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I I I '. I F I ,I I I I I I I I I I I . WOOLtOMOOLOO BAY PTY L TO .' a subsidiary of PIVOT IIJIMH'fED - BERTHS 6,.7,8 & 9, WOOLLOOMOOLOO BAY History Arc4aeology and Documentation . . .' May 1989 : .. . - PREPARED BY DON GODDEN, PATRICIA HOlT AND PETER SPEARRITT -. , \ " . !

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Page 1: PIVOT G~OlUJP IIJIMH'fED I '. I - University of Sydneynswaol.library.usyd.edu.au/data/pdfs/15451_ID_Godden1989...wallabies and kangaroos and the word 'Walla Mulla' has the same derivation

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. WOOLtOMOOLOO BAY PTY L TO .' a subsidiary of PIVOT G~OlUJP IIJIMH'fED

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BERTHS 6,.7,8 & 9, WOOLLOOMOOLOO BAY History Arc4aeology and Documentation . . .' May 1989 : ..

. -

PREPARED BY DON GODDEN, PATRICIA HOlT AND PETER SPEARRITT • • •

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WOOLLOOMOOLOO FINGER WHARF: HISTORY, ARCHAEOLOGY AND DOCUMENTATION .

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Don Godden, Patricia Holt & Peter Speanitt

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Don Godden & Associates

and

Heritage Consultants

Sydneyl989

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TABLE OF CONfENTS

1 WOOILOOMOOLOO'S ORIGINS

1.1 Early Settlement

1.2 From Fishing Village to Suburb

1.3 Reclamation and Deep Sea Wharfage

1.4 Home of the Sydney Fishing Fleet

1.5 Dockland Life in the 'Loo

2 TIIE FINGER WHARF

2.1 The Sydney Harbour Trust: Rebuilding Sydney's Wharves

2.2 From Central Jetty to 'Cathedral of Commerce'

2.3 A Tour of the Wharf

2.4 The Wharf and the Bay

2.5 Passenger Ships and Troop Ships

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3, TIlE WHARF AND TIlE PORT

3.1 Depression and War

3.2 Overseas Passenger Terminal

3.3 Gradual Decline •

4 WHARF RELICS

4.1 Wharf Technology •

4.2 Goods Conveyors •

Driving System

Drive System

4.3 Gantries and Cranes

4.4 Bon~ds and Dolphins

Bollards ,

Dolphins

4.5 The Northern End Shed

4.6 The Electric Lifts

4.7 Gates, Gateposts, Fences and Fenceposts · •

4.8 The Cart Docks • •

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.' 5 TIffi WHARF AND THE COMMUNITY •

5.1 A Grand Development Scheme

5.2 Workers, Residents and Dwellings

6 EVALUATION: THEWHARFTODAY,ANEMPTYCATHEDRAL? 6.1 An Empty Cathedral .

6.2 Timber Pile Wharves: The Australian and World Context 6.3 Conclusion

7 ARCmv AL; PUBLISHED AND UNPUBLISHED SOURCES, INCLUDING

MAPS, ARCIllTECTURAL DRAWINGS AND PHOTOGRAPHS 7.1 Literatllfe: Novels and Autobiographies

7.2 Sources for Industrial Architecture

7.3 Maritime Services Board Library

7.4 Mitche11 Library •

I . 7.5 State Library o~ NSW 7.6 Newspapers

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7.7' NSW Archives

7 .8 Unpublished reports I

. 7.9 W oo11oomooloo Maps •

7.10 W oo11oomoollo Pictorial Material

7.11 Architectural Drawings Held by the Maritime Services Board

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1. WOOLLOOMOOLOO'S ORIGINS

In most of the early maps Woolloomooloo Bay appears as

Garden Cove or Garden Island Cove and was so named

because Garden Island at its entrance was set apart as a

vegetable garden by Governor PhiIlip in 1788. The origin

of the name Woolloomooloo has been much debated.

Early theories suggested it was a corruption of the

Aboriginal'Wulla Mulla', 'Walla Mulla', Woollamulla' or

even 'Wollabahmulla' - names variously said to mean •

'burying place', 'place of blood', 'place of plenty' and

'place where kangaroos abound'. It was also suggested

that Woolloomooloo was the Aboriginal pronunciation of the word 'windmj]]'.

