Vaucluse (ferry)

Last updated
Sydney Ferry VAUCLUSE.jpg
History
Civil Ensign of Australia.svg
NameVaucluse
Operator
Builder Rock Davis, Blackwall
Launched1905
Out of service1931
Fateto Newcastle
General characteristics
Tonnage121 tonnes
Length42.5 m
Speed14 knots
Capacity500

Vaucluse was a ferry on Sydney Harbour that served on the Circular Quay to Watsons Bay run. She was launched in 1905, and was one of the fastest ferries in Sydney. She was sent to Newcastle after which her fate is unknown. She was named after the Sydney suburb, Vaucluse.

Contents

Background

Hull at Blackwall, Brisbane Waters soon after launch, 1905 Sydney ferry VAUCLUSE (II) hull after launch at Rock Davis yard at Blackwall circa 1905.jpg
Hull at Blackwall, Brisbane Waters soon after launch, 1905
Arriving at Circular Quay Sydney Ferry VAUCLUSE arriving at Circular Quay between 1905 - 1930.jpg
Arriving at Circular Quay
At Garden Island after wheelhouses attached Sydney ferry VAUCLUSE at Garden Island.jpg
At Garden Island after wheelhouses attached

In 1790, a signal station was established at South Head and ships' boats were used to carry passengers and cargo to the area. As the Watsons Bay and Vaucluse areas grew, Edye Manning provided a ferry to local hotel and picnic grounds. In 1876, a regular service was in place and run by W Harmer until 1881 with Golden Rose and Swansea and by 1884 three competing companies were running ferries to the area including Golden Rose, Swansea, Coombra, Phantom and Victor. Two of the companies combined in 1887 into the Watsons Bay and South Shore Steam Ferry Co Ltd, which in 1912 became the Watsons Bay and South Shore Ferry Co Ltd.

The company bought Bald Rock from the Balmain Company in 1900 and renamed it Vaucluse until a new boat of the same name was built. She was sold back to the Balmain Company and was reverted to Bald Rock in 1905 when Vaucluse (II) was introduced. King Edward had joined the fleet in 1901, and the company commissioned Greycliffe in 1911 and Woollahra in 1913. The latter was delivered with high bows and raised wheelhouses having been intended for a short-lived Manly to Watsons Bay service.

Service history

The Watsons Bay and South Shore Ferry Company commissioned the naval architect Walter Reeks to design a new vessel, Vaucluse, his first double-ended screw steamer. She was built in 1905 by Rock Davis in Blackwall (Brisbane Water). The 121 ton, timber-hulled ferry could carry 500 passengers, and had a 70 hp steam engine by Chapman & Co. Ltd. This pushed her to bursts of 15 knots, which made her one of the fastest ferries on the harbour and ideal for the long run from Circular Quay to Watsons Bay. She carried a brass rooster on her jackmast to identify her as the fastest boat on the harbour, and was said to overtake larger Manly ferries on their way to Manly. However, she was expensive to run.

On a 5:35 pm service from Circular Quay on 4 October 1916 with 100 passengers aboard, Vaucluse collided with the Royal Australian Navy steam yacht, Franklin . Rounding Bennelong Point and heading to Garden Island, she headed into a blinding rain squall. Franklin was travelling the other way up the harbour and her sharp bow cut halfway through the ferry. As the boats separated, water rushed into Vaucluse and she began to sink. The passing Mosman ferry, Kirawa , was able to tow her to Garden Island where she was made fast. Vaucluse was kept a float using the dock's fire engine pumps, and the fireboat Hydra came with more powerful pumps. Two passengers were injured and the remainder were to their destination by Greycliffe.

Vaucluse was taken over by Sydney Ferries Limited in 1920 when they bought out the Watsons Bay and South Shore Ferry Company. Three running mates, King Edward, Greycliffe, and Woollahra, were also included in the take over and the company's other ferries were sold. Greycliffe was sunk and 40 passengers killed in a 1927 collision with the liner Tahiti .

