Thursday, 14 May 2020

REMEMBERING THE DISASTER.

The Sun, Sydney, 4 October, 1922.

KOOMBANA WRECK


Tragedy of Ten Years Ago
LOSS OF 170 (157) LIVES
Terrific Coast Gale
While steaming on a smooth
sea between the mainland and
Bedout Island, in the north, the
steamer Bambra struck what is
believed to be the remains of
the steamer Koombana.

A tantalising possibility, finally the discovery of the wreck of Koombana, 10 years later. 

However, the Geranium naval steamer was tasked to go to the site and confirm the story. This did not materialize. Koombana remains illusive.
A little over ten years ago every
body was asking: "Is there any news
of the Koombana?". She left Port
Hedland on Wednesday March 20,
1912, with 170 (157) souls aboard. 
On that day a terrific gale— a willy willy
— raged along the north-west coast. 
The cyclone commenced on the 
Wednesday night and continued till 
the Friday morning. During that time 
nine inches of rain fell.

"Koombana" was on everybody's lips
for several days. Then came the 
message that a smoking-room settee 
and a red cushion had been found near
Bedout Island. That was followed
by the announcement that all hope
had been abandoned. Several days 
after memorial services were held in
churches and a relief fund was opened.
WHAT MARINERS THOUGHT

After the finding of the wreckage,
mariners were convinced that the
Koombana went down near Bedout 
Island. But, as with the Waratah and
Yongala, and other ill-fated vessels,
the relatives of those on board did not
give up hope till the very last. And
sailors who know that part of the
Australian coast, were not surprised
that there were no survivors. "No
person could have lived in such a sea
for five minutes," they declared, "and
the vicinity of Bedout Island is noted
for the existence of myriads of sharks."

When the Koombana was three days
out the relatives of the unfortunate
passengers and crew were heartened
by a message that she had got back to
port. But that was due to the over-
anxiety of a telegraph line repairer
outside Port Hedland, who reported
that the Koomabana, flying signals of
distress, was about to enter the port.
The steamer proved to be the Bullarra,
which subsequently rendered great
assistance in the vain search for the
Koombana.

"SHE WILL TURN UP"

Right on top of the telegraph lines
man's story came another cheery mess
age — "Evidently the Koombana missed
the full force of the gale, for her safe
arrival at Derby, some distance north
of Broome, is announced." Unfortunately, 
however, both messages proved inaccurate, 
and the Bambra has, it is believed now, 
passed over the Koombana at the very 
spot where ten years ago a veteran 
north-west coast captain said she had 
gone down.

Right up till the time the wreckage
was found the agents were hopeful.
"She is such an admirable seaboat,"
they said, "and the master is such a
careful mariner, that we have every
confidence she will turn up safely."
The Koombana was the plaything of
the cyclone. Old mariners were emphatic 
on that point. She was battered to pieces
- that was indicated by the tattered and 
torn state of the wreckage.

ALMOST FORGOTTEN

Then for a week or two the man in
the street remarked "That's the last of
the Koombana." And so many things
have happened since that the Koombana 
was almost forgotten until a few days ago, 
the Bambra struck her and rolled so much 
that it was feared she would turn right over 
and find a resting place alongside the fine 
vessel of 4400 tons that has evidently been
there for over a decade.

But the Koombana was not altogether
forgotten, because when she went down
she took with her 170 (157) of our own kith
and kin, leaving behind the memory of
a tragedy of the sea.
There have been many tragedies of
the sea during the last ten yours, and
especially during the war period.
Many fine ships were mined — others
torpedoed. But that we could understand
although we were shocked we were not 
staggered. But when at our very doors a 
vessel with many precious lives aboard 
is swallowed up and leaves hardly any 
trace behind— not one solitary survivor 
to tell the story — words fail us. . . .And 
then, as time goes on and disaster 
succeeds disaster we forgot the Koombana. 
But ten years ago almost everything else 
was forgotten. . . . Today we are reminded 
of the tragedy of March, 1912— and we 
understand.


SS Bambra - courtesy Flotilla Australia.

Mirror, Perth, 29 March, 1930.

 In the loss of the Koombana not 
one of her 130 (157) passengers 
and crew was ever seen again. 
She disappeared with all hands.

The Koombana was lost in one of the
worst cyclones on the Nor'-West coast.
Two other ships, the Crown of England 
and the Concordia, were driven ashore 
off Depuch anchorage, eight men off the 
former being drowned. Scores of luggers 
were wrecked and three well known men 
who were to have been Crown witnesses 
in a murder case were drowned when the 
lighter in which they were waiting to be 
picked up by the s.s. Bullara was 
overtaken by the storm. Altogether the 
death roll — apart from the 130 on the 
Koombana — amounted to over 40. 

