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| In late 1942 the Small Ships Section of the United States Army Services of Supply - South-West Pacific Area requisitioned 100's of small vessels - fishing trawlers, tugs, private launches, etc from Australians. These vessels were then sailed from Australia to New Guinea. The men who sailed this vessels and the vessels themselves have been largely forgotten, very little has ever been written about them. Yet these men were vital; they were the life line of the allied armies advance in New Guinea. They carried everything from troops to ammunitition to mail and food. This is the diary of my father - Ken Shearer - who sailed with his fishing trawler during 1942 and May 1943 and towed barges around Oro Bay, Buna and Porlock Harbour. |
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On the sixth day of November, 1942, the M.V. Nanagai entered Later in the manager’s office, the American Lieutenant told us we could stay with the boat in the employ of the United States Army; the crew immediately signed on. We were fishermen no longer. The trawler was to be fitted out for running supplies and men up to We had to go to number 10 Ten days later we again put to sea for “Good luck, lads. Good sailing, you have a touch job but I know you will come through OK,” said Captain Juddah of the Small ships U.SA.A. “You are to tow a barge to Townsville. My department is against this idea saying that small fishing boats are not capable of handling these tows on long ocean trips such as is asked of you, but I know you will come through, Good luck.” Before we left I had to get sailing directions for the trip and the signals of the days to follow and charts of the mine field at So on The M.V. Nanagai or S.164, as the boat was to be called from now on, was a small wooden vessel sixty five feet long; a beam if eighteen feet and drawing eight feet aft. She was about one hundred tons gross, powered by a one hundred and twenty horsepower Ruston Hornby diesel engine which pushed her through the water at eight knots per hour. This little vessel was an unusually good sea boat, a veteran of many howling gales. We carried a crew of five comprising of John ‘Big Jack’ Haylen Mate Ben Huxley Engineer John Ridding A.B. Sid Sharpe Cook; and myself Kenneth Shearer Master The five of us had been fishing together many years and I can say we were a happy little ship. As I have already said we were fishing only a week ago. We had had a good catch of fish when a southerly gale hit us while we were trawling off Every sailing day I had to go to the Navy Department and receive sailing directions, code signals for the number of days that we would be away. When called upon by a patrol boat or plane, we must give the signal of the day by signal light. All other small trawlers up and down the coast had to be in port between sunset and sunrise but we could be out at all hours. Once we were ordered into the nearest port by a navy patrol boat, but when we arrived in port he was very apologetic having found out that we had permission to stay out. It was the sixteenth of November at We were towing a forty-five foot timber lighter, square across the front and on its deck was securely lashed an invasion tank barge. We were using a nine inch Manila Hawser for a tow line, seventy fathoms long with fifteen fathoms of two and half steel wire as bridle; a tow line that was to tax our strength later on. All was bustle and hurry on the day we sailed, and it seemed half of
CHAPTER TWO Out at sea last the weather was good, a slight nor’easter blowing, though not enough to worry us. Set the watch, Big Jack the mate, taking the first wheel. Jack was a mere mite of twenty stone, standing six foot two in his socks. About the crew before we proceed any further, As you can see Big Jack was no stripling, a bit of an ear basher and a hard drinker but a good ship mate and dependable. Young Jack next, he also was tall and solid weighing some fourteen stone, an English lad who had been with us some years; he also was a fine fellow and one who stuck by his mates. Next, Old Ben, the Engineer, he was a dried up old chap, soft spoken and forever grinning, one of the best who had sailed in many ships including the pearl luggers up north. We were to meet up with many of his cronies later on up north. To return to our story. We were on our course standing some ten miles of the coast as laid down by our navy. About The weather remained fine and we were making a hundred miles in twenty hours, not bad for our heavy tow line, which was giving us no trouble except for chaffing the tow line. We overcame this by parceling with bags. We passed Off the On the twentieth we came upon Richmond Light at
CHAPTER THREE On the fifth day after leaving The weather seems like being fine, a light easterly wind, our tow behaving exceptionally well with the new bridle. Each day seem the same just ship routine, nothing exciting, until we reached This cape runs some twenty miles to sea, formed of coral and sand, covered with water and very shallow, soon rip a ship’s bottom out, One can dodge the Cape by going through Inchinbrook Channel but the Navy said we could not pass the bar at the entrance so it was the cape for us. We just got to There was no sleep that night, as was my duty I remained in the wheelhouse drinking lashings of coffee and tea. A mad night for us all around this Next day was our hottest day, over one hundred degrees. The lads are busy making tropical suits. Big Jack procured an old mattress cover and with it he has made a lava lava, what a sight! Twenty stone with a rag around his middle, his stomach hanging over the top like a bag of spuds. The rest of us were quite satisfied with shorts. One the twenty seventh of November we made Bustards Head and anchored in Pancake Creek. Our engine was giving a little trouble; the barge was half full of water from the storm. Though the barge was decked and well caulked the weather somehow managed to get in. The engine was easily repaired as spare valve housing and valve. The engineer and I looked around the engine room to see what we could use to empty the water from the barge. The fresh water cooling system had plenty of piping we could use. The deck washing pump and using the deck house We also visited the lighthouse keeper and his wife, right pleased to see us for it was lonely here for them, wild desolate country; all they see is a fisherman now and then and the light tender’s ship with stores. Still, they seem content and happy. Whilst visiting we tried some hunting but for all we saw we could have left the guns on board. Next day our engine was once more alright, the barge pumped dry and so we again put to sea. On this day also we came onto the islands proper, we were to see many of these for north Queensland’s coast is dotted with thousands, We found that among these islands the tides run very string, our speed dropped to one or two knots per hour, and with the barge in tow we made a lot of lee way. Our orders were to take all precautions so we always anchored at one of the islands at night though if the tides were favourable we did push on. These tactics proved to be sound for later on we found that we were the only one out of many to get our tow through safely. A lot of these islands are barren rocks; other huge mountains rising from the sea, thickly covered with trees, some have families living on them raising sheep and tropical fruits. One we visited in the Keppel group had a family of four living of on it. The White family had a lonely life raising sheep and growing bananas and pineapples, there was also wild game. The boys of the family showed us a boat they had built from timber growing on the island; forty foot in length, ten foot beam, all planks sawn by hand and bit saw. What a job, two years to build and a trim craft, a real credit to them. When we left they loaded us with huge bunches of bananas. The last day of the month and we had a strong head wind and made little progress, we anchored at St Bees Island just after dark. The start of a new month, December - the weather against us, a stiff Northerly wind, raining like hell; our first taste of tropical rains, visibility the length of the boat, speed crawling. After a stiff battle we made We anchored around Still we had a welcome change from tinned food, we had paw paws, coconuts and I shot a goat with the Tommy gun although I seemed to have chased it all over the mountain side, Jack had also caught some fish. The cooks made a casserole with some of the goat and baked the rest of it; and, together with the fish, paw paws and coconuts that night we had a feast which made a change from bully beef. On our way again next day we made Bowen late at night against bad weather, the next morning the American Officer came down to see to our wants and we were told we were the first to reach this far with our tow. One boat was lost off Not long before our fuel and store and even some fresh bread arrived, Burns Phillip agents once again looking after us.
The next day saw us once again on our way, headed for Townsville. | ||
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