Kurranulla
Vessel numberHV000017
Vessel type
Surf Boats
(1913 - 2007)
Builder
Roy Philllips and Son
Previous owner
Cronulla Surf Life Saving Club
Designer
Roy Philllips and Son
Date1964
DimensionsVessel Dimensions: 7.46 m x 1.67 m, 0.26 tonnes (24.5 ft x 5.5 ft, 0.26 tons)
Terms
- partially restored deck
- partially restored hull
- original layout
- surfboat
- Darling Harbour
- cold moulded
- timber
- timber planked
- displacement
- monohull
- canoe stern/double ended
- round bottom
- open
- inside building
- non-operational
- on public display
- photos
- interviews
- news clippings
- oar
- sweep oar
- cultural
- sport/recreation
- local/community
- type/use
- construction
- construction/repair
The crew are seated in a staggered arrangement on thwarts, while the sweep stands aft steering with a very large oar. When coming ashore through the break, and surfing on a wave, the crew leave their rowing stations and stack aft near the sweep to keep the stem up as the boat speeds toward the beach propelled by the wave it has caught.
The surf rescue craft also raced at surf carnivals and their crews were a significant part of the surfing scene throughout the country. The double-ended hull form was replaced with faster hulls that featured a tuck stern with a narrow transom, a design that was first introduced in the late 1940s.
KURRANULLA was built for the Cronulla Surf Life Saving Club and used by them for many years before becoming part of the National Maritime Collection at the Australian National Maritime Museum. In 2006 it is featured in the Watermarks Gallery at the Museum, suspended in the gallery.
SignificanceThe surf rescue boat KURRANULLA is a timber, open boat built in Sydney in 1964. It was built by Roy Phillips in Balmain, and is one of the last double-ended craft built and then used with surf life saving patrol work as its principal task. It is an example of the typical wooden craft used for many years before fibreglass construction became the accepted method for their production.
Vessel Highlights
1960
N & E Towns
1944
c 1934