With the Watsons Bay run declining for much of the 1920s due to competition from trams and private cars, Woollahra and Vaucluse were sold in 1931, the latter to the Employees' Welfare Committee of the Walsh Island Dockyard & Engineering Works in Newcastle, where she carried workers from Newcastle to the dockyard [1] prior to its closure in 1933. [2] Vaucluse survived a storm in September 1934 [3] but her fate after this is unknown. The Watsons Bay service was abandoned on 31 July 1933. King Edward was sold in 1934 and Woollahra was used on other routes until 1934.

Citations

  1. "DOCKYARD EMPLOYEES". Newcastle Morning Herald & Miners' Advocate . 1931-08-31. p. 4. Retrieved 2020-04-18.
  2. "PROTEST MEETING SUGGESTED". Newcastle Morning Herald & Miners' Advocate. 1933-01-20. p. 8. Retrieved 2020-04-18.
  3. "SUNG PENG IN PORT, AFTER STORM TOSSED VOYAGE". Newcastle Morning Herald & Miners' Advocate. 1934-09-06. p. 5. Retrieved 2020-04-18.

Related Research Articles

<i>Dee Why</i>-class ferry

The Dee Why and Curl Curl, were two identical steam ferries servicing Sydney Harbour's Circular Quay to Manly service. Both commissioned in 1928, they were the largest ferries on Sydney Harbour until the 1938 introduction of the South Steyne.

<i>Greycliffe</i> disaster

The Greycliffe disaster occurred in Sydney Harbour (Australia) on 3 November 1927 when the harbour ferry Greycliffe and the Union Steamship Company mail steamer Tahiti collided. The smaller ferry was cut in two and sank with the loss of 40 lives, the deadliest incident on Sydney Harbour.

Baragoola Australian ferry

MV Baragoola was a ferry formerly operated by the Port Jackson & Manly Steamship Company and its successors on the Manly service.

Koompartoo Sydney Harbour Ferry

Koompartoo was a 1922 Sydney Ferries Limited K-class ferry later converted to a Royal Australian Navy boom defence vessel. Koompartoo, described in the press as a "Dreadnought for the Milsons Point run" and "a titan amongst ferries", was along with her sister ferry, Kuttabul, the highest capacity ferries ever on Sydney Harbour.

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

MV <i>North Head</i> Australian ferry

The MV North Head was a ferry operated by the Port Jackson & Manly Steamship Company and its successors on the Manly service from 1913 until 1985.

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>Karrabee</i> (ferry)

Karrabee 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 and near "sister", Karingal, were the smallest of the fleet of round-end "K-class ferries".

MV <i>Lady Denman</i> Historic site in New South Wales, Australia

Lady Denman is a former Sydney Harbour ferry built in 1912 for the Balmain New Ferry Company. She was later run by Sydney Ferries Limited and its government successors. She is now preserved at the Jervis Bay Maritime Museum near her original build site in Huskisson, New South Wales, Australia.

<i>Koree</i>

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.

<i>Binngarra</i>

Binngarra was a ferry operated by Port Jackson & Manly Steamship Company on the Manly service. Launched in 1905, she was the first of six similar vessels built for the company–the Binngarra class—the success of which saw three of her sister vessels serving through to the 1970s and 1980s.

SS <i>Kuring-gai</i>

SS Kuring-gai was a ferry that served on the Sydney to Manly run from 1901 to 1928.

SS <i>Manly</i>

Manly (II) was a ferry that served on the Sydney to Manly run from 1896 to 1924.

<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>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>Lady Scott</i>

Lady Scott, later John Cadman and Harbour Queen, was a Sydney Harbour ferry built in 1914 for the Balmain New Ferry Company. She and four similar ferries, Lady Chelmsford (1910), Lady Denman (1912), Lady Edeline (1913), and Lady Ferguson (1914), were a new series of "Lady-class", designed by renowned naval architect, Walter Reeks.

<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.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Timeline of Sydney Harbour ferries</span> Timeline of ferry transport in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia

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.

References

Commons-logo.svg Media related to Vaucluse (ship, 1905) at Wikimedia Commons