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----- Original Message ----- From: Derek L Warner Pty Ltd (research@paddleducks.co.uk) To: research@paddleducks.co.uk (research@paddleducks.co.uk) Sent: Tuesday, March 13, 2007 3:19 AM Subject: RE: APAM- The Directors Cut! Hi PD’s & hullo PJ…….here is a listing of the paddle vessels that plied from waters of Sydney harbour in Australia & were termed as the Manly ferries or combined with duties of ferries/tugs  The Brothers 1847>1886 Warlingtin 1851>? Herald 1854>1884 Nora Creiner 1854>? The Huntress 1854>1857 Planet 1855>? Black Swan 1854>? Phantom 1858>1878 Clommel 1859>1878 Culloden 1867>? Breadalbane 1853>1884 Goolwa 1864>1919 Cobra 1871>1873 Commodore 1878>1898 Fairlight 1878>1912 Brighton 1883>1916
----- Original Message ----- From: Roderick Smith (research@paddleducks.co.uk) To: research@paddleducks.co.uk (research@paddleducks.co.uk) Sent: Wednesday, March 14, 2007 9:52 PM Subject: RE: APAM- The Directors Cut!sued You really have to buy the books.The images are copywritten, and can't be reproduced here.One good site for the Sydney ones ishttp://landover.no-ip.com/ferries/index.htmlIt lists 32 paddlesteamers, with images of about 12 (45 images, as some have multiple). SNIP
The third large paddle steamer was WEEROONA. These were like large Clyde steamers in design....
----- Original Message ----- From: Roderick Smith (research@paddleducks.co.uk) To: research@paddleducks.co.uk (research@paddleducks.co.uk) Sent: Thursday, March 15, 2007 2:52 AM Subject: RE: APAM- The Directors Cut! You really have to buy the books.The images are copywritten, and can't be reproduced here.One good site for the Sydney ones ishttp://landover.no-ip.com/ferries/index.htmlIt lists 32 paddlesteamers, with images of about 12 (45 images, as some have multiple).I have visited NMM twice. Despite its pretentious name, National Maritime Museum is not very national. Its themes are good, but hardly all-embracing. IIRC, it doesn't even cover the Murray or Darling, and they flowed through NSW (NSW still lives with a Premier State mentality).I don't recall much on Sydney Harbour ferries either.The displays which stick in my mind:* Early migration by sailing ship. with interpretive material and sample interiors.* Links with USA (a display funded by the USA government).* History of Halvorsen.* Recreation and beach picnics (including yachting, surfing, and a Kontiki-style boat made from empty beer cans).* A sectioned marine engine (double or triple expansion?).The bookshop is good, and most marine books (eg the Plowman series) are available there.Some of the important boats moored alongside require a supplementary fee (or perhaps that was because my more recent visit was when entry to the main display was free, under a sponsorship deal).Overall, I thought that NZ's national maritime museum (Auckland, in a similar setting on a touristfied former working harbour) did a better job of covering the important aspects of national maritime history.Regards,Roderick B SmithRail News Victoria Editor-------------------- m2f --------------------Exported by Paddleducks Mail System.http://www.paddleducks.co.uk/forum/viewtopic.php?p=11379#11379-------------------- m2f -------------------- No virus found in this incoming message.Checked by AVG Free Edition.Version: 7.5.446 / Virus Database: 268.18.11/722 - Release Date: 14/03/2007 15:38