Southern Cross Stars
Vessel numberHV000335
Vessel Registration NumberO.N.174 687
Designer
Harry De Wall
Previous owner
G Shark and Son
Previous owner
P Schark and B Russo
Builder
W Holmes Boat Builder
Previous owner
B and G Russo
Previous owner
Royal Australian Navy
(Australian, founded 1913)
Vessel type
Royal Australian Navy Vessels
Date1940
DimensionsVessel Dimensions: 19.2 m x 18.29 m x 5.49 m x 2.29 m, 50.2 tonnes (63 ft x 60 ft x 18 ft x 7.5 ft, 51 tons)
Terms
- Sydney
- original hull
- substantially restored deck
- substantial modified gearbox
- substantially modified shaft
- trawler
- motor cruiser
- war service
- Williamstown
- timber
- carvel
- timber planked
- timber plywood
- canoe stern/double ended
- displacement
- full keel
- keel hung rudder
- concrete
- wheelhouse
- motor vessel
- diesel
- single
- operational
- fishing
In fact, the iron bark keel was laid in 1939. The vessel was planked in spotted gum up to the waterline, and Oregon on the topsides. The original engine was an Atlas Imperial Diesel giving 90 kw (120 hp) at 320 rpm, and a speed of 10 knots.
On 17 April 1942 the vessel was requisitioned for the war effort and from 22 April 1942 it became HMAS POLARIS with the Royal Australian Navy. The Navy paid the owners £6,300 for the vessel which operated as a survey vessel from 1942 to 1944. The navy added an open but sheltered observation deck on top of the wheelhouse along with the necessary surveying equipment. It assisted HMAS STELLA and HMAS WHYALLA in charting unsurveyed waters around New Guinea. Under the command of GD Tancred they surveyed a shorter route from Milne Bay to Ora Bay, and the Buna area through the D’Entrecasteaux Islands. It came under attack from Japanese aircraft when operating off Cape Nelson on 2 January 1943.
The following poem attributed to the Petty Officer of HMAS POLARIS suggests a hard existence aboard the craft during the war.
'The men who handle little ships have got no band to play,
and spend their lives in an endless watch, ceaselessly night and day.
The little ships turn somersaults where the cruiser only dips,
and crashing seas make music for the men in the little ships.'
After the war it was paid off on the 5th December 1945 and SOUTHERN CROSS STARS was bought back from the Navy for £4,250 by Biaggino & Guiseppe Russo. It was refitted at the cost of another £2,500. Biaggino and Russo kept the vessel until selling it to Harry Rose in 1950. He delivered it to Auckland New Zealand and operated it until around 1963 when it was sold to new owners. The vessel returned to Australia in 1968, having been renamed MARINE STAR in 1966.
In 2009 the owner had returned the vessel's name to SOUTHERN CROSS STARS, and it remained in excellent condition in private use as a large sea-going motor cruiser.
Prepared with assistance from the Register of Australian and New Zealand Ships and Boats compiled by Mori Flapan; www.boatregister.net
SignificanceSOUTHERN CROSS STARS is a wooden trawler built in 1940 by William Holmes at his McMahons Point, Sydney yard. He was more widely known for the construction of motor cruisers and yachts. It is an example of a typical round or canoe-sterned vessel, a seaworthy design favoured by a number of trawler builders and operators. It was requisitioned for war sevice in 1942 and operated as a survey vessel in Papua New Guinea waters.
Vessel Highlights
c 1934