MS Wanganella

For other uses, see Wanganella.
Australian ex-POWs being transferred to the hospital ship Wanganella two days after their liberation from Batu Lintang camp, Kuching, Sarawak, on the island of Borneo in September 1945
History
Australia
Name: MS Wanganella
Owner: Huddart Parker
Builder: Harland & Wolff, Belfast
Yard number: 849[1]
Launched: 17 December 1929
Completed: 29 November 1932[1]
In service: 12 January 1933
Out of service: 1963
Reclassified:
  • Passenger liner (1933-1941, 1946-1963)
  • Hospital ship (1941-1946)
  • Floating hostel (1963-1970)
Homeport: Port of Melbourne
Fate: Used as hostel for construction workers from 1963 to 1970. Towed to Taiwan in April 1970 and scrapped
General characteristics
Tonnage:
Length: 144.5 m (474 ft)
Beam: 19.5 m (64 ft)
Draught: 7.6 m (25 ft)
Propulsion: Two 4-stroke Burmeister & Wain 8-cylinder diesels (6,750 bhp)
Speed: 17 knots (31 km/h; 20 mph)
Capacity: 304 First Class, 104 Second Class
Crew: 160

MS Wanganella was an Australian-registered merchant vessel constructed by the Harland and Wolff shipyards and entering service as a trans-Tasman passenger liner in 1933. Originally named Achimota, the liner was acquired by Huddart Parker after the original sale to Elder Dempster Lines fell through.

Renamed Wanganella, the ship sailed between New Zealand and Australia until 1941, when she was converted into a hospital ship. As Australian Hospital Ship (AHS) Wanganella, the ship operated in support of Australian forces until 1946, when she was returned to her civilian operator. During the 1950s and 1960s, Wanganella was affected by several incidents of industrial action by wharf labourers.

The increase in travel by air made operating the ship less viable, but before the ship was due to be scrapped in 1963, she was acquired and moored in Doubtful Sound, New Zealand, and used as a hostel for construction workers building the Manapouri Power Station until 1970. In April 1970, a tug towed Wanganella to Hong Kong, then later Taiwan, where she was scrapped.

Construction

Wanganella was built at the Harland and Wolff shipyards in Belfast, Northern Ireland and launched on 17 December 1929. She was originally christened Achimota, and destined for use as a mail and passenger liner for the West African trade. The commissioning owners, Elder Dempster Lines, were suffering financial troubles at the time and never took the ship over. Eventually the Achimota was bought by the Melbourne-based Australian shipping company Huddart Parker in September 1932 and renamed Wanganella,[2] commencing regular service on 12 January 1933.

Operational history

Pre-World War II

Renamed Wanganella, the ship operated as a top-rated trans-Tasman passenger liner, with accommodation for 304 First Class and 104 Second Class passengers. She primarily sailed between the cities of Auckland and Wellington in New Zealand, and Sydney and Melbourne in Australia, making the Tasman Sea crossing in three and a half days.

Wanganella in her pre-war livery

On 28 December 1937, she collided with the trawler Durraween off the coast of New South Wales.

On 19 June 1940 she assisted with the rescue of passengers from the RMS Niagara, after the latter hit a mine and sank off the coast of Auckland.

Hospital ship

During World War II, Wanganella was converted to serve as an Australian Hospital Ship (AHS). Between 19 May 1941 and 1946, AHS Wanganella carried wounded and sick evacuees from the Middle East, New Guinea, Solomon Islands, Borneo and the South Pacific, travelling over 251,011 nautical miles (464,872 km) and transporting 13,385 wounded.[3]

An emaciated Australian ex-POW from Batu Lintang camp being helped aboard Wanganella by naval ratings

A recently-liberated soldier from Batu Lintang camp, Kuching, Sarawak wrote of her:

