Sunday, 18 December 2016

A DANGEROUS COAST.

Barrier Miner, Thursday 28 March, 1912.

A Dangerous Coast.
The coast along which the Koombana
travels is most dangerous. It is noted
for storms of a sudden and particularly
severe nature There are few lighthouse
between Port Hedland and Port Darwin 
to guide the mariner, and the course so 
far has been imperfectly surveyed. 

There are numerous hidden obstructions 
which might at any time be responsible for 
a wreck. The toll is heavy already. A network 
exists of shoals, bars, reefs, tides, and currents.
The Ninety-Mile Beach, which forms part of the 
coast, is especially low and sandy. To illustrate 
the variety of the unexpected dangers, it is 
recorded that in one instance, as the result of a 
mischance, a vessel ran aground on the only 
stretch of soft sand in an otherwise rockbound 
island, and was floated off without injury, while 
another ship went on the one flinty ridge in a 
deep water channel and sank. The tidal fall 
of King Sound is one of the largest in the world
its maximum is 42ft. There are innumerable 
maelstroms at the entrance to the harbor, and 
a few of the currents travel at about 12 miles
an hour. An irregular ridge is formed where the 
Fitzroy river pours its flood into the harbor, and 
the various forces set up a terrible fight. 

Numerous islands dot the coast, and ships 
cannot approach near to it. There are but
few ports, and pearling is the chief industry. 
The heat is intense at Port Hedland, which is 
the starting of the recently completed Marble 
Bar Railway. The roofs and chimneys of some
of the houses are anchored with chains.
The flourishing town of Broome has
been created by tho pearling industry.
There the tide runs out as much as 28ft.
and the efflux is remarkably rapid.


courtesy Google Earth
courtesy Trove

Saturday, 17 December 2016

PROBATE - CAPTAIN ALLEN.

The Advertiser, Adelaide, Wednesday 7 April, 1912.

COURT CASES.
KOOMBANA WRECK RECALLED
APPLICATIONS FOR PROBATE.
At the Full Court on Tuesday two applications 
for probate were heard which recalled the sad 
fate of the steamer Koombana.
Mr. S. H. Skipper made application on
behalf of Seaborne Robert Cottrell Allen
(executor) that probate be granted in the
estate of the late Thomas Maurice Allen,
master of the steamer Koombana, which
was lost some months ago off the north-
west coast of Western Australia. Mr. Skip
per asked for leave to swear that the death
of the testator had occurred between Port
Hedland and Broome, North-West Australia, 
on or since March 20 last.
The motion was supported by affidavits
by Peter Donaldson Haggart (secretary of
the Adelaide Steamship Company), Walter
Vernon Ray, Robert A. Smith, and Stoddart 
A. Poole. It was mentioned by Mr. Skipper 
that the Koombana left Port Hedland on 
March 20 and on the next morning she 
should have arrived at Broome, 204 miles 
distant. A few hours after the vessel's 
departure there was a terrific cyclone and 
the vessel had not been heard of since.
Although steamers had been sent out in
search of the missing vessel nothing had
since been heard of it, and he believed that
no wreckage had been found. Insurance
had been paid on the vessel as a total loss
The court granted the application.
Consideration was given to a similar 
application in regard to the will of John
Francis Coughlin, who was a steward on
the ill-fated vessel.
Mr.G. W. Dempster, who appeared for
Dennis Fitzgerald, the sole executor, said
the testator had left all his property to his
mother. Affidavits were put in from P. D. 
Haggart and Archibald H. Lewis, a clerk .
in the Perth office of the Adelaide Steamship 
Company. It was stated by the latter that 
he saw the deceased on the Koombana
when the vessel left Fremantle. Mr Dempster 
said the testator left only about £6 in South 
Australia, but he had between £1.000 and 
£1,500 invested in Western Australia.
The Chief Justice -That's a very good
beginning for a steward.
The case was eventually adjourned till a
date to be fixed to enable Mr. Dempster to
supply further evidence. The Chief Justice
said he thought it would be sufficient to
get an affidavit by someone who saw the
deceased on board the Koombana at Port
Hedland.