The Koombana had been on the coast
for two (3) years. She was of 4399 (3668)
tons, well equipped, could do 15 knots, 
and was recognised as one of the best 
boats on the coast. She left Port Hedland 
for Broome at 10.30 a.m. on Wednesday, 
March 20. There was
A GALE BLOWING

then and she was rolling heavily as she
left the anchorage, her captain having
decided not to fill the ballast tanks till
he crossed the outer bank. 

As recalled, 10 years later, there was a gale blowing and Koombana, in very light condition, was 'rolling heavily'. These are the salient, correct facts which stuck in the collective memory.

At 1 p.m. she was sighted by the Bullara, 
which left Port Hedland for the south half 
an hour after her. But she was never seen
again.

Captain T. M. Allen's farewell
words as he prepared to sail out
into the storm were strangely
prophetic: 'I'm going straight
out to sea.' he said, 'and I'll be
lucky if I get to Broome on 
Saturday.'

Again absolutely no ambiguity about departing into a storm and anticipating a rough time of it.

He never reached there. For days the whole 
State waited anxiously for news. Shipping men 
generally
WERE OPTIMISTIC.

One authority, Captain H. C. Clarke,
said that 'properly handled the Koombana 
would live in any hurricane.' And
an engineer who had weathered some
rough weather in her described the ill
fated vessel as 'the best sea boat I
ever sailed in.'

After a few days of anxious waiting
a systematic search was begun, the
Premier (Mr. Jack Scaddan) and the
Prime Minister (Mr. Andrew Fisher) 
cooperating with the steamship 
companies in the hope of piercing the 
veil of mystery. But their efforts were 
unavailing. The coast was scoured by 
luggers and the Bullarra, Gorgon, Minderoo,
Moira and Una kept a close watch for
signs of the missing vessel.

On April 3 the Gorgon found some 
small wreckage and the door of a stateroom.
The discovery was made 25 miles west
by north of Bedout Island, the searchers 
being directed to the spot by the presence 
of numbers of birds. 

Flocks of birds at sea were generally associated with the presence of bodies after the loss of a ship. No bodies, however, were ever officially discovered. 

The Koombana was the only boat on the
coast with staterooms and on receipt of
the news the manager of the Adelaide
S.S. Co (Mr. W. E. Moxon) counselled
people to resign themselves to the
thought that the Koombana

HAD BEEN LOST.

The stateroom door was subsequently
identified as belonging to the stateroom
facing the port side entrance to the
music saloon.

The next discovery was made by
Capt. Mills of the Minderoo, who found
a smokeroom settee, and red cushion,
part of a cabin drawer and the bottom
boards of a boat between 50 and 70
miles west of Bedout Island. And on
Friday. April 5, the 'West Australian'
announced 'All Hope Abandoned.' A
fund for the relief of sufferers was
opened by the Mayor of Perth (Mr. T. G.
A. Molloy) and services were held in
all the churches.
Later the Bullara (Captain Upjohn)
picked up the bow of a boat 20 miles
north of Bedout and a quantity of
greasy and oily water was seen. 

And nothing more on that important subject, then and now.

The Una picked up a mast from one of, the
ship's boats, and a cabin panel and air
tight copper tanks were discovered on
the coast about 150 miles from Broome.
Beyond these traces the Koombana had 
become one of the mysteries of the
sea. She

HAD DISAPPEARED

as completely as had the Yongala of
the same line off the Queensland coast
exactly a year before. Some people still
say she was top-heavy. But to some
every steamer that has more than one
deck in its superstructure is carrying
too much top hamper. It is felt, however, 
that she either struck a reef or was 
overwhelmed by the seas somewhere 
in the vicinity of Bedout Island and sank 
with all hands.

And when some days later the
'Old Bull'— as the Bullara was
known — limped into Fremantle
with her funnel blown away and
temporarily replaced by a wooden
box, her superstructure damaged
and her boats smashed in, those
on the waterfront wondered that
any ship could live out the hurricane 
the 'Old Bull' and the Koombana
encountered.


Bullarra on the left and Koombana on the right, towering over the older steamer - courtesy wikipedia


Wednesday, 13 May 2020

DOOMED DESIGN?

Daily Commercial News, 9 April, 1912.
THE LOST KOOMBANA.
A Terrible Disaster.
It is only too evident that the fine
steamer Koombana has been lost. 
She was a fine vessel in every way; 
indeed, a most staunch ship, and that 
she should meet her end in weather 
that other vessels passed through, 
crippled but safe, might cause some 
surprise.

This is a loaded paragraph, echoing words from the official Inquiry: 

'a most staunch ship'. 

However, the author juxtaposes the accolade with 'surprise' that other vessels came through intact, with pointed reference to the ageing Bullarra minus her funnel. 

Still, it is the fortune of the sea. 