Later authorities on the subject believed it to be a composite

I . word, contracted from the habit both blacks and whites had

of blending the English and Aboriginal language. Some

I . 'th early records of the wbe°rd< refesr t°th'WHalladMudllaB' and aPBPlY e name to an area tween, ou ea an otany ay

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which Governor Phillip had proclaimed a reserve for the

Aborigines. Apparently the area was plentiful with

wallabies and kangaroos and the word 'Walla Mulla' has

the same derivation as 'wallaby'. Loose application of the

word in colonial days also applied the name 'Walla Mulla'

to Palmer's Farm, which became known as

Woolloomooloo Farm. It is thought that Palmer.adopted the latter spelling.

1.1 Early Settlement

In 1793, 100 acres at the head of Garden Cove was

granted to John Palmer by Lt-Governor FrancisGrose.

Palmer, who had arrived with the First Fleet as purser of ,

the flagship Sirius, was by then a powerful government

official, having been made Commissary General of ,the

settlement in 1791. As Commissary, he had responsibility

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for the stores and accounts and funds of the colony. The

farm, described as 'deliminated by ditches and stone walls,

overlooked by a hill crowned With windmills, and reaching •

from Old South Head Road, now Oxford Street, to the

bay' was extensively cultivated by 1803, primarily with

orchards, and a windmill and bakery operated on the five

acre model farm at the Domain. It is believed that the

bakehouse was situated on the current site of the

Conservatorium of Music and one windmill stood where

Governor Phillip's statue was erected in the Botanic Gardens.

The homestead was said to have been elaborately furnished

with coacIi houses and stables, a ditch around it, over

which grew sweet briar roses and golden gorse in the

English fashion. It was one of the colony's first

permanent residences and' the Palmers lived elegantly,

entertaining the first rank of colonial society. It is known

that, in 1836, there was a vineyard on the property, known •

as 'Tokay', covering nearly twelve acres. An

advertisement for its sale appeared in The Gazette in that

year. •

John Pa]mer sold the Woolloomooloo estate to Edward

Riley, a tea and sugar merchant and a director of the Bank

of New South Wales, in 1822. Palmer went to live at •

Parramatta. He died in 1833, the last of the officers of the

First Fleet. Riley, who lived at the Woolloomooloo

homestead until 1825, when he committed suicide, was

survived by a widow and seven children. The settlement

of the estate was a lengthy business and in the interim the

house and land were leased to various colonial identities

including Saxe Bannister, the first Attorney-General of

New South Wales, Thomas Hobbes Scott, the first

Anglican Archdeacon of the colony and later, Doctor John •

Bede Polding, the first Catholic Archbishop of Australia. • •

1.2 From Fishing Village to Suburb •

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The Woolloomooloo estate was not sold and subdivided

until the late 1840s. The homestead was demolished in

1850 and development of suburban housing spread down

the hill from William Street. Two of the main streets in the

subdivided district were named Palmer and Riley. By

1854, most of the streets of lower Woolloomooloo were

established although development at the waterfront was

still limited. Land below Woolloomooloo Street (now

Cathedral Street) was described in 1858 as being alluvial

land only a few feet above the high waterllne. Mudbanks

had also helped to inhibit the usage of the Bay for deep

wharfage, so that only a few small jetties had been built

into the bay for the loading and landing of timber, lime and

other building materials. Many small craft used for fishing

were moored in the Bay. However, on a map dated 1854,

only two unnamed jetties and one wharf are marked on the

south-eastern shores. •

A newspaper article of 1904 on.'Old Sydney' provides the

most detailed available description of the Bay prior to the

building ~of Cowper's Wharf in c. 1861-3. The water line •

. reached thebackyards of the houses in Bay Street and little

jetties running out from these yards served as mooring

places for pleasure craft. On the eastern shore below Fred

McQuade's hou~c:?, 'Tarana', ('Bomera' b~longing to

Williain,McQuade was next door) was the Subscription

Boat Club that was also known as Holdsworth's. A little

south Yates and Son had a 'letting out and boat building

establishment' at which yachts were moored. Next was •

the boatshed of Punch and McGrath and adjoining this was

Fairfax apd Company's steam saw mill. The saw mill was •

built on a wharf of masonry so as to enable small shipping

to take in or deliver timber. Fairfax and Company's timber

yard was a 'big concern whose southern boundaries face •

the hoteJ known as Meacher's (or Meache's), which •

stood, ... at . the extreme end of Dowling Street the •

waterfront immediately facing the door; from the street a

jetty projected for some distance and was used by the

steamers going to Manly Beach, Woolloomooloo Bay

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being a port of call'. It appears that Meache's Hotel,

opposite the entrance to this jetty, was probably originally

the "Wharf Hotel". This is because an hotel next to

Fairfax's steam mill is referred to as 'Mr Shipman's

Dowling Street "Wharf Hotel"'.in another newspaper I (Illustrated Sydney News, 11 November 1854).