Captain Thomas Allen (courtesy Daily Telegraph)
courtesy Trove

Saturday, 10 December 2016

MISSED CYCLONE WARNING.

The West Australian, Perth, Friday, 26 April, 1912.

THE KOOMBANA.
COURT OF MARINE INOUIRY.
QUESTION OF STABILITY.
COURT INVITES EVIDENCE FROM
PUBLIC.

S. R. P. Stevens, who was acting divisional
officer of the Commonwealth Weather Bureau 
from March 15 to 25, examined by Mr. Parker,
said that each morning he received reports from 
Wyndham, Hall's Creek, Broome, Derby, Cossack, 
Onslow, and other places in the North-West. 
Duplicate reports were sent to the Melbourne 
Bureau, and from that office the forecasts, based 
on barometer and thermometer readings, were
issued at noon, Eastern time. These forecasts 
were received in Perth between 11.30 and 12 
noon (Western time). If they were not received 
by noon each day the forecast was issued by 
the local bureau. If storms were approaching 
warnings were issued to all stations in the 
vicinity of the storm centre. Later on in the 
afternoon forecasts based upon more recent 
data were issued by the local bureau. No special 
forecast was issued from the Melbourne office 
of any storm from March 16 to 21, inclusive

The Mercury, Wednesday 20 March, 1912.

WEATHER REPORT.
FORECASTS.

WEDNESDAY 20 MARCH.

Fix this tesignificantxtWEDNESDAY, MARCH 20.
West Australia.- Fine, cool to moderate
temperatures on the S. coast; warm to hot
elsewhere. Variable winds, chiefly between
S.E. and N.E. Some scattered thunderstorms
in Kimberley.

(The steamer Bullarra sailed from Port
Hedland for Cossack via Balla Balla on
March 20, at 11 a.m., and encountered
a strong north-east gale on leaving the
harbor. By 2 p.m. the gale had increased
to a hurricane, and continued till 1 p.m.
next day. - Advertiser Adelaide, 26 March)

The central bureau failed entirely in its duty to assess data and issue appropriate warnings. It was though history repeated itself, highlighting the short-comings of this cumbersome system of sending data to Melbourne and expecting a reasonable outcome; Yongala, one year prior, had steamed into a cyclone that was neither predicted nor identified off the Queensland coast. In the case of Captain Knight of the Yongala, he departed Flat-Top for Townsville into conditions at sea which he believed to be a south-east change system moving up the coast from the south, and which he must have believed could be safely outrun en-route to Townsville. Captain Allen had far more information to make his final decision about whether to depart Hedland or not. Luggers running for shelter; significant ground swell; huge waves crashing onto the beach the previous evening etc.. But at the end of the day these masters relied on guidance from the central weather bureau for expected weather conditions and warnings, which did not come in either case. See the following post which illustrates the degree to which cyclones could be predicted as far back as 1898:

http://yongalarevisited.blogspot.co.za/2016/11/there-was-no-cyclone-prediction-or.html

Both coasts, east and northwest, can experience up to 5 cyclones per summer season. It was not as though a cyclone was a rare weather event, difficult to predict and anticipate its path of destruction. From all the anecdotal reports it is clear that experiencing such a phenomenon at sea was horrific to say the least. The central weather bureau were obliged to have their finger on the button anticipating these catastrophic events. Circa 1912, there were more than enough stations on both coasts collating barometer and temperature readings to establish the pattern of a tropical depression.

On March 15 there was a monsoonal depression 
which had worked S.S.W. to Port Darwin. By the 
18th the storm had reached the neighbourhood 
of Derby, but in no cases were high winds recorded, 
and the lowest point the barometer recorded was 
29.70. report from Port Hedland on the 20th 
stated that the wind force was four miles an 
hour, with threatening weather and smooth 
seasand Cossack reported a barometer of 
29.69 with wind east blowing at the rate of 
19 miles an hour.