My first real sight of the hospital ship occurred at a range of well over a mile ... Distances and sizes of things at sea can be very deceptive ... [and] I realised she was far bigger in all respects than I had imagined. Wanganella, for such was her magic name, rode quietly at anchor unperturbed by wind or tide, unreal, dazzling white, clinically neat, a heavenly ship waiting patiently as a lover to receive us. ... I swayed with the motion of the MTB. My liberator Massey laughed at my weakness but enthused, 'This is one hell of a good ship. You'll be alright now cobber!' It seemed a contradiction in terms to call Wanganella 'a hell of a ship'; to me she appeared as a vessel from another world, but I understood his concern to reassure me that indeed there was now hope of a future for us all. The port side of the ship towered high above us. I viewed with dismay the formidable rank of steps leading from the launch to the main deck. ... The slow energy sapping climb began. Each patient, for that was what we had become; was escorted by male Australian nurses. They were taking good care, that even as we had been snatched from under the Japanese heel, we should not fall now, and be claimed by the sea. ... After an eternity of endeavour, advancing one step at a time, one by one we reached the deck. Behind me a voice avowed 'I would not like to have to do that all over again.' It was Slim Landers: I was not sure whether he meant the climb up the gangway or the three and a half years at Batu Lintang."
[4]

Post-war

On her maiden voyage after the war, Wanganella had a narrow escape when she ran aground on Barrett Reef (later to claim TEV Wahine with 53 lives lost) at the entrance to Wellington Harbour in New Zealand. On 19 January 1947, while making its first trans-Tasman voyage after the war, Wanganella struck Barrett Reef just before midnight and stuck fast. The weather conditions were unusually benign, and remained so for the 18 days the ship spent on the reef. (Such benign weather is still known in Wellington as "Wanganella weather"). No-one was injured, and the passengers were taken off the ship the morning after the accident. The damage she incurred put her out of action for twenty-two months, mainly as a result of industrial action while she was laid-up in a floating dock for repairs. Harland and Wolff sent out the necessary steel work from Belfast.[2]

Wanganella being towed off Barrett Reef

Wanganella was caught up again in industrial action; this time in the 1951 New Zealand waterfront dispute. This 151-day-long industrial battle between the employers and the watersiders in New Zealand began when watersiders refused to work overtime. The New Zealand Government, hand-in-glove with the employers, was determined to smash the union and introduced Emergency Regulations. The army was brought in to work the wharves. Wanganella became involved in smuggling money and manpower between Australia and New Zealand, with her Australian crew carrying thousands of pounds to New Zealand from various unions in Australia, in support of their New Zealand comrades.

In about 1960, Wanganella was acquired by the scrap metal dealer Albert G Sims, and was sent to Singapore for breaking up as scrap. However, there was a drop in scrap metal prices, and the ship returned to service on the Sydney to Auckland run. In early 1962, when the owners were taken over by McIlwraith McEacharn Ltd of Melbourne, the ship was sold to the Hang Fung Shipping & Trading Co Ltd of Hong Kong, operating under the same name.[2]

Hostel ship

Wanganella moored in a cove of Doubtful Sound. The cove is now known as Wanganella Cove.

During the 1950s and 1960s, the expansion of civilian air travel made trans-Tasman shipping obsolete. In 1963, shortly before the ship was due to be scrapped, engineers working on the construction of the Manapouri Power Station in New Zealand acquired Wanganella.

Between 1963 and 1970, Wanganella was moored in Doubtful Sound to be used as a hostel for workers building the tailrace tunnel, and the Wilmot Pass access road. The vessel became notorious for the drinking culture on board. A popular legend is when the vessel was to be towed away, tugs apparently struggled to dislodge the ship from a bed of empty beer cans that had been tossed overboard.

Wanganella was sold for scrap in 1970, and was towed to Hong Kong, then Taiwan. The cove in which Wanganella was moored and the stream that supplied the water to the liner are now gazetted as Wanganella Cove and Wanganella Stream.

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Wanganella.

References

  1. 1 2 McCluskie, Tom (2013). The Rise and Fall of Harland and Wolff. Stroud: The History Press. p. 140. ISBN 9780752488615.
  2. 1 2 3 Dunn, Laurence (1964). Famous Liners of the Past Belfast Built. London: Adlard Coles. pp. 76–77.
  3. Smith (1992). Pg. 19
  4. Ooi 1998, 640-1. The author was L. E. Morris, who weighed five stone, three pounds (73 lb/33 kg) on his liberation
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