Acknowledging the unknown.

Really, considering the strength of the hurricane 
and the experiences of other vessels, such 
as the Bullarra, Uganda, etc it is marvelous
that the losses were not greater. But, the 
strange part of this hurricane and a number 
of others where loss has occurred in recent
years is that almost new vessels have
been lost, whilst older ships fought their 
way to safety.

Now the gloves were off, the author attacking seaworthiness of new vessels. 

It was so with the Waratah, again with the 
Yongala last year, and now the Koombana
and abroad the same coincidence has been
noticed. It is remarkable that it should be so, 
and opens the old question of whether the 
advance of marine architecture may not have 
something to do with it. 

Blatantly questioning the science of progress.

Vessels are built to-day with top hamper unheard 
of a few years ago, which has given rise to the 
remarks so often  heard, no doubt, but the most 
careful investigation and experiments have not 
proved the idea dangerous.

Deferring skeptically to 'careful investigation and experiments.'

As to the question of stability generally,
coupled with that of safety at sea, an
interesting paper read by Professor
W. S. Abell, M.I.N.A., professor of naval
architecture at Liverpool University,
recently (and which appears in to-day's
issue), shows that, with the strides
made by marine architects, great 
consideration has been shown, and every
care exercised. Yet these fearful disasters 
occur repeatedly. 

The author questioned the expertise bluntly; 'yet these fearful disasters occur repeatedly'

Truly it is difficult to understand, the only 
certainty about them  being that they 
happen all to frequently, and cause general 
sorrow.


RMS Koombana (ANU archives)
Koombana was in a league of her own when it came to inherent top heaviness.



TSS Waratah



SS Yongala


However, there were a great number of similarly 'modern' steamers with significant top hampers which operated successfully in all conditions over long service periods. 

Ballasting was the key word, ensuring stability and seaworthiness. Sometimes ballasting was overdone, as in the case of Waratah, creating a new set of problems, but that is another story and blog:




SS Indarra



SS Assaye



SS Morea



SS Dongala




SS Falaba
The West Australian, 13 April, 1912.

STABILITY OF SHIPS AND
LAWS OF STORMS. 
- To the Editor.

"Sir, now I that the missing Koombana
may certainly be listed as lost, like the
Waratah and Yongala, the travelling public
might very well be interested in studying
for themselves the simple proposition of 
stability in ships. This proposition lies buried
in scientific jargon as far as the man in the
Street is concerned, and can easily be 
demonstrated in ordinary language. 

It is a long time since Archimedes proved. 
that a floating body is exactly the same 
weight as the water it displaces. A steamer, 
with whatever cargo or ballast she may 
have in her, is exactly the same weight as 
the water she displaces. The water she 
displaces is what would fill the cavity her 
weight and shape impose below the water 
line or surface of the water. Exactly in the 
centre of this cavity, in which the floating 
ship fits lies the vessel's centre of buoyancy, 
and through this centre there acts an upward 
pressure from the sea in its endeavour to 
become level against the weight of the ship. 

When a steamer is floating upright, this 
centre of buoyancy lies midships in a 
vertical line or plane, dividing the vessel 
in two. If one thinks of  a partition being 
built from stem to stern amidships from 
the keel upward, then in this partition lies 
the centre of buoyancy when the steamer 
stands upright, and it lies nearly half-way 
between the keel. and the water line. 

The water line is a imaginary line or plane 
joining, from side to side through the vessel 
the  surfaces of the surrounding sea. Not any
of the painted lines on the hull often alluded
to as the "water line." When a steamer
heels over; that is lists or rolls from side to
side part of her hull comes out above the
level of the sea on one side and another part
sinks further in on the other side. When
this happens the centre of buoyancy changes
position in the hull while always retaining
its position about the centre of whatever
portion of the hull is immersed. Thus, as
she rolls to starboard, it leaves the assumed
partition amidships, moving to starboard,
returning to partition, and then towards
port as she rolls from starboard, through
upright, and then to port.

As before explained, there is always an
upward pressure from the ocean in a 
straight line perpendicular to its level
surface through this moving centre of 
buoyancy and that line always passes 
through a given point in the midships 
partition above it. This point is termed 
the "meta centre" by experts and it will 
readily be imagined that the centre of 
buoyancy swings from side to side like 
a pendulum suspended from it, when
the vessel is rolling at sea.