Contrary to what appears to have been a blatant untruth, the following extract described conditions at Hedland, 20 March:

It started on Tuesday night with a strong 
easterly wind, and the waves thundered on 
the beach with indications of heavier and 
deadlier surges out at sea. Wednesday 
morning saw about forty luggers running 
to shelter off Port Hedland, where they 
were soon safely anchored. These luggers 
had a rough time on Tuesday night near 
Turtle Island, and the cutting away of masts 
in some cases was seriously contemplated. 
The wind increased its velocity, and it 
continued for three days and nights. The
waves surged up the harbour's entrance, and

the breakers crashed into the sandy Esplanade, 
and washed thousands of tons of it away.

It seems to me that every effort was made at the Inquiry to steer attention away from the glaring truth that Captains Upjohn and Allen were ill-advised to depart Hedland into what was clearly a developed storm system. The luggers had made this point perfectly clear. 

On the 20th at 1 p.m. Cossack advised that a 
fresh gale was blowing, with high seas and 
weather threatening. On the 21st, next morning, 
the barometer recorded 29.56, wind 37 miles
an hour, and there were very heavy seas. The 
storm, from 15th to 21st March, went in 
south-west direction, and evidently struck the 
coast at Cossack and curved. The centre of 
the storm passed north of Cossack. There
was nothing to indicate that a cyclone was
approaching.

A fresh gale was hardly what Captain Upjohn described, 22 n miles from Balla Balla, 20 March. Note the discrepancies in barometer readings, quoted:

The steamer Bullara (Koombana's sister ship), 
which sailed from Hedland for Cossack, via 
Balla Balla, on March 20 at 11 a.m., encountered 
a strong north-east gale. By 2 o'clock the gale 
had increased to a hurricane, and continued
until 1 p.m. on March 21. At noon the 
barometer had fallen to 27.70. At this stage
the hurricane had reached its strongest. On
March 20 the steamer's funnel blew off 
from the base and fell across the top deck 
with a tremendous crash. Great difficulty was
encountered in lashing the funnel to the
boat, as was also the case with many marine 
appliances, which were being blown away. 

The Moira account also confirmed the extent of conditions out at sea, not just on land:

Captain Brett Ward, master of the
Moira, which reached Wyndham 
yesterday, forwarded the following 
cable message, via Broome, to the 
Premier :-

"We encountered cyclonic weather at 8 a.m. 
on the 20th, in latitude 19-20 deg. south,
and longitude 117 deg. east, 100 miles 
north-west of Hedland. The Moira was 
run before the storm in a westerly direction
about 150 miles. The storm roughly lasted 
21 hours, the wind gradually shifting from 
east and north-east to south-westerly.

Cross-examined by Mr. Moss: The cyclone
indicated a sudden development and 
unexpected energy. 

Tell that to the luggers, particularly the ones almost 'de-masted' and the Moira battling at sea from 8 am, 20 March, some 100 miles northwest of Hedland !! How could this account have been accepted into evidence !!

The forecasts were thoroughly satisfactory,

NO !!

and the only delay in getting them from 
Melbourne was the time it took to transmit 
the telegrams, which had precedence over 
all other matters. Pressed by counsel, 
witness admitted that there would be 
a saving of time to that extent  if the 
reports were made by the local bureau.

At last a sensible suggestion which should have been implemented after the loss of the Yongala.

Continuing, witness stated that apparently
the depression struck the coast somewhere
near Cossack, and, being interrupted by the
coastline, and the width of the depression
being narrowed, it resulted in a sudden
storm. 

No, it was not sudden.

It would help if the various officers on the 
coast exchanged information directly
provided, they understood what it conveyed.

It was raised when Yongala was lost if it would have helped if she had been fitted with wireless to receive warnings and advice from officers both on land and at sea. Koombana had just such a wireless which was of no use whatsoever. Steamers out at sea experiencing the first impact of the cyclone did not have wireless to transmit warnings to Koombana and there were no receivers on land to receive general warnings from shipping.

