Koree

Last updated
Sydney Ferry KOREE 1902 to 1933.jpg
Koree in her original appearance
History
Civil Ensign of Australia.svg
NameKoree
NamesakeIndigenous word for Chowder Bay
Operator Sydney Ferries Limited
BuilderDavid Drake, Balmain
Launched1902
Fatesold for breaking up, 1934
General characteristics
Tonnage276 tons
Length42.8 m
Beam8.6 m
Installed power69 hp triple expansion steam
Propulsiondouble-ended screw
Speed11 knots
Capacity1,058

Koree was a "K-class" ferry on Sydney Harbour. Launched in 1902, the timber-hulled steamer was built for Sydney Ferries Limited during the boom in cross-harbour ferry travel prior to the opening of the Sydney Harbour Bridge.

Contents

When built, Koree was Sydney's largest cross-harbour ferry and a typical early example of the "K-class"; a group of double-deck, double-ended, steam-powered screw ferries. Koree was the first Sydney ferry built with the sides of her promenade (upper) deck enclosed, although the ends near the wheelhouses remained open.

Built for, and initially used on, the short but busy cross-harbour route between Circular Quay and Milsons Point, Koree was also used frequently on the Mosman route. Along with 17 other Sydney Ferries Limited vessels, the ferry was sold for breaking up in 1934 following the opening of the Sydney Harbour Bridge in 1932.

Background

Koree was built for Sydney Ferries Limited during the early twentieth century boom in cross-Harbour travel prior to the 1932 opening of the Sydney Harbour Bridge. At the time, the company ran one of the largest ferry fleets in the world.

Koree was an earlier vessel of a broader type of timber double-ended screw ferry known as the K-class. The company built 25 of vessels between the 1890s and early 1920s to meet the booming demand. The K-class were all propelled by triple expansion steam engines and were predominantly timber-hulled (four later K-class had steel hulls).

Koree followed Sydney Ferries Limited's then emerging tradition of naming their vessels after Australian Aboriginal words starting with "K". "Koree" is thought to be an indigenous name for Chowder Bay. [1]

Design and construction

In Mosman Bay, circa 1910. Koree was the first Sydney Harbour ferry to be built with enclosed upper decks Sydney ferry KOREE in Mosman Bay c 1910.jpg
In Mosman Bay, circa 1910. Koree was the first Sydney Harbour ferry to be built with enclosed upper decks

Plans for the hull were provided by Mr Scott, from the plans of the late Captain T Sumberbell, manager of Sydney Ferries Limited [1] with the design being an evolution of the company's recent Kurraba and Kirribilli ferries. Koree was built by David Drake at Bald Rock in Balmain. Her machinery was provided by Clyde Engineering to a specification provided by Sydney Ferries Limited's works manager, Mr T Brown. [1] Her 480 hp triple expansion steam inverted direct-acting and surface condensing engines comprised 13, 21 and 34 inches respectively with a 21 inch stroke. She had two multi tubular cylindrical boilers of 7 and 2 inch diameter of 18 feet in length. The boilers' working pressure was 170 lb. [2] [3] Koree's patent suspension furnaces had a heating surface of 1600 square feet. [3]

Koree's hull was launched on 23 July 1902 and christened by Miss O'Sullivan, the daughter of the Minister for Works. A bottle of port was smashed on her rudder. [3]

At 276 tons, she was, by a significant margin, the company's largest vessel when built. The previous largest, sisters Kurraba and Kirribilli, were 195 and 198 tons, respectively. [4] Koree was rated to carry 1,058 passengers compared to Kurraba at 890 and Kirribilli at 896. Koree was 42.8 m long with a beam of 8.6 m. The keel and kelson were of ironbark, with the frames of blue and spotted gum. Planking to the waterline were of blue and spotted gum and planking above the waterline was of kauri. [3] Four side companions were provided instead of the usual two between the two passenger decks to service the increased capacity. [1]