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On an 1886 plan of wharves (State Archives X2032) there

is only one sizeable Jetty in the centre of the bay. It is

marked. "Jetty for passengers" so it would be likely to be

the central jetty that was replaced in the 1890s and later

replaced. by the existing central Finger Wharf. ,

The Manly steamers were then named 'Breadalbane' and

'Phantom' and 'the space between the jetty and Fairfax's

was pretty generally filled. up with logs of pine and ced.ar

for milling purposes. ... From the water's edge on the

western side, from the Domain entrance to the rear of

wharf is now The Bells was a mass of high rocks. These

rocks were all removed by blasting; for use in reclaiming

the bay, and allowed for a gradual slope as shown in the · , Domain today'. The article went on" to describe the beach

on the western shore, where Brown's Wharf stood for

many years. It was a pleasant beach where prawns could

be netted. and horses swum; on occasions it was used by

the Baptists for public immersions. I The metal wharf was

built where a large iron roofed enclosure used. as a ladies

baths was situated.

• A small jetty was built where The Bells Hotel now stands.

" On it was a semaphore used by members of the

Subscription Boat Club to signal for a boat to carry the

member across to the Club. Apparently the Club was

difficult to reach at high tide because of the rocks around

that side of the bay. · •

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. In the 1850s a boat builder named. Dan Sheehy had a shed. • • • •

and wharf on the south eastern corner of the Bay at the foot

of Duke Street (now McElhone Street). Sheehy's Wharf •

landed coal from the Hunter River Colliers (P. S. Elliott •

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had a coal and fuel yard in Woolloomooloo). Another Bay

landmark was the 'Vernon', a training vessel for boys. It

was acquired by the government, largely at the prompting

of Sir Henry Parkes, was equipped as a floating school,

and was originally anchored in Woolloomooloo Bay.

It appears that Woolloomooloo in the early days of its

subdivision was always a 'good', suburb even if it was one

of mixed class:

Houses of every size are rising up rapidly. _

There are no filthy, unhealthy lanes, such as are

to be met with at the rear of even the principal

streets of the city of Sydney; and in

W oolloomooloo all classes of people, from the

wealthy merchant, or the man of a large family,

down to the humble artisan and mechanic, can

find clean, commodious residences to suit their

different circumstances', (Illustrated Sydney

News 11 Nov. 1~54) •

The later subdivisons: it seems, were less salubrious,

Small terrace houses continued to spread over the lower

end of the suburb and a problem - one of health - stemmed

from what the Surveyor-General, Sir Thomas Mitchell

referred to as the "undrained, unlevelled and unshaped

ways misnamed streets",

Woolloomooloo however, still had plenty of open spaces

and its seclusion, clear water and the parkland of the

Domain made it a pleasant 'recreational place. The City

Council built public baths in the 1850s on the shoreline

below the Domain and Robinson's Hot and Cold Baths

established two swimming baths (Ladies and Gents). A

man named Wilson was the proprietor of baths built around

the hulk of the old ship, 'Ben Bolt' and Robinson's were

built around a bigger ship, 'Cornwallis', such arrangement·

saving the owners considerable money on timber and

labour. The City Council incorporated them all in 1908

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with the establishment of the Domain Baths. Today the

Andrew 'Boy' CharltonPool is on the same site. .

The recreational theme continued on the other side of the . Cove with the establishment in the 1850s of several boating

clubs on the waterfront. These included 'The Australian

Subscription Rowing Club', that set up business on the

eastern shore in 1859. It provided boats on daily hire or by .

