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The launch on display
N & E Towns Motor Boat
The launch on display
The launch on display
Newcastle Maritime Museum

N & E Towns Motor Boat

Vessel numberHV000584
Date1920
DimensionsVessel Dimensions: 4.9 m x 1.8 m (16.08 ft x 5.91 ft)
DescriptionN & E Towns were one of the principal boatbuilders in Newcastle in the first half of the 20th century, and their shed was on Dempsey Island in the Hunter River. Small craft were commonly built in clinker or lapstrake construction around a simple set of moulds, and this craft would have been built in the same manner. It is 4.90m overall and 1.80m beam. The hull has eight planks per side, a raked and curved stem, a round bilge hull shape and the deadwood keel features an aperture for the propeller. The internal arrangement has a small raised deck forward and four thwarts. The aft thwart is fixed to the stringer and transom, the remaining three have double knees, and the second aft thwart has a removable back rest. The hull is varnished inside and out and painted bottle green below the waterline on the exterior.

The engine is well forward, along with seating for passengers, and the boat’s hull carries its beam and volume forward as well to trim correctly to this weight distribution. Having the engine well forward requires a long shaft, and this is enclosed through to the stern gland. There are two rowlock brackets for oars and a footboard fitted for use with the midships thwart. It has a rudder and tiller for steering from the aft thwart.

Its use and ownership remain unknown, however a launch of this nature has the capacity to ferry people and stores or supplies some distance along the Hunter River and tributaries, and could have multiple recreational uses as well.

AMBER LEE (HV000236) is a similar launch built by N & E Towns at their shed on Dempsey Island, most probably in the 1920s. It is not known if it was used commercially or built solely as a recreational craft, but it shares the same clinker construction and profile, but is 6.1 metres long, and AMBER LEES’s hull shape resembles an easily driven rowing skiff rather than the launch proportions used on the shorter hull of this craft.

In 2014 this vessel is part of the Newcastle Maritime Museums extensive collection of regional small craft.

SignificanceThe Newcastle Maritime Museum’s clinker motor launch was built by N & E Towns in Newcastle in 1920. It has the typical shape and proportions for an early motor launch, and the type was then relatively common in sheltered waters throughout Australia. Towns were one of a number of builders who specialised in small craft and once engines became reliable in the early 1900s they included motor launches in the range of vessels they built.
AMBER LEE in a quiet corner of the Murray River in 2007
N & E Towns
1920
The motor launch in storage at NMM
N & E Towns
The butcher boat in 2011
N & E Towns
BOOFA when it was on display at the Eden Whaling Museum in the 1980s
N & E Towns
1946
Transom view of MAY-BELLE in storage
Sutton and Gay
1895
THE MAYFLY
Reg Fazackerley
1973
TORQUAY
Jas Edwards & Sons
1913