Postmasters, speaking generally, were very
reliable in the matter of weather reports.
There had been cases of delay in issuing
forecasts from Melbourne. He could not form
any ideas as to the velocity of the cyclone
which wrecked the Koombana. The diameter, 
he thought, would extend from Port Hedland 
on the north and Cossack on the south. About 
90 miles north-east by south-west.

This seems reasonable. 

To Mr. Parker: It would be of assistance
to masters if the postmaster at Broome 
advised postmasters north and south of 
the weather conditions.

Any practical suggestions such as this were better than the existing, useless system. Nothing whatsoever learned from the Yongala disaster.


http://yongalarevisited.blogspot.co.za/2016/10/cyclone-data-warning-9-am-23-march.html

courtesy Google Earth

diameter of cyclone - roughly 100 miles (courtesy Google Earth)



- probably closer to the truth (courtesy Google Earth)
courtesy Trove

Thursday, 8 December 2016

KOOMBANA INQUIRY.

The Marine Inquiry was expedited very quickly, one month after the Koombana went missing. Was there enough time for preparation and collation of all the facts and witness accounts, never mind getting witnesses from Northwest Australia to Fremantle ??


The West Australian, Perth, Saturday 11 May, 1912.

KOOMBANA INQUIRY.

FINDING OF THE COURT OF
MARINE.

"VESSEL'S STABILITY UNASSAILABLE". 
"CAPTAIN'S CAREFULNESS AND 
COMPETENCY BEYOND QUESTION"

"A MYSTERY OF THE SEA."

The Court of Marine Inquiry gave their decision 
at the Fremantle Courthouse yesterday regarding
the loss at sea of the s. Koombana on or about 
March 20,1912, between Port Hedland and Broome.
Mr M. L. Moss, K.C., who watched the proceedings 
on behalf of the Adelaide Steamship Co., and 
Mr. W. R. Moxon, attorney and manager for the 
company in this State, were the only persons who 
sat in the body of the Court.

In delivering the decision the President said: In
conformity with the request of the Hon., the 
Colonial Secretary, the Court of Marine Inquiry
investigated at Fremantle the 25th, 26th, and 
29th days of April, 1912, the circumstances 
surrounding the loss at sea of the S S Koombana. 

The difficulties attendant on doing so were 
exceptional, because though in many inquiries 
under the Navigation Act of 1904, the Act under 
which an inquiry is held, evidence can be adduced
from persons who were on board - and who
can depose to the circumstances immediately
attendant on a disaster to a ship, no such
evidence is obtainable in this case owing to
the fact that the ill-fated vessel has totally
disappeared at sea, with all on board of her.
In order, therefore, to account for such a
total disappearance, the inquiry for the most
part must be directed to considerations of
the: Ship's Stability; Equipment; and Sea
worthiness; together with Captain Allen's 
efficiency and carefulness as a shipmaster. 

During the inquiry Mr. Parker, the Crown 
Prosecutor, appeared on behalf of the Chief 
Harbourmaster, and Mr. M. L. Moss, K.C., 
appeared on behalf of the Adelaide S.S. Co., the
owners of the s.s. Koombana. The Court was 
considerably assisted also by the presence 
throughout the inquiry of a large model of the 
Koombana, complete in minute detail, as also 
by various plans, etc., readily produced. 

The SS Koombana was a steel screw steamer of 
3,668 tons gross and 2,182 tons net. - Her length 
was 340ft., breadth 48ft. 2in., and depth 25ft. 8in. 
Her indicated h.p. was 4,000 (3,000), and her 
nominal h.p. 423. She was built by Messrs. Alex. 
Stephen and Son, Ltd., Glasgow, in the year 1908 
from specifications to the Highest Class of British 
Corporation Requirements, which in many 
instances she exceeded. She also held a Marine 
Certificate to August,1912, issued by the Department 
of Navigation of New South Wales, and was last
docked in Sydney on August 15, 1911. 