There is now the centre of gravity, which
everyone nowadays understands is simply
the centre of weight to be considered as it
must readily be realised that a vessel's
centre of gravity depends upon the amount 
of cargo or ballast she may be carrying and
how such is stowed or disposed in her holds.
But once the cargo or ballast is placed, stowed,
or, disposed in the vessel, the centre of 
gravity remains constant, and does not
shift (unless the cargo shifts), like the centre
of buoyancy. If the vessel be stowed properly 
it will be found somewhere in the assumed 
midships partition and at a point below meta 
centre point. The pressure from the weight of 
the ship is always in the direction of an assumed 
plumb line hanging from the centre of gravity point, 
and as the vessel rolls at sea this plumb line or 
direction of pressure swings from side to side
in harmony with the line of buoyancy, exactly 
coinciding when the vessel is upright, and parallel, 
with an increasing distance between them as the 
vessel rolls to one side. 

The degree of stability- that is safety from capsizing 
- depends on the distance of the meta centre above 
the centre of gravity. This distance is termed the meta 
centric height. (GM). The force downward from the
centre of gravity is exactly equal to the force 
upward exerted by the ocean endeavouring to 
get level; and these two forces tend to right the ship 
when the undulations of the sea swing her away
from the upright. The greater the metacentric 
height which is the same as saying the greater 
the safety from capsizing, the more uncomfortable 
the vessel to travel on. The more leverage the forces 
of buoyancy and gravity have the more quickly 
they can right the vessel swaying on the undulating 
surface. Too great safety from capsizing brings about 
other dangers. Sailing vessels with heavy dead-weight 
cargoes have been known to lose their masts and 
strain their hulls to such an extent, in so rolling, their
masts out, that they have sprung a leak and
foundered. 


Iron and such like heavy cargoes have often to 
be stowed in narrow trunkways or on platforms
especially built in the ship to keep her centre
of gravity higher when loaded. When we hear
people say that such and such a vessel is a 
grand seaboat, etc., etc., such a vessel may 
have been very unsafe on that particular voyage, 
her very unsafety contributing to the comfortable 
travelling. 

It may be taken for granted there is very little
difference in modern cargo vessels when
carrying complete cargoes that nearly fill
them. With like loading they may safely
be expected to behave much the same in
similar storms. The common design for such
vessels provides a breadth equal to about
twice the moulded depth below the main
deck,and as there are no passengers
carried there is very little superstructure
above the main deck. When we consider
passenger steamers, however, the tendency
to build additional decks and keep the 
passengers' accommodation all above the main
deck is most noticeable. Everyone prefers a
nice airy cabin to the stuffy ones which were
once the vogue, and all below the main deck.
Here it is an open question whether we are 
not sacrificing safety for comfort and carrying 
capacity. 

The fact that we have had the Waratah,
Yongala, and Koombana mysteries in these 
latitudes during the last three years is sufficient 
excuse for the public requiring some practical
and expert investigation made on their behalf. 
In the case of the Waratah it seems abundantly 
clear, from the evidence given at the Law Courts 
that this vessel was not considered to have 
sufficient ballasting powers when sailing without 
cargo, to counteract the weight of superstructure
supplying the passenger accommodation. She
was to some extent in the same predicament as 
our famous sailing clippers of last century, which 
needed nearly half a cargo of ballast to go seeking 
for cargoes from one port to another. 

When the Waratah was lost she had nearly a 
full cargo on board and whatever her degree 
of stability was when empty, had surely nothing 
to do with her degree of stability when loaded. 
Yet, as far as  the writer can learn, there was 
little or no evidence forthcoming as to the weight 
and disposal of the cargo she had when lost.

In the case of the Koombana there is
considerable food for reflection. She was
probably carrying less than 500 tons of
cargo and:appears to have been engulfed
in the centre of a "willy-willy." It the opinion 
of the writer that the Koombana in light trim 
was not fit to encounter a hurricane centre.
The writer has been caught near a cyclone 
centre off Mauritius in a sailing vessel, and 
remembering how that vessel, although in 
ideal load and trim was.smothered under 
almost bare poles with bulwarks under water 
and hatch comings awash, he cannot conceive 
it possible for a steamer like the Koombana 
in light trim, exposing such an area of 
superstructure to such a force of wind, to live 
through it.

The question is, 'Is it a legitimate risk to send
such a vessel in such a trim into hurricane
latitudes in hurricane seasons?" 

It must be remembered that the law of
storms is getting on towards being an exact
science, with barometers to provide indications
of approach; and with means to indicate the 
vessel's position from the centre and to show 
from collected data the most probable path of 
the centre, a good steamer with an experienced 
and expert master should easily avoid being 
caught. It is a matter of vigilance and judgment
just as is the case with a pedestrian avoiding
motor cars. These remarks are applicable.
to cyclones, typhoons, and other well
known and studied storms, but have we
done our duty with regard.to the Nor'-West
"willy-willy" ?? Is there a published hand
book with information; instructions; and
suggestions as is the case in other 
hurricane parts of the,world for the
safety of mariners. If not, is it not a work 
worth taking in hand at once?

'Yours; etc.,

LONGSHOREMAN.'

Fremantle, April.