ST Wattle
Vessel numberHV000227
Builder
Cockatoo Island Dockyard
Previous owner
Royal Australian Navy
(Australian, founded 1913)
Date1933
DimensionsVessel Dimensions: 22.86 m x 5.33 m x 2.83 m, 97.32 tonnes (75 ft x 17.5 ft x 9.3 ft, 98.88 tons)
Terms
- original hull
- partially restored hull
- partially restored deck
- partially restored superstructure
- partially restored layout
- partially restored rigging
- partially restored gearbox
- partially restored shaft
- tug
- Melbourne
- steel
- steel/iron
- steel/iron
- plumb stem
- overhanging transom
- displacement
- round bottom
- full keel
- spade rudder
- concrete
- wheelhouse
- full decked
- wheel
- iron/steel
- steam reciprocating
- screw steamer
- single
- non-operational
- museum vessel
- local/community
- military
- type/use
- period
- construction/repair
- written, photographic, film, audio
- cultural
- educational
- social
- promotional
- memorial
On 27th June, 1933, CODECO was lifted into the water by the giant floating crane TITAN, with steel work complete, wooden deck laid and most of the auxiliaries in place. The lifting weight was 55.8 tonnes (55 tons). The tug was steam-driven using an oil fired Scotch marine furnace, and is understood to have been the first oil-fired steam tug in Australia. The first trials took place in November 1933. A mean speed of 10.6 knots at 133 rpm was reached with the tug in light-ship conditions (118 tons/119.9 tonnes displacement) at the end of the trial.
Shortly after trials the tug was handed over to the Navy and given the name WATTLE. The tug remained with the Navy in Sydney for 29 years.
After being de-commissioned in 1962 ST WATTLE was purchased in 1971 by a syndicate from the Sydney Heritage Fleet which later donated the vessel to a volunteer-based Victorian company. It then spent many years operating in Port Phillip carrying excursion passengers. It was classified by the National Trust in Victoria as a heritage item. WATTLE retains its original machinery and construction.
In 2003 WATTLE lost its commercial survey and was faced with extensive restoration. Various plans were put forward for returning WATTLE to commercial service but these came to nothing until the ship found new benefactors in 2008. A refurbishment of the hull and superstructure was planned with the intention of returning the ship to operation on Port Phillip when work is completed.
SignificanceST WATTLE is a steel steam tug completed at Cockatoo Dockyard in Sydney NSW in 1933. It was built as a means of keeping many of the apprentice workforce employed during the Depression era. It has a long association with the Navy on Sydney Harbour and remains essentially in its original configuration.
c 1934
early 1900s
1959
1945