Interesting to note that Koombana had a depth of hold of 25 ft. 8 in. and a depth of hull of 29.5 ft., which gives us a double bottom containing water ballast tanks of 3.75 ft. slightly more than the equivalently sized Yongala - 3.5 ft.. Yongala had a ballast tank capacity of 400 tons, whereas Koombana had a capacity of 900 tons, which appears to have been contributed to by considerable fore and after peak tanks. At this early juncture it is important to note that Koombana needed a greater ballast to steady her towering decks and relatively low maximum draft. This had significant implications for the sequence of events 20 March, 1912.

The Court heard evidence from Mr. S. R. P.
Stevens, an officer of the Commonwealth
Weather Bureau, Perth; Captain Upjohn,
who is master of the ss. Bullarra, and who
was chief officer of the s.s. Koombana for 12
months; Mr. James Crossley, chief officer of
the s.s. Bullarra; Captain James F. Morrison, 
Inspector of Shipping at the Port of Fremantle, 
who had official knowledge of the s.s. Koombana; 
Captain Matthew John Williams, Marine 
Superintendent of the Adelaide Steamship Co
in Western Australia, Henry John Clarke, assistant 
wharf manager for the Port of Fremantle, and
formerly chief officer of the ss. Koombana
for fifteen months on the North-West coast 
of Western Australia, and also on her maiden 
voyage to Australia from Glasgow; Mr. Alex. Craig, 
the chief engineer of the s.s. Bullarra; Captain 
J. A. Rankin, Acting-Marine Superintendent for
the Adelaide Steamship Company for Australasia - 
who produced to the Court and explained by actual 
test a Ralston stability and trim indicator 
specially made for the s.s Koombana and 
which was not on board the vessel owing 
to its only having recently arrived in Australia.

The Ralston stability and trim indicator was NOT ON BOARD. True GM could not have been established when Koombana departed Port Hedland, 20 March. How convenient for the owners. Bringing up the 'indicator' irrelevant.

Mr. A.C. Butcher engineer-surveyor for the 
Harbour and Light Department at Fremantle,
Mr. W.E. Moxon, attorney and manager in 
Western Australia for the Adelaide Steamship 
Company; Captain Irvine, the Chief Harbour
master for Western Australia ; the Rev. William 
Patrick, who saw the S S Koombana leave Port 
Hedland on her last voyage, and Captain G. 
Cumming, being the only person who 
volunteered evidence in response to an 
invitation from the Court publicly announced 
and published in the daily press.

It is very interesting that the summary referenced Captain Cumming, quoted as the only person to respond to an 'invitation' issued from the Court via the Press. The fact that logistics prevented the majority of residents of Port Hedland (associated with Koombana) from attending, was disingenuous to say the least. 

The Court Finds

that the S S Koombana, official number
122,725, registered in Adelaide, Captain
Thomas Allen master, and owned by the
Adelaide Steamship Company, Ltd., was 
on a voyage from. Fremantle to Derby,via
ports. She sailed from Port Hedland on
March 20, 1912, at about 10.20 o'clock 
a.mdrawing 19ft. aft and about 12ft. 
forward in excellent trim, with her propeller 
well submerged, and shaped a course to round
Bedout Island on her way to Broome. 

Koombana was widely quoted as having a maximum draft of 20 ft. 8 in.. 19 ft. aft is a mere 1 ft. 8 in. short of max. load. This is plain nonsense; Koombana carrying 260 tons of cargo forward (14% max) and empty tanks. The harbour master, accurately, claimed that Koombana was drawing 16 ft. aft and 11 ft. forward, verifying her astonishingly tender condition! Like Yongala, Koombana was notably lighter forward, a factor adjusted in Yongala's case by adding 164 tons of pig iron in hold 2 to increase the draft forward by 6 in.. These two tender steamers required additional ballasting, particularly if cargo component was limited. In fact Captain Rees, 1910, held onto 150 tons of rails in Koombana's bottom to see him through some unsettled, late summer weather. 

It was claimed in a press report that Koombana's 'propeller was beating out of the water' when she departed Hedland. The upper limit of the propeller was in fact 16.5 ft. which proves the Harbourmaster's point. The Inquiry claim sharply contradicted all logic on the matter. The simple fact was this; Captain Allen needed Koombana to be in this condition to clear the inner bar with a heavy ground swell and choppy seas making the crossing dangerous to say the least - bar, 19 ft.. deep at the time. 

