Parappa
Vessel numberHV000429
Vessel Registration Number151544
Builder
EA Jack
Date1915
DimensionsVessel Dimensions: 15.85 m x 13.72 m x 3.81 m x 1.83 m, 25 tonnes (52 ft x 45 ft x 12.5 ft x 6 ft, 24.6 tons)
Terms
- Launceston
- partially restored hull
- substantially restored deck
- substantially restored superstructure
- partially restored layout
- original rigging
- substantially modified sails
- substantial modified gearbox
- substantially restored shaft
- cray boat
- Kettering
- timber
- carvel
- timber planked
- aluminium
- monohull
- overhanging stem
- displacement
- round bottom
- full keel
- keel hung rudder
- internal
- lead
- full decked
- wheelhouse
- wheel
- yawl
- gaff
- inboard
- diesel
- single
- operational
- interviews
- drawings
- plans
- photos
- news clippings
- fishing
- type/use
- builder
- vessel use
- social
From 1936 until 2004 PARAPPA was owned by four generations of the Jager family at Southport and Dover in south east Tasmania. During their ownership a wheelhouse was added, and by 1946 the gaff rig had been modernized to Bermudan. Then the deck was raised and a new wheelhouse installed in 1964 to make it more seaworthy offshore of Maatsuyker Island where they had located a good area for cray. Finally a third wheelhouse was added in 2002. It changed from tiller to wheel steering when the first wheelhouse was added, and went through no less than 12 changes of engine, gradually moving from a petrol powered auxiliary engine delivering 7.5 kw up to 75 kw of diesel power, by which time the sails and their masts were no longer fitted and it was a motor vessel.
PARAPPA is being overhauled and preserved by its new owner on the principle of maintaining the integrity of the vessel as it exists and therefore keeping the record of changes that have occurred since 1915. In this way it can continue to tell a remarkable story of survival due to continued use and adaptation to changes.
SignificancePARAPPA is a Tasmanian fishing boat built by Ned Jack in Launceston in 1915. PARAPPA worked in the industry for almost 90 years, and was adapted and re-built at various times to keep up with the changes in technology and fishing operations over that time span. These changes are a record of the evolving industry and the evidence of many of them are still visible on PARAPPA in 2010, as it undergoes an overhaul to maintain the vessel as a living example of this long history. EA "Ned" Jack was one of the premier builders in Tasmania, and PARAPPA is an example of the many types of craft he built and the longevity of the strong construction he used.
c 1934
c 1950