Koree was the first ferry on Sydney Harbour to be built with closed in upper decks with sash windows provided for most of the deck's length. [1] Kurraba's (1899) and Kirribilli's (1900) open decks were enclosed in 1903 all subsequent K-class ferries were built with sash-windowed upper decks. The first Manly ferries to have enclosed upper decks were the sisters, Dee Why and Curl Curl , both of 1928. Koree was fitted with electric lighting, at the time a relatively new feature for Sydney Ferries, with the 93-light system supplied by Westinghouse. [1] Communication between the wheelhouses and the engine room was by Chadburn telegraph fitted with turn rods and bevelled brass. [3] With the continuing rapid expansion of the Sydney Ferries Limited fleet, by 1912, there were another fifteen vessels in the passenger fleet.

Service history

Koree's trials were held on 27 November 1902 during which she reached a speed of close to 11 knots over the measured mile. Sydney Ferries Limited representatives and guests were on board. Later moored at Berrys Bay for speeches following the trials, the chairman noted that it was the company's largest and most advance vessel, and the "best boat of her kind in the world". [1]

The largest ferry in the fleet when introduced, Koree was initially used predominantly on the busy cross harbour routes to Milsons Point. [1] She was joined on the route by Kulgoa in 1904. With the introduction of the larger Kaikai in 1907, Koree was transferred to other routes, including McMahon's Point / Lavender Bay and the Mosman service. [5]

On 19 March 1932, the Sydney Harbour Bridge was open. Sydney Ferries Limited patronage fell from 40 million annually to 15 million. The Milsons Point service, which crossed the harbour at the location of the new bridge, was quickly redundant. 17 vessels from the fleet were retired from service, including Koree, other large and older K-class ferries Kurraba and Kirribilli, and all Sydney Ferries Ltd's vehicular ferries. Koree was sold for breaking up in 1934 for £100. [6]

Incidents

Koree with ripped out bulwarks after collision with Kuramia, 21 September 1929 Sydney ferry KOREE damaged after collision with ferry KURAMIA.jpg
Koree with ripped out bulwarks after collision with Kuramia , 21 September 1929

See also

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 "TRIAL TRIP OF THE KOREE". The Daily Telegraph . No. 7324. New South Wales, Australia. 28 November 1902. p. 7. Retrieved 26 January 2021 via National Library of Australia.
  2. "Launching a New ferry Steamer". Australian Town and Country Journal . Vol. LXV, no. 1695. New South Wales, Australia. 2 August 1902. p. 24. Retrieved 14 May 2021 via National Library of Australia.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 "THE NEW FERRY STEAMER KOREE". The Sydney Morning Herald . No. 20, 193. New South Wales, Australia. 28 November 1902. p. 5. Retrieved 14 May 2021 via National Library of Australia.
  4. "THE KOREE". The Australian Star . No. 4611. New South Wales, Australia. 25 November 1902. p. 6. Retrieved 25 April 2021 via National Library of Australia.
  5. Clark, L.A. (1976). North of the Harbour (Third ed.). Broadmeadow NSW: Newey & Beath Printers Pty Ltd. pp. 11 & 13. ISBN   0-909650-05-5.
  6. "Ferries for Breaking Up". The Daily Telegraph . Vol. 3, no. 299. New South Wales, Australia. 31 January 1934. p. 9. Retrieved 29 December 2020 via National Library of Australia.
  7. "RESCUE FROM DROWNING". The Sydney Morning Herald . No. 20, 222. New South Wales, Australia. 1 January 1903. p. 5. Retrieved 14 May 2021 via National Library of Australia.
  8. "KOREE-CHAMPION COLLISION". Evening News . No. 11, 956. New South Wales, Australia. 4 October 1905. p. 4. Retrieved 10 April 2021 via National Library of Australia.
  9. "FERRY BOATS GOLLIDE". The Sun . No. 152. New South Wales, Australia. 24 December 1910. p. 5 (FINAL SPORTING). Retrieved 26 January 2021 via National Library of Australia.
  10. "HARBOR COLLISION". The Sun . No. 618. New South Wales, Australia. 21 June 1912. p. 7 (FINAL EXTRA). Retrieved 10 April 2021 via National Library of Australia.
  11. "BUMPED THE WHARF". Daily Commercial News And Shipping List . No. 9499. New South Wales, Australia. 10 October 1918. p. 2. Retrieved 26 January 2021 via National Library of Australia.
  12. "STEAMER KOREE". The Sydney Morning Herald . No. 27, 163. New South Wales, Australia. 26 January 1925. p. 7. Retrieved 10 April 2021 via National Library of Australia.
  13. "FERRY SMASHES HAVE BEEN FREQUENT". Evening News . No. 18835. New South Wales, Australia. 4 November 1927. p. 15. Retrieved 27 March 2021 via National Library of Australia.
  14. "HARBOR COLLISION". The Labor Daily . No. 1835. New South Wales, Australia. 19 October 1929. p. 7. Retrieved 10 April 2021 via National Library of Australia.