At last clarity about the route, shaped round Bedout Island - Captain Allen was on course when Koombana foundered.

The voyage from Port Hedland to Broome is
usually accomplished in about 24 hours. The
Bullarra was at Port Hediand at the same time 
as the s.s. Koombana, and left that port, bound 
southwards, about half an hour or so after the 
S S  Koombana left Bullarra had the Koombana 
in sight until noon. 

This confirms that Koombana was delayed after clearing the bar at Hedland (+/- two hours) due to attempts to fill all her ballast tanks. I do not believe Koombana's tanks could have been adequately pressed up during this time (needed three hours), creating a free surface effect, further destabilising the already top heavy vessel.

At about 6.30 p.m. that day the wind 
increased until it blew a violent hurricane, 
which lasted for several hours, and the 
ill-fated Koombana has never been
seen or heard of since. During the day
of March 20 last, the wind was blowing a
fresh breeze from the north-east, and
weather was a bit overcast and dirty, 

The Inquiry blatantly defied earlier reports, signalling early in its course, the likelihood of a whitewash:

"It started on Tuesday night (before the 
steamers departed Hedland) with a strong 
easterly wind, and the waves thundered on 
the beach with indications of heavier and 
deadlier surges out at sea. Wednesday 
morning saw about forty luggers running 
to shelter off Port Hedland, where they 
were soon safely anchored. These luggers 
had a rough time on Tuesday night near 
Turtle Island, and the cutting away of masts 
in some cases was seriously contemplated."

 'The steamer Bullarra sailed from Port
Hedland for Cossack via Balla Balla on
March 20, at 11 a.m., and encountered
strong north-east gale on leaving the
harbor.' 

but Captain Upjohn and Captain Allen in 
conversation decided there was nothing 
in it, and neither of them expected to
encounter such a blow as is described
in the S S Bullarra's logbook as a howling
hurricane,

Compare this statement with an earlier  press report:

"Captain Allen, of the Koombana, seemed
disinclined to go out, and when he decided
to do so he said, "I am going straight out to
sea, and will be lucky if I get to Broome on
Saturday."   
a hurricane which apparently has totally
engulfed the S S Koombana, and which, 
according to Captain Upjohn's evidence, 
the S S Bullarra only survived through a
miracle. There was an unattended light
house on Bedout Island, the light in which,
however, was not burning on March 20. 
The S S Koombana should, however, in 
the ordinary course of things, have been 
clear of the inland before the wind became 
a hurricane, i.e., before it was dark that day.

A strange thing for Captain Upjohn to have said. He made it clear that Bullarra steamed into the fringe of the cyclone 22 miles from Balla Balla, roughly 4 p.m. that day. The 'hurricane' was to the southwest, not northeast, in which direction Koombana was headed. Koombana could only clear Bedout Island during daylight hours (Bedout light not functioning) if not more than two hours were allocated to filling tanks.

The only wreckage discovered was picked 
up a distance varying from 20 to 70 miles 
from Bedout Island, and with the exception
of some air tanks it was all picked up at sea, 
the air tanks alone having been found on the 
mainland. 

This confirms that the disaster occurred in the vicinity of Bedout Island with wreckage, naturally, drifting from Koombana's final position somewhere northeast of Bedout Island.

The wreckage consisted of a part of a starboard
bow planking of a motor launch; a state-room
door, and panel from the promenade deck,
two planks for covering tanks of lifeboats, and 
some air tanks . 

Not one word mentioned of the patch of oily water. It's as though the Court, intentionally, did not invite the finality of that particular discovery. Why? Perhaps there was a reluctance to commit to dragging the area of sea for the wreck in the vicinity of the oily water. It would also not have allowed the Court to come to the conclusion outlined in the following paragraph. 

The Court cannot say What actually happened 
to the S S Koombana, but it seems reasonably 
clear that the hurricane of the night of the 20-21 
March last was responsible for her total loss at sea. 