SUbscription and was the first strictly amateur boat club set

up in Sydney. William Beach, 'the undefeated world

champion scuiler', whose prowess is commemorated by an

obelisk erected in Cabarita Park in 1938, won in the early

1880s, his first race - an all-comer's skiff race from

Woolloomooloo Bay, round Pinchgut and return, on a

course of two and a half miles. A famous annual event ,

was the 'Woolloomooloo Regatta', begun in 1854 and in

which all races began and fmished in the Bay. For many

years, this Boxing Day event was enjoyed by large

numbers of spectators, the bulk of whom watched the

proceedings from the Domain. I

'" tI < • , 1.3 Reclamation and Deep Sea Wharfage

The reclamation of the Bay commenced in 1864 and was

completed about 1866. The cliffs around the Bay were

quarried for large blocks of stone which, together with a i

timber pile wall provided a new foundation around the

shoreline. The Bay was dredged and the fill placed behind

the wall thereby extending the usable land from Cathedral

Street to the present Iwaterfrontage. The reclamation

provided a quay which enabled ,the erection of longshore .

wharves that serviced! local industries. A semicircular

wooden wharf, Cowper's, was constructed at the head of

the Bay in 1861-3. As the main public wharf, it was •

constructed by the Government for general,use, and named

after Si! Charles Co~er, member for East Sydney,

Premier!of- New Sou~ Wales and proponent of many'

major public works. It contributed to making

Woollo~mooloo Bay a busy resort of sailing vessels,

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especially for the unloading of general merchandise and the

loading of wool. It was later extended along the eastern

side of the Bay. In the 1890s, the 'Coal Baron', John

Brown, mine owner, built Brown's Wharf on the western

side of the Bay.

An official proposal was submitted to the Public Works

Committee in 1888 to erect a jetty in the centre of the Bay

as the old jetty by this time was in an "unsound condition ".

As a result of the work of this Committee, Admiralty

Wharf (of which there are some excellent photos taken by

the NSW Government Printers Office) was also built, in

1889-90. Some sources state that it was built by the

Imperial Government and was used for ships of war. I I Certainly its name suggests the same, and it is probable that

it was paid for by the Imperial Government This wharf I . was reconstructed and expanded in 1910-16.

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'In 1891, Captain John Jackson 'Manager and Collector of I

Public' Wharves' successfully negotiated with a syndicate

to occupy Admiralty Wharf as a loading wharf.' A wool-

dumping concern known as the Fitzroy Stevedoring

Company was also installed, this time on the east side of •

the purpose of loading the Bucknall Line of steamers.

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1.4 Home of the Sydney Fishing Fleet

When Cowper's Wharf was completed, the Bay was noted

for its function as a fishing port and for its traffic in timber •

and bluestone. Liners from San Francisco also used the

Bay. In fact, during the latter part of the nineteenth century

Woolloomooloo Bay was probably best known as the

home of the Sydney fishing fleet. (The fleet had been

previously stationed in Darling Harbour). Sydney's first •

government administered Municipal Fish Markets open in

1872 in a building at the corner of Forbes and Plunkett • • •

Streets. The building was extended in 1880, but

demolished in 1892 and the new building that opened in • •

1893 on the same site remained in use as the city's fish

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markets until new markets were opened in the Haymarket in 1910. The building was later occupied by Sungravure

Printing Works.

At this time, the fishing fleet transferred its base away frOm

I " Woolloomooloo Bay. Two reasons are advanced for this waning of influence of the fishing industry: one being that

with the development of deepwater wharfage the fishing

vessels became less important in the area, and the other that

it eventually was found to be more convenient to send fish

to Sydney by rail from fishing ports along the coast than to

bring them in" boats to W oolloomooloo. For this reason the

fish market was relocated to the Municipal Markets near the

railway goodsyard at Darling Harbour.

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1.5 Dockland Life in the, 'Loo

, With the establishment of the wharves Woolloomooloo

developed more of a maritime character based on its

proximity to its docks and its growing population of wharf , I • workers and fishermen. Although many larger, elegant

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'boom style' terraces were built in the 1880s - particularly . '

those built along the crest of what was then known as

. Woolloomooloo Heights (now Victoria Street) - rack

renters introduced terraces of the more un salubrious

variety, and the area, by the turn of the century was largely

. a suburb for working class families. Many dockside hotels

opened, including 'The Little House Under the Hill', 'The

Ivy Leaf, 'The Blue Bell', 'The Firm Anchor' and 'The

Cottage of Content'. 'The Bells" rebuilt in the 1920's can

be seen in the background of the aforementioned photo of

Admiralty Wharf. Naturally these watering places became

the social centre for sailors and wharfies and this,

combined with the vision of sprawling streets of worker's

cottages may have given the appearance of disreputability.

The working class nature of the area was reinforced in the

1890swhen the name ofWoolloomooloo became gradually'

I synonymous with thedockside district in the vale at the head of the Bay.- The :flrst recorded use of the shortened

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term 'Loo was in a poem, published in 1893 by Daniel lIea1ey: .

