Saturday, March 12, 2016

BLUE FUNNEL LINE ODYSSEY TURNS UP A FEMALE FIRST IN AUSTRALIA

Researching  the   above  faded   shipping  ephemera , a  single piece of  writing paper  bearing  the letterhead  of  the  British  Blue Funnel Line's  TSS  Anchises, below,  resulted   in  some  interesting discoveries.
 
One   being  that  the   company ,  which  gave  its  vessels  names  from  classical Greek legends   or   history , was  the  first   one  to employ a  female marine  engineer, Victoria  Drummond (1894-1978), aboard  the liner  Anchises, named after the   father of Aeneas , rescued  by his son from the fires of Troy, from 1922-1924, in which she made  four trips to Australia , one to China . It was not a case of smooth sailing as some men  gave  her  hell , as  did  several female passengers . 

Her  position with the company  was  as  the 10th  engineer  aboard ship ; then as  refrigeration engineer on  the  cargo ship  Perseus , ( son of Zeus and  Danae , who slew the Medusa  and saved   Andromeda  from  a sea monster ) ,  in 1943;  then in  1946  as resident engineer at the Caledonian Shipbuilding  yard, Dundee, supervised   completion of  Rhexenor and Stentor,  two new ships  to replace  Blue Funnel vessels lost in WWll, numbering 41  in all ,  16 in  WWl .

Serving in the British  Merchant  Navy during  the war , she  was  awarded the MBE  for  bravery under fire  and also was the  first female member of  the Institute of Marine Engineers. It is not possible  to say this  letterhead  is from the Anchises  on which   Drummond  served  as   over  the  years    Alfred   Holt and Company, trading as the Blue Funnel Line , had  a  number of  vessels of  the  same  name , one  bombed  by  Germans   and   eventually  sunk.

A 1947 built  vessel  bearing  the  same  name  Anchises  was attacked and bombed twice  on the way from  Woosung to Shanghai  on the Wangpoo  River  in 1949 by Chinese Nationalist   planes ; it was  towed to Japan  for repairs  and renamed Alcinous .   

Another of the  Blue Funnel   vessels , Nestor,   carried  Australian  Expeditionary Force   troops  in WWl ,   evacuated  British children to Australia in WWll  and after its final voyage to Australia in  1950 was scrapped .

A November 1931 newspaper advertisement  offered  special first class  round trips  to  China , Japan and Australia  aboard  the TSS Anchises  for  145 pounds; There was a  similar  special rate to Australia  via  the Canary Islands and South Africa  for  125  pounds  aboard the  TSS  Nestor.



The  letterhead was  found  in Adelaide along with other nautical items, including the  Bass Strait 41 ton ketch    Leillateah , owned by the McDougall Brothers  of Recherche, a pioneering sawmilling  family  that  battled bushfires that  destroyed  working  men's huts , poor  loading  facilities  which they overcame by building a large landing stage for  interstate ships .

A member of the family , Stanley Robert McDougall  (1889-1968), won the Victoria  Cross and the Military Medal   for extreme bravery at Dernancourt in WWl, his uniform,  medals  and  a Lewis gun  he used  on display in the Hall of Valour , Canberra.


 Shipping records show the ketch  was involved in a collision with another ketch , John  and Margaret , off Woody Island , in the D'Entrecasteaux  Channel, July 14  1899 ;   carrying   timber   from Devonport ran aground  at Nine Mile Beach  in 1901 ;  still  sailing , to Melbourne , in mid 20th century .