Launched in 1927, the Esk was a long time in the making. Based on the unfinished hull of a fishing vessel being built across from Ritchies Mill, the north bank of where the Esk flows from the Cataract Gorge into the Tamar River. Acquired on the slip when the original owners ran out of funds, by the Marine Body of Launceston and the Colonial Tasmanian Navy. Operating side by side with the dredge Ponrabbel II in marking new channels in the Tamar Estuary, she also was equipped for salvage operations, mail transport, hydrographical survey and in her Navy guise, minelaying, minesweeping and patrol boat.
Throughout the latter half of 1929, she was engaged cleaning up the aftermath of the 1929 Flood which littered the waterfront and riverbed with wreckage. In 1932, to repay costs run up with coaling from the VCN, the Esk was loaned for 14 months to help with a major Hydro-graphical survey of the Victorian Coastline and to assist with the examination of the wreck of the SS Casino and retrieval of bodies.
In 1934 she assisted the search for the SS Coramba, the Casino's replacement. Finding no trace of the missing vessel in the North Bass Strait, she returned to harbour duties. War broke out when the Esk was surveying Port Sorrell on the North of Tasmania. Returning to Launceston to ship her QF 12 Pounder that had been purchased for her use in 1936 from the VCN. During the war she mainly served as a patrol boat in the King Group, the Furneaux Group and along the North Coast.
Seeing the war through quietly, she returned to her civil duties without her gun, being sold to the South Australian Fisheries Board as an inspection ship in 1947. In 1954, increasingly aging, she was sold to Tasmania again, initally serving in Hobart as a pilot boat then in her old role alongside the Ponrabbel in 1955. Receiving a refit to increase her range and complement, she also gained a new diesel engine, increasing her measly 8 knots to 10.25 knots. In this new shape, she completed a very comprehensive survey of the West Coast and another of the King Group/Furneaux Group. In 1967, she was sold to a Launceston fishing group and served in that role until 1985 when she was sunk in rough weather close to Hebe Reef, the entrance to the Tamar, the very reef she conducted a large amount of work upon.
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Work list(Current)
Miscellaneous|
Victorian Colonial Navy|
Murray Riverboats|
Colony of Victoria AU|
Project Sail-fixing SB's sail shortage
How to mentally pronounce my usernameRow-(as in a boat)Don-(as in the short form of Donald)Dough-(bread)
"Loitering on the High Seas" (Named after the good ship Rodondo)
There's no such thing as "
nothing left to draw" If you can down 10 pints and draw, you're doing alright by my standards