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JUST ONE on display at Wharf 7 Darling Harbour in 2009
Just One
JUST ONE on display at Wharf 7 Darling Harbour in 2009
JUST ONE on display at Wharf 7 Darling Harbour in 2009
Photographer D Payne ANMM Collection

Just One

Vessel numberHV000353
Sail NumberMJ 1
Vessel class (1959 - 2009)
Date1959
DimensionsVessel Dimensions: 2.59 m x 1.51 m x 0.41 m (8.5 ft x 4.97 ft x 1.33 ft)
DescriptionJUST ONE was designed and built in Sydney in about three weeks by electrical engineer Ralph Tobias in 1959 for the Manly 14 ft Sailing Club. The club members wanted a versatile training craft for their children with the stability and handling of their larger skiffs. They felt that the only satisfactory solution was to design their own new craft. Originally called the Manly Midget, it is understood that the original idea for the hull shape featured a conventional sharp stem. This was promptly changed to a pram or transom bow to allow the dinghies to fit under the club's roof when stacked on end.

In local trials JUST ONE proved a big success. For its first outing Ralph Tobias sailed the dinghy with a young sailing novice in a good stiff breeze which showed how well it could perform. The dinghy was easy to handle, planed readily, had good stability and was also adaptable as a fishing and rowing craft.

The Manly Junior, or MJ, was soon adopted as the training fleet by the Manly club's junior members. It was hugely popular because a crew of two youngsters could learn all aspects of boat-handling and racing in a safe, simple and relatively cheap craft. Other Sydney clubs quickly followed and by the 1960s and 70s, (the class' heyday) Manly Juniors were firmly established interstate.

Despite the introduction of more recent training designs, such as the Laser, the MJ's popularity has remained strong across the country. In New South Wales, 90 craft raced for the State title series in February 2009.

The 2008 Olympic Gold medalists in the International 470 class, Nathan Wilmot and Malcolm Page from Middle Harbour in Sydney, are among the many Australian champions who learnt to sail in a Manly Junior.

JUST ONE was built of plywood and originally carried cotton sails on a wooden spar. Over the years it changed owners a few times, and the last private owner was well known Sydney sailor John 'Beetle' Hebden and his family. To reinforce the aging planking he fibreglassed the exterior, and in 1984, the craft no longer being used by his family, he donated it to Sydney Heritage Fleet.

In 2009 JUST ONE was on display at the Wharf 7 Maritime Heritage Centre in Pyrmont, Sydney, complete with a wooden spar, a cotton mainsail from Brookvale sailmaker Laurie Mitchell, who made the first sails for the class, and a more recent synthetic jib.
SignificanceJUST ONE is a wooden racing dinghy built in NSW in 1959.It was built in Sydney and was the prototype boat for the well known Australian designed Manly Junior training class sailing dinghy. Manly Juniors became an important national training fleet during the 1960s and many champion Australian sailors began their careers in a Manly Junior or MJ as it was known. Although partially modified over the years, JUST ONE still shows the essential features of the original plywood construction and layout and lies in stark contrast to the arrangement of the current MK II fibreglass construction model Manly Juniors being built and raced in 2009.
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