Related Research Articles

Inner Harbour ferry services was a name used for ferry services connecting suburbs on the foreshore of the inner Sydney Harbour with Circular Quay by commuter ferry. Since 2017 this name is no longer used and all services have reverted to individual names

HMAS <i>Koompartoo</i>

HMAS Koompartoo was a Sydney Ferries Limited K-class ferry later converted to an Royal Australian Navy boom defence vessel.

HMAS <i>Kuramia</i>

HMAS Kuramia was a Royal Australian Navy boom defence vessel, converted from a Sydney Ferries Limited K-class ferry.

Sydney Ferries Limited operated ferry services on Sydney Harbour from 1900 until June 1951.

Bellubera Ferry operated by the Port Jackson & Manly Steamship Company

Bellubera was a ferry operated by the Port Jackson & Manly Steamship Company on the Manly service. Launched in 1910, she was the third of six "Binngarra-type" vessels. Upon her 1936 conversion from steam power, she became the first diesel-electric vessel in Australia. She was decommissioned in 1973, and scuttled at sea in 1980.

<i>Kanangra</i> and <i>Kirawa</i>

Kanangra and Kirawa were ferries on Sydney Harbour. Both vessels were near identical sister vessels and were launched in 1912 during the early-twentieth pre-Sydney Harbour Bridge boom years of Sydney Ferries Limited.

Sydney K-class ferry

The K-class ferries were a group of double-ended screw steam ferries run by Sydney Ferries Limited and its government successors on Sydney Harbour. The company introduced more than two dozen of the vessels from the 1890s through to the early twentieth century to meet the booming demand for ferry services across Sydney Harbour prior to the opening of the Sydney Harbour Bridge in 1932.

<i>Kulgoa</i> Ferry on Sydney Harbour

Kulgoa was a "K-class" ferry on Sydney Harbour. Launched in 1905, the timber-hulled steamer was built for Sydney Ferries Limited during the boom in cross-harbour ferry travel prior to the 1932 opening of the Sydney Harbour Bridge. Kulgoa was Sydney's largest ever wooden ferry. She was a typical early example of the "K-class"; a group of double-deck, double-ended, steam-powered screw ferries. Kulgoa was one of the first Sydney ferries built with the sides of her promenade (upper) deck enclosed, although the ends near the wheelhouses remained open.

<i>Kirrule</i>-type ferry

The Kirrule-type ferries - Kiandra, Kirrule and Kubu - were three identical K-class ferries that operated on Sydney Harbour by Sydney Ferries Limited.

<i>Kummulla</i>

Kummulla was a "K-class" ferry on Sydney Harbour. Launched in 1903, the timber-hulled steamer was built for Sydney Ferries Limited during the boom in cross-harbour ferry travel prior to the opening of the Sydney Harbour Bridge. She was decommissioned in 1934 after the 1932 opening of the Bridge.