And what if it hadn't???

With regard to her stability, it is known what cargo, 
coal, etc., she had on board when leaving Port
Hedland, and where it was stowed; also the
condition of her ballast tanks: 

She carried a load of 260 tons of cargo; properly 
stowed; 480 tons of coal, 871 tons of water in her
tanks, and of stores she had some 60 tons.

260 tons of cargo was about 14 % of her average, full cargo capacity. Koombana, just on the basis of this component of dead weight was very light indeed (top heavy). I do not for one moment believe the figure of 871 tons of ballast water. She could not clear the outer bank with almost full ballast tank capacity (900 tons) and Captain Upjohn referred in a statement to Captain Allen intending to fill all his ballast tanks once out at sea. 

Such a blatant untruth did not bode at all well for the credibility of this Marine Inquiry. No one could have known to what extent Captain Allen filled his ballast tanks at sea after departing Port Hedland.
She also had on board 76 passengers and a
crew of 74. 

The stability of the vessel with that load was 
tested with Ralston's stability indicator; which
showed she had a G.M. of 2 ft. 71/2 in. plus.

Having examined in detail GM with regard to the SS Waratah, I find this result almost ridiculous in a steamer whose propeller was beating out of the water as she exited Port Hedland and carrying 14 % of total cargo capacity. The testing quoted, was hypothetical, as Koombana did not have this instrument on board, final voyage. What the GM might have been is unanswerable and to what extent Captain Allen was able to fill his tanks at sea, must remain a mystery as strong as the disappearance itself. This did the Court no credit, taking those with an interest in the case, for fools!

Seven other tests were made with 
the indicator under varying conditions
of load, and in each of them her
stability was shown to be entirely 
satisfactory.

Whitewash satisfactory.

If further affirmation of the ship's stability
and seaworthiness be required it is to be
found in the career of the vessel since 
1908 on the Australian coast. 

As in the case of the top heavy Yongala. It took a cyclone to demonstrate in the harshest of terms the limitations of these tender steamers. In the case of Koombana she did not even have to steam into the cyclone to be found wanting.

All the witnesses who have had experience 
in her deposed to her very excellent seagoing 
qualities.

An insistence which belied the true facts.

With regard to the personnel of the vessel, it
was of the highest quality, and both Capt. Allen 
and the chief officer held extra masters'
certificates and both were men of great
experience on the Australian coast. 

Marine Inquiry Yongala de javu.

The Court is satisfied that the S S Koombana, 
in construction, stability, and seaworthiness,
was equal to any vessel of her class in the
Australian coastal trade. 

She wasn't equal to the humble Bullarra which survived the full onslaught of the cyclone.

The Court thinks it desirable that telegrams 
regarding the weather should be exchanged 
every day between stations where observations 
are made along the'north-west coast, that the
information so obtained should be posted for
general information, and that storm signals
should be shown at all ports.

I shall return to this subject in detail, suffice to say that nothing, and I mean nothing, had been learned from the Yongala disaster one year prior.

In conclusion, the Court simply finds, without 
indulging in useless speculation, that the Stability 
and Seaworthiness of the s.s. Koombana were 
unassailable, and the competency and 
carefulness of her master, Capt. Allen, beyond
question and that after being lost sight of at 
sea on the 20th March, 1912, her fate passes 
beyond human knowledge and remains' a mystery
of the sea.

Compare this closing statement with that for the Yongala:

merely conjectures, it is not possible to allow them any consideration; and while it is both gratifying and reassuring that the vessel's stability and seaworthiness remain unassailable, and the competency and carefulness of Captain Knight unimpeachable, the Board, with no desire to indulge in idle speculation, simply find that, after becoming lost to view by the lightkeeper at Dent Island, the fate of the "Yongala" passes beyond human ken into the realms of conjecture, to add one more to the long roll of mysteries of the sea.

Another whitewash wrapped in a conclusion of cliched repetition.


SS Koombana (courtesy Wikimedia Commons)



SS Yongala (courtesy Michael McFadyen's scuba diving website)
courtesy Trove
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