the pressure Captain Allen experienced to 'press on'. The limited access to a tidal port such as Hedland was a central factor contributing to the disaster. It does raise a number of issues:

1. Did Koombana's size and draught qualify her for using this tidal port?

2. In order to clear the outer bar, Koombana had to empty her tanks which made her unstable in terms of GM - unseaworthy. 

3. Filling ballast tanks at sea was risky at best and frankly dangerous if Koombana was rolling and pitching, as was witnessed on the morning of 20 March.

4. 'Bumping' the outer bar on numerous occasions would surely have caused latent damage to the keel and hull of Koombana? It does remind one of the discovery of a 150 ft. section of her bilge keel near the coast after the disaster!!!

5. The harbour master at Port Hedland,who represented Captain Irvine, the Chief harbour master, sanctioned Koombana exiting his port on numerous occasions in extremely light, unseaworthy condition. The Department of Harbour and LIghts was thus, albeit indirectly, also responsible for allowing Koombana to go to her fate? 

6. Trying to save costs at the expense of lives and safety in terms of not dredging the bar and not providing lighters for ships the size of Koombana.

courtesy Trove.

Tuesday, 19 June 2018

DOOR DESCRIPTION

KOOMBANA WRECKAGE FOUND.
The Premier of West Australia has received the 
following message from the Resident Magistrate at Port
Hedland : —
'Captain Townley, of the Gorgon, reported on arriving 
here to-night, 25 miles north by west of Bedout Island,
we sighted a white panelled piece of wood. Stopped and
picked it up. The description is : Panelled door, painted
white, one side has been polished. The other fittings
were marked with crossed flags, and Walker and Hall in
brackets, and ornamented with a Grecian urn. The
door had apparently been forced off by pressure, as both
handles on the white side were gone, and on the reverse 
side had been driven in. 

What is interesting about the description is that the door was intact and showed evidence of having been forced out of the frame by a uniform force such as that exerted by a volume of water possibly when the steamer rolled over onto her port side.  This makes more sense than 'shredding' wind destruction in the middle of a cyclone.

We proceeded after stoppage,' and passed through several 
small pieces of wreck, one a painting stage. Others were 
apparently small pieces of board. An unusual number of 
birds were about.'

Birds do suggest that there were bodies adrift, not necessarily seen by the crew of the Gorgon.
On Tuesday last the Premier received' the following
telegram from the resident magistrate, Broome :— 
'Message just received from postmaster, Pt. Hedland, reads :
'Jones, of steamer Gorgon, just ashore. Found door
of stateroom 50 miles from here, north of Bedout Island,
where there is a lot of small wreckage. There appears
to be no doubt.'

Mr. Moxon, manager of the Adelaide Company at 
Fremantle, said in his opinion there was no doubt that the
flotsam comprised portions of the Kocmbana's fittings, the
description received from the company's manager at
Port Hedland clearing up any doubt in that regard. The
floating door was evidently from the chief steward's
cabin, leading off from the saloon entrance on the spar
deck, the leather-headed nails being used for the purpose 
of hanging nick-nacks upon. 


courtesy Trove.