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Subject: RE: APAM- The Directors Cut! I have found my Gippsland book: I will go through it tomorrow.[SNIP]I have about 20 photos of Port Phillip Bay paddlesteamers to scan from the Loney book. I will finish my current Murray River series before starting this.Regards,Roderick B SmithRail News Victoria Editor
----- Original Message ----- From: Roderick Smith (research@paddleducks.co.uk) To: research@paddleducks.co.uk (research@paddleducks.co.uk) Sent: Saturday, March 17, 2007 4:56 PM Subject: RE: APAM- The Directors Cut! PJ, please post the three PS mentioned in the Bull book. I suspect that I own a copy (bought in Mar.2001), but buried.What I found, on which to base today's post, is:Peter Synan 'Highways of water; how shipping on the lakes changes Gippsland', Landmark Press, 1989, Isbn 0 949449 64 4 (hardback), 0 949449 72 5 (paperback). It is more an economic account than a book on boats as such.p8: Photo of two unidentified paddlesteamers at Bairnsdale wharf.p15: Painting of a PS at the entrance (distorted)p16: Enterprise, the first steamer built on the lakes, designed for the lakes, launched in 1858. The author is vague, but it seems to be SS, not PS.p19: PS Lady of the Lake chartered from 1864 (painting on p21). It was used to haul schooners through the treacherous entrance.next chapters: lots of steamers mentioned, operated by GSN, but probably all screw.p36: PS Gippsland built on the Clyde (Scotland), but never worked on the lakes: it was sold in Melbourne after its delivery run.p36: PS Avon built in Liverpool; shipped in sections to Melbourne in 1867 for assembly, then to the lakes.p38: Photo of PS Avon at Bairnsdale c1870 (it could even be one of the two in the p8 photo). p40: After lots of references to SS Murray, there is now a painting of it, showing that it is PS. This is a very difficult book from which to extract information. Within my time limit today, I am skimming just the photos.* p61: Photo of PS Tanjil; its paddleboxes are different from the two vessels in the p8 photo.* p77: Photo of a PS at Sale; from the length of the name, it may be Avon.* p88: Photo of a PS at the works for the new entrance, in 1887. The paddleboxes indicate that it is the leadig PS in the p8 photo.* p92: Photo of a PS at the completed entrance; it seems to be the same as in the p77 photo.* p115: A really good photo of PS Tanjil* p130: A lot of text on the transfer of Ethel Jackson and Burrabogie from the Murray. Presumably both PS, but the text is vague. After sinking in 1891, Burrabogie was rebuilt as a screw steamer, and the photo on p135 shows it without paddles.Summary: confirmed PS Lady of the Lake, PS Avon, PS Tanjil, PS Burrabogie, PS Ethel Jackson (confirmation from Parsons, not from Synan). Mystery: the second boat in the p8 photo.Famous boats Tambo, Omeo and the second Gippsland were SS, not PS.This compilation took 45 min.Regards,Roderick B SmithRail News Victoria Editor-------------------- m2f --------------------Exported by Paddleducks Mail System.http://www.paddleducks.co.uk/forum/viewtopic.php?p=11423#11423-------------------- m2f --------------------