<i>Wallaby</i> (ferry)

Wallaby was a ferry that operated on Sydney Harbour.

<i>Kanimbla</i> (ferry)

Kanimbla was a "K-class" ferry on Sydney Harbour. Launched in 1910, the timber-hulled steamer was built for Sydney Ferries Limited during the boom in cross-harbour ferry travel prior to the opening of the Sydney Harbour Bridge. Kanimbla was renamed "Kurra-Ba" in 1935. She was laid up in the 1940s and broken up in the 1950s.

<i>Kareela</i> (ferry)

Kareela was a "K-class" ferry on Sydney Harbour. Launched in 1905, the double-ended timber-hulled steamer was built for Sydney Ferries Limited in response to the early twentieth century boom in cross-harbour ferry travel prior to the opening of the Sydney Harbour Bridge. She was the first of Sydney Ferries Limited's boats to have a fully enclosed upper deck.

<i>Kosciusko</i> (ferry)

Kosciusko was a "K-class" ferry on Sydney Harbour. Launched in 1911, the timber-hulled steamer was built for Sydney Ferries Limited during the boom in cross-harbour ferry travel prior to the opening of the Sydney Harbour Bridge.

Timeline of Sydney Harbour ferries

Sydney Harbour ferry services date back to the first years of Sydney's European settlement. Slow and sporadic boats ran along the Parramatta River from Sydney to Parramatta and served the agricultural settlements in between. By the mid-1830s, speculative ventures established regular services. From the late-nineteenth century the North Shore developed rapidly. A rail connection to Milsons Point took alighting ferry passengers up the North Shore line to Hornsby, New South Wales via North Sydney. Without a bridge connection, increasingly large fleets of steamers serviced the cross harbour routes and in the early twentieth century, Sydney Ferries Limited was the largest ferry operator in the world.

<i>Kookooburra</i>

Kookooburra was a "K-class" ferry on Sydney Harbour. Commissioned in 1907, the timber-hulled steamer was built for Sydney Ferries Limited during the boom in cross-harbour ferry travel prior to the opening of the Sydney Harbour Bridge. She was retired from Sydney Harbour service in 1947 after which she was sent to Newcastle. She is thought to have been broken up in 1959.

<i>Kurraba</i> and <i>Kirribilli</i>

Kurraba and Kirribilli were two similar "K-class" ferries on Sydney Harbour. Launched in 1899 and 1900 respectively, the two timber-hulled steamers were built for Sydney Ferries Limited during the boom in cross-harbour ferry travel prior to the opening of the Sydney Harbour Bridge.

<i>Kaludah</i> Ferry on Sydney Harbour

Kaludah was a K-class ferry on Sydney Harbour, Australia. Commissioned in 1909, the timber-hulled steamer was built for Sydney Ferries Limited during the boom in cross-harbour ferry travel prior to the 1932 opening of the Sydney Harbour Bridge. Like the other "K-class" ferries, she was double-deck, double-ended, steam-powered screw ferry. However, she and the larger but otherwise similar Kookooburra (1907), were the only two K-class ferries designed by naval architect Walter Reeks and not Sydney Ferries Limited's Captain Summerbell.

<i>Karingal</i> (ferry)

Karingal was a ferry operated by Sydney Ferries Limited and its NSW State Government operated successors on Sydney Harbour from 1913 until 1984. A wooden ferry built at the time of Sydney Ferries' rapid early twentieth century, she was the smallest of the round-end "K-class ferries".

<i>Kaikai</i> (ferry) Ferry on Sydney Harbour

Kaikai was a "K-class" ferry on Sydney Harbour. Commissioned in 1907, the timber-hulled steamer was built for Sydney Ferries Limited during the boom in cross-harbour ferry travel prior to the 1932 opening of the Sydney Harbour Bridge. At the time of launch, Kaikai was one of Sydney's largest wooden ferries, being the longest and second largest by tonnage. She was a typical example of the "K-class"; a group of double-deck, double-ended, steam-powered screw ferries.

References