Songton
Vessel numberHV000476
(not assigned)A 109
(not assigned)B 57
(not assigned)A 81
(not assigned)A 10
(not assigned)EM921Q
Builder
Alf Hansen
Previous owner
Queensland Department of Native Affairs
Builder
Harold Collis
Designer
Alf Hansen
Vessel type
Pearling Luggers
Date1956
DimensionsVessel Dimensions: 15.85 m x 17.98 m x 14.32 m x 4.27 m x 2.01 m, 30.49 tonnes (52 ft x 59 ft x 47 ft x 14 ft x 6.6 ft, 30 tons)
Terms
- Cairns
- partially restored hull
- partially restored deck
- partially modified superstructure
- substantially modified layout
- substantially restored rigging
- original sails
- original gearbox
- original shaft
- ketch
- pearling lugger
- Innisfail
- timber
- carvel
- timber plywood
- wood/fibreglass
- timber planked
- wood/fibreglass
- operational
- decked with cockpit
- full decked
- cabin
- wheelhouse
- monohull
- overhanging stem
- overhanging transom
- displacement
- round bottom
- full keel-short
- keel hung rudder
- motor vessel
- inboard
- diesel
- single
- ketch
- synthetic
- timber
- indigenous
- type/use
- builder
- vessel use
The 15.85 metre long hull is planked in black penda ( xnthostemon chrysanthus) and spotted gum, and copper fastened with steam bent frames. It is planked down to the heel, whereas many other TI luggers showed a modest deadwood for the keel.It also featured a transom stern, designed to avoid the rot problems associated with the traditional long and finer counter sterns where ventilation and access were both diffcult. A new plywood and fibreglass deck has replaced the original planked deck. The engine is a Gardner 5LW giving 73 kW power. This is supplemented by the ketch rig that was used in the days when they had a diver down on the pearling grounds and the craft drifted with the wind.
SONGTON was first licensed in 1957 to J.B. Witts, registration number A109. The number changed in 1958 when the numbering system was revised (due to the introduction of a new Act governing fisheries in Queensland) and it was licensed as a pearling and trochus boat (reg. A81) to J. B. Witts & Co. in 1958-59 in Thursday Island and from 1960 to 1962 in Cairns (where it would have had a C-prefix number, but the records are missing to confirm this information). In 1963 SONGTON was listed as "not working", Witts having gone bankrupt.
From 1964 to 1967 it was licensed to the Department of Native Affairs (on behalf of the Nona family of Badu Island) as A10 PETTA RALPH NONA. Cocky Watkin bought the lugger from the Nona’s in the 1980s and sailed it out of Cardwell as a fishing boat until he sold it around 2001 to Peter Catarinich. Watkins added the doghouse, and also converted it to a staysail ketch.
In 2011 SONGTON is now a pleasure craft, but still retains much of the the rig and proportions of its time as a working craft in Northern Queensland and Torres Strait. This includes the classic curved sheer and spoon bow profile.
Prepared with assistance from the Register of Australian and New Zealand Ships and Boats compiled by Mori Flapan; www.boatregister.net and Tony Hunt.
SignificanceSONGTON is a pearling lugger built in Cairns, Queensland in 1956. It was built by Alf Hansen and Harold Collis for trochus collecting and also worked on the Torres Strait pearling grounds. Its proportions reflect the final proportions of the Thursday Island type that had begun in the early 1890s. The transom stern, modest ketch rig and powerful main engine contrasted with the counter-sterned sailing craft that created the distinct Thursday Island type. It has been closely associated with the region throughout its life and spent time based at Badu Island where the Indigenous community operated the vessel as a fishing boat.
Vessel Highlights
1904
c 1934
1933