Tim Bunyip was of Austral birth Born at the classic 'Loo.

At about this time the 'Loo was becoming notorious for its

gangs of'larrikins'. (The uniform of the larrikins has been

described as a "black suit with bell-bottom trousers, short

coat, flat-crown hat and high-heeled fancy boots").

. Although the area had a reputation for being a 'tough'

quarter until about 1930, at least some of its reputation

seems undeserved. During a lengthy debate carried in the

'letters to the editor' pages of the Sydney Morning Herald

in the early months of 1905, genteel concerned residents

argued for a name change for their ~uburb believing this

measure to be all that was necessary for. it to be rid of its

stigma. This concern was partly engendered by a fear of . faJIing rental and land values. •

. One resident wrote:

•... .Its narrow little lanes, nestling beneath the cliffs, and hiding away behind the principal streets as the surveyors aligned them and the people built along them, became in process of

• time a sort of Alsatia for the criminal, the unfortunate, and the very poor. The "Rocks" district was in the old days for the western and northern ends of Sydney what Woolloomooloo became for the eastern, and the new and evil fame it acquired in the short and simpl~ annals of the policy eclipsed. the respectable associations which had begun to grow up there, and now cling to it after the evils have been exterminated or have departed. The old name, with its multitudinous vowels, has become synonymous with the evil repute, and the modem resident craves for the final effacement of both with one pass of the sponge across the slate. :

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One resident provided a poem:

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What's in a name? There is much too much for you Or I who have a business in the Loo. . Call out mad dog, and everyone will try To beat the creature as he passes by, Although the cur is sound in sense and limb, Yet each and all will try to injure him.

and continued:

Woolloomooloo is one· of the healthiest parts of the city to live in. Except for a few lanes the streets are all of the regulation width. Bounded on the one side by the Domain and on another by the harbour, the place is always filled with the ever bracing and health-giving sea breezes. During the outbreak of plague in '90 this part of the city enjoyed almost perfect immunity from the dreaded disease. No plague-infected rodent has been discovered in this portion of the City. . ... B ut something must be done in order to remove the odium that is at present associated with the name.

Popular suggestions for Woolloomooloo's new name

included Palmerton, Palmersham, East Sydney and St

Kilda (after an old house that was a landmark in the j

district). John Pa]mer's great grandson, R. H. Palmer, a

resident of AnnanOale, wrote in expressing his approval of

the name 'Palmersham' and suggesting that Palmer Street

be called 'Commissary-avenue'. Another suggestion was

that Woolloomooloo Street should have its name changed.

By the 1920s its name had been changed to Cathedral , •

Street, and Duke Street, which had been notorious as a

lively quarter had had its name changed to McElhone Street

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The Italian fishing community residing in the 'Loo added

an extra dimension in the area's colour and life. Italians

had been living in Woolloomooloo since the 1860s and

Cardinal Moran had the church of St Columbkille's built

for their benefit. St Columbkille's is now one of the few

remaining nineteenth century churches in the area. One

other remaining chl!l'Ch is the Palmer Street Uniting Church

(formerly Presbyterian). Even ID the 1960s, Italian fishing

trawlers were moored in the Bay and fishing nets could be

seen laid out in the streets for purposes of mending. In

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1960 there were approximately eighty Italian families as

well as 15 Italian boarding houses in the area. . Their •

presence was remarked upon in the 1920s:

In some of the still unimproved slum streets there reside swarthy foreigners, who go out daily'in small craft to test the harvest of the sea.' (Sydney Morning Herald, 21 June 1924).

Sydneysiders still benefit from this particular maritime ,

legacy as some of Sydney's best Italian restaurants are in

the W oolloomooloo, Darlinghurst and Kings Cross areas.

Harry's Cafe de Wheels is another dockside institution. It

has been situated at various intervals around the Cowpers

Wharf Roadway over the last decades, and although Harry

died in 1979, a cafe of the same name still survives.

Harry's Cafe de Wheels, as it was when he died, has been

preserved by the Museum of Applied Arts and Sciences.

Snippets of life in thej'Loo can also. be gleaned from a

number of famous novels that have been set there, •• • · . including: Christina Stead's Seven Poor Men of Sydney

(1'934); Kylie Tennant's Tell Morning This (1967;

abrldgedversion, 1953); M. Barnard Eldershaw's

Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow (censored 1947;

uncensored, 1983); an,d Patricia Wrlghtson's Down to Earth (1965).

