Skip to main content
CAPE DON in 2008, moored along side the Waverton Coal Loader while volunteers work on the resto…
MV Cape Don
CAPE DON in 2008, moored along side the Waverton Coal Loader while volunteers work on the resto…
CAPE DON in 2008, moored along side the Waverton Coal Loader while volunteers work on the restoration and recommissioning project.
Reproduced courtesy Sea Heritage Foundation

MV Cape Don

Vessel numberHV000208
Vessel Registration NumberAVWNA 126494 HT 4 NSW
Date1962
DimensionsVessel Dimensions: 76.25 m x 67.05 m x 12.8 m x 4.37 m, 2139.8 tonnes (250.18 ft x 219.99 ft x 42 ft x 14.34 ft, 2174.04 tons)
DescriptionMV CAPE DON was built in 1962 at the NSW State Dockyard in Newcastle for the Commonwealth Lighthouse Service and designed in Australia by the Australian Shipping Board. The steel ship is just over 76m long, one of a class of three identical vessels purpose-built to service the many navigation aids and support the manned lighthouses around the Australian coastline.

It is one of the few Australian designed and built ships from the 1960s that has not been scrapped and is still in the country.

CAPE DON, with its sisterships CAPE PILLAR and CAPE MORETON, worked until the 1980s when most of the lighthouses were automated.

CAPE DON operated mainly on the western and northern coastlines. Much of this coastline, especially in the north west, is a vast area of islands, bays and archipelagos, with massive tides and miles of wilderness. There are many navigation markers or beacons defining channels and highlighting hazards which were serviced by CAPE DON.

In 1973 CAPE DON under the command of Captain John Marion was used to recover two anchors lost by Matthew Flinders when he was charting the coastline in 1803. The anchors from his ship HMS INVESTIGATOR were retrieved in waters off Esperance WA.

Captain Richard Ireland joined the CAPE DON in 1974. He recalls that up until 1981 the CAPE DON was responsible for the navigation aids from Esperance in the south and as far around as Groote Eylandt in the Gulf of Carpentaria. From 1981 onwards they also did South Australian, Victorian and Tasmanian lights during the summer period, then Western Australian and Northern Territory lights in the winter period. He also recalls CAPE DON helping out in Queensland waters on Moreton Bay when an additional ship was required.

The CAPE ships were manned by Australian crews, and built to provide a versatile platform for various technicians to work from. They featured workshop and cargo storage spaces and a crane on the foredeck to lift buoys on board and to move cargo. They could carry a LARC amphibious vehicle, stowed on the port side. The fitout included first class accommodation in VIP quarters for officials. Relief lighthouse crews often brought their families on board. The ship was able to remain at sea for extended periods, allowing it to cover long distances between major ports.

Phil Osborne served aboard Cape Don and recalled the following, a reflection of the period in the early 1980s.

" I was in service for 5 years with the DOT and may I say they where the best years of my life. If you have the crew lists you will find me under the Galley Staff. I worked as a 2nd cook, Scullery/3rd cook and Peggy (crews pantry and mess assistant, cabin boy).
I started in 1981 through to1986. In that time I got to meet a lot of blokes who could tell you a few stories about lighthouses, the islands, serious weather and of course drinking. (I can still see those 10 gallon kegs in the vegie fridge just chilling).
Thanks Phil Osborne. "

CAPE DON remained in service from 1963 to 1990, a period of 37 years. The three ships were then retired around the same period. CAPE MORETON went to the Maldives as the OCEAN PARADISE while CAPE PILLAR became the cattle ship KALYMNIAN EXPRESS.

CAPE DON was renamed WESTERN EXPRESS when it was sold in 1990. It was then the subject of a number of schemes that came to nothing, including hopes to sail to the Barcelona Olympics and to refurbish it as a cruise ship. At one time it did become a prop for the feature film 'Dogwatch'.

The breakers yard seemed to be its inevitable end until the MV Cape Don Society stepped in. A team of volunteers including past crew from all three vessels is currently restoring the ship.
SignificanceMV CAPE DON is steel ship built in NSW in 1962. It is a surviving example of 1960s Australian design and shipbuilding, one of only a few remaining in Australia. It's working role was both as a lighthouse supply ship and coastal navigation-aid service vessel. It is the only remaining lighthouse supply ship and one of only two surviving Australian coastal navigation-aid service vessels; the other is PV JOHN OXLEY (HV000032) from the 1920s. Both ships represent typical shipbuilding characteristics of their eras, with obvious differences in equipment to deal with their roles.
Interior of the dugout canoe
Robert Cunningham (1930-2009)
c1965
PARRY ENDEAVOUR on display in 2013
R Williams & J Chute Partnership
1979
BALANDRA under restoration in 2017
Jock Muir
1966
STEPHEN DAVIES in 2019
Norman R Wright and Sons
1952
CLS2-CARPENTARIA in drydock at the Queensland Maritime Museum in 2010
David and Charles Stevenson
1916
Berrimilla II during the Grand Veterans Race on Sydney Harbour 18 April 2010
Professor Peter Numa Joubert
1977
PV RICHMOND crossing the bar at Ballina
W Holmes Boat Builder
1932
WANGADIR at Scarborough Qld 2012
Watts & Wright
1940
The lifeboat on display at the Portland Maritime Discovery Centre in 2008
Victorian Government Ports and Harbours Division.
1858
HMAS WHYALLA is now landlocked and on display in its original configuration at Whyalla Maritime…
BHP Whyalla
1941
WESTWARD in 1948
Jock Muir
1947