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LADY FREDA being readied for towing, and showing the elegant canoe stern profile.
Lady Freda
LADY FREDA being readied for towing, and showing the elegant canoe stern profile.
LADY FREDA being readied for towing, and showing the elegant canoe stern profile.
ANMM Collection

Lady Freda

Vessel numberHV000261
Official Number121115
Designer
Date1905
DimensionsVessel Dimensions: 9.75 m x 9.08 m x 2.19 m x 0.69 m, 3.94 tonnes (32 ft x 29.8 ft x 7.2 ft x 2.25 ft, 4 tons)
DescriptionLADY FREDA was first registered in December 1905. It is planked in New Zealand kauri over spotted gum frames and longitudinal members, an established construction method for the period. It was fitted with a 9 kW (12 & 1.2 hp) Thorneycroft twin cylinder engine.

The designer was RW Heywood, who was establishing a name as a launch designer in this early period of motor craft design. The Sydney Morning Herald carries a report on various motor boats in the 5th August 1905 edition. Included is a mention of LADY FREDA, noting that a " 30 ft Whale-Boat" for Dr Piers Hatton was under construction at Ford's yard, along with another launch by the same designer. The term whale-boat is a comment or description of the vessel's very neat canoe stern hull shape.

In 1907 Hatton sold LADY FREDA to another harbour physician, Dr Caldwell, and he too may have used the craft to visit merchant vessels on the harbour. In 1920 it was sold to an unknown buyer and the vessel's trail of ownership was lost.

In 1980 it was sold as a sunken vessel to Peter Nicholson, who, after considerable salvage efforts, brought the vessel ashore at the waterfront in Seaforth, Sydney. By this time the craft had acquired a heavy cement keel and a hole in the cabin top, both features suggesting it had been rigged with a mast and sail at some unknown time.

In 1997 the craft was donated to the Australian National Maritime Museum as a possible craft for a volunteer restoration program. The museum accepted the craft, removed it from the shoreline, then slipped the hull to take off the concrete keel and stabilise the structure. In 2008 it was in storage. The hull and superstructure are largely original, and it is a rare survivor of an early motor launch.
SignificanceLADY FREDA is a launch built in NSW in the early 1900s It is a rare example of a Sydney Harbour motor launch built by the renowned North Sydney-based firm of WM Ford. It was built for Mr Piers Hatton, a physician from Rose Bay, Sydney, who visited ships in Sydney Harbour by boat. The launch has a canoe-stern shape typical of this very early period of development of petrol-powered motor launches and was designed by RW Heywood.
WIRRAMINNA in 2010
WM Ford Boatbuilders
1907
FREDA is an excellent example of the small motor cruisers that were part of the Halvorsen hire …
Lars Halvorsen Sons Pty Ltd
1959
SAO on Sydney Harbour , a recent black and white image which shows the well proportioned gaff c…
WM Ford Boatbuilders
1905
ATHENE, possibly  in the early 1930s
WM Ford Boatbuilders
1905
SY ENA at the ANMM March 2014
WM Ford Boatbuilders
1900
MAY QUEEN, June 2012
Alexander Lawson
1867
Killala
Arthur Merric Boyd
1896
BONA  in 1905 under full sail, an image from an album of original photos taken during a cruise …
Walter Reeks
1903
MAYA on Sydney Harbour sailing with SASC
Alfred Cuthbertson
1929
On Sydney Harbour , date unknown
Lars Halvorsen Sons Pty Ltd
1931
Berrimilla II during the Grand Veterans Race on Sydney Harbour 18 April 2010
Professor Peter Numa Joubert
1977