Sam Male
Vessel numberHV000657
(not assigned)B3
(not assigned)B4
Previous owner
Pearls Pty Ltd
Previous owner
Male and Co
Vessel type
Pearling Luggers
Date1957
Terms
- Broome
- partially restored hull
- partially restored deck
- partially restored superstructure
- partially restored layout
- partially restored rigging
- partially restored sails
- original gearbox
- original shaft
- pearling lugger
- ketch
- Broome
- timber
- carvel
- timber planked
- timber planked
- monohull
- round bottom
- overhanging transom
- full keel
- keel hung rudder
- internal
- full decked
- wheel
- ketch
- gaff
- timber
- non-operational
- on public display
- outside
- fishing
- type/use
It was launched as Kimberley Male and registered as No 3 in 1958 O/N 196882 at Fremantle with the builder recorded as AS Male- Arthur Streeter Male. It is carvel planked, and has a flush deck with a raised bulwark forward. There is a high cabin over the forward accommodation area which may have been an addition to the accommodation forward as an improvement for European crew members. During its working life it was registered as B4 at one point.
Initially Sam Male would have worked the fields in a traditional manner, using its Lister diesel to get to and from the fields, and then operating under sail drifting across the pearling beds as the divers worked their way slowly along the ocean floor.
It was one of the ten pearling luggers still operating out of Broome in 1973. Around this period it was likely to have been used to harvest Mother of Pearl for Pearls Pty Ltd’s new cultured pearl farming at Kuri Bay. Pearls Pty Ltd was formed as a consortium including Streeter and Male, Brown and Dureau Ltd, Otto Gerdau Company, and Nippon Pearl Co.
It was purchased by the Shire of Broome in 1977 from Streeter and Male, decommissioned and placed on Male Oval. At this point it was renamed Sam Male. In 1990 it was removed for restoration and in 1999 relocated to a park beside D.McD. at Pearl Luggers in Dampier Terrace. The display is centred on the two original pearling luggers with a replica tidal jetty.
Prepared with assistance from the Register of Australian and New Zealand Ships and Boats compiled by Mori Flapan; www.boatregister.net
SignificanceSAM MALE is a pearling lugger understood to have been built in Broome in 1957 for Streeter & Male It is a rare surviving example of the Broome lugger, a craft unique in design to that region. And represents the late 1950s development of the type.The mother of pearl shell industry was a major economic activity in northern Australia (north-west and Torres Strait) for over 100 years from 1850 and was one of the contributors to the development of those regions. By 1910, Broome was the largest pearling centre in the world with over 400 luggers and 3500 people involved in the search for shell in those waters of North-Western Australia. The industry was multi-cultural and involved Aboriginal people, Europeans and Asians in all aspects so much so that it was granted exemption from the White Australia Policy on immigration of the early 20th century. Streeter & Male were one of the prominent pearling companies of Broome. The vessel is now on permanent display at a park in Broome and provides good interpretive capacity of its technology and social aspects
Vessel Highlights
Alf Morgan
c 1950