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Garbo

Vessel numberHV000632
Date1928
DimensionsVessel Dimensions: 9.86 m x 7.86 m x 3.2 m x 0.9 m (32.35 ft x 25.79 ft x 10.5 ft x 2.95 ft)
DescriptionGARBO was built by shipwright Tommy Rann Senior in Fremantle for his father-in-law Arthur George Henfry (1873-1931) in 1928, for pearling in Shark Bay Western Australia. It is 9.86m long and 2.0m wide. It is carvel planked and was initially fitted with a centreboard and cutter rig. The rounded deck edge to the stern is framed and fitted with beams such that it gives the impression of being a section of a cartwheel, and the this type of stern used by Rann and other builders was known locally as a cartwheel stern. It is extreme;y strong and with its curved shape well suited to the dredging method it undertook.

The initial method used in Shark Bay pearl shell fishery was simply to collect it at low tide and as the resource became depleted, a move was made to harvest in deeper water by dredging. The dredges were constructed like a wire basket attached to a steel or iron round-bar frame with a flat blade or knife at the lower edge of the opening. They were fastened to the luggers by a ‘dredge line’ that was approximately seven fathoms long (12.5 metres) and they could tow up to four dredges at one time, the speed of the drag controlled by the trim of the sails.

Arthur George Henfry was a second generation pearler, who had pearling leases totalling some 1457 acres near Well Bank, on the western shore of Useless Inlet. When he died in 1931, GARBO was sent up to Onslow where it was part owned by Snow Everett. Eventually it came to Fremantle where Tommy Rann removed the original centreboard and installed a false keel for the new owner, Jim Brown, a former fisheries inspector. He used the vessel for 3-4 years before selling it to the Western Australian Fisheries Department in 1954, and GARBO took on a new role as a fisheries inspection vessel. The newly appointed fisheries inspector and GARBO’s skipper was Neil McLaughlin and at the age of twenty-two he sailed it back to Shark Bay to work with the fishing vessels of that area.

GARBO was disposed of by the Fisheries department and sold to J.F.Leonie of Carnarvon, who then sold it in1966 to F.A.Payne of Lesmurdie. At some point during this period its name was changed to MARIA LOUISE. Oral histories suggest it had several owners after this before it was purchased by Bill Jones of Banjup and stored on his property as an unfinished restoration project. During this time it fell into disrepair, including having a sapling beginning to grow through the hull. GARBO was acquired in 1996 by the Western Australian Museum where it has been stabilized in a cradle support, placed in storage and is used to tell the history and stories of the Shark Bay pearl fishery.

SignificanceGARBO is a Shark Bay pearling vessel built in WA in 1928. It was built by Tommy Rann and is one of very few examples of this specialized type of pearling lugger. Although in poor condition, it is able to interpret the construction of these craft, in particular their 'cartwheel' style of stern shape.
Vessel Highlights
On display at WAMM
West Australian Department of Harbour & Lights
1958
side view of the hull
Wilson Bros.
1950
Ancel
Streeter & Male
1953
PENGHANA in 2011
RF Hickman Pty Ltd
1958
JOHN LOUIS on Sydney Harbour in 2004
Male and Co
1957
LEERUNNA on the slip in Iluka, 2016
Alfred Blore
1914
LITTLE DIRK at Carnarvon early in 2000 before restoration work began.
Robin Gourley
1927
Derwent Hunter in the Whitsundays
Walter Wilson
1946
DAMPIER undergoing sea trials.
M.H. Horton
1959
PREMIER as a fishing boat in the 1930s
Percy Coverdale
1922
Mavis Pearl at the Spring Bay Maritime Museum, Triabunna, Tasmania
Noel Wilson
1958
SONGTON in 2010
Alf Hansen
1956