I

• 2. THE FINGER WHARF

2.1 The Sydney Harbour Trust: • Rebuilding

Sydney's Wharves : • , I

The establishment of the Sydney Harbour Trust in 1901

was one 'of the most significant events in the history of

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Sydney Harbour. Between 1901 and 1920, the Trust

developed Woolloomooloo Bay into one of the -most .

important sets of berths for commercial shipping in

Sydney. The formation of the Sydney Harbour Trust

resulted from pressure that was exerted on Sydney's

limited cargo handling facilities at the end of the nineteenth

century. During the final decade, of that century ship

movements in Sydney increased eightfold and aggregate

tonnage more than doubled. Yet most of the wharves were

privately owned and operated. As such they had been.

constructed to suit the requirements of individual owners ,

and without regard to any orderly scheme.

The Harbour Trust Commissioners' general task was that

'of making the ocean gateway to the City .•. wholesome,

attractive and efficient to meet the requirements of trade

arid, as far as practicable, provide for the future shipping

and commercial needs'. Reconstruction involved the

removal of 'old, unsightly galvanised iron structures' then

doing duty as sheds; at most of the wharves, and the

construction of rat-pr:oof walling as well as roadways to

give easy access to wharves (Port of Sydney Journal October 1947).

Some of the larger works initiated and completed by the

Sydney Harbour Tru.st, subsequent to its inception and

prior to its amalgamation with the State Department of

Navigation and becoming known as the Maritime Services

Board of NSW in 1936, took place in Woolloomooloo

Bay. These comprised the construction of the massive

central jetty, Nos 6 to 9 Berths, and Berths Nos 1 to 3, •

originally built as recently as 1897-8, that were lengthened

and remodelled.

A 1901 map of principal wharves shows the White Star

Line uSing Cowper's Wharf as well as all of the east side

of the ~ay, on which.there was a road as well as wool and

general cargo sheds. By 1902-3, the German-AUStralian S •

S Company was using the cargo facilities on the east side •

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and in that same year, a wharf on the south side (leased by •

McArthur & Co.) was reconstructed and enlarged and

alterations were also made to the roadway. (Sydney

Harbour Trust Annual Reports 1901, 1903).

Early in 1911, work began on the remodelling of the 1890s

wharves 1 to 3. They were combined, widened and

raised. Rock and clay, excavated from the hill-behind, was

used for some reclamation and thus the east side was again

dramatically redeveloped. Of the Trust's works here, the

Daily Telegraph reported, in29 August 1912, that:

An .80ft roadway is to run round behind the wharves. Just above the cliff face stands Bomerah, that the Trust had to resume; and just below it two half-built wharf-structures, with earth and stones being pushed out and filled in between them. ••. the wharf. will stretch on piles for 40ft Along one side will be a "Black Gennan" berth, and across the end will be the Port Iackson Ferry Company's cargo-boats. That will remove the need for the little wharf at Fort Macquarie, from which the Manly cargo all comes now. The Fort Macquarie, picnic • steamers will have more room, too, and the

• small cargo-boats will find plenty off Potts Point .

'Bomerah' was the large residence nearest the wharves.

Actually spelt 'Bomera', it was once a grand Italianate

house with separate stables and servants qu'arters to the

rear and grounds that extended to W oolloomooloo Bay,

encompassing a tennis court, swimming baths. and terraces

fronting the Bay. These waterfront terraces must have

'gone' with the wharf construction of the 1890s and yet

more of Bomera's frontage was resumed in 1911 to allow

the wharves to be widened and extended to the north­

eastern point where land was also resumed for the Manly

cargo steamer berth (Telegraph 11 November. 1912).

Fortunately the house was saved, although the servants

quarters had been demolished by the 1940s. Bomera was

still a boarding house during the 1930s and is featured as

such in Jessica Anderson's award-winning novel, Tirra

Lirra by the River (1978). The William McQuade family

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• •

occupied Bomera from 1856 to 1883, when it became the

home of Commodore E. Erskine. During 1940-1, a19ng

with all the properties on the east side of Wy1de Street,

Bomera was acquired by the Department of the Interior and

is now offices for Fleet Headquarters.

. Nos 1 to 3 Berths were in use by 1912, and were

completed in 1913. Installation of the cargo handling

equipment and the roadway and footpath at the rear were

not complete until the early months of 1916. The entire

east shore was to mainly provide for the Gennan-Australia

Steamship Company. The wharves, running out opposite

and close to Garden Island, and having large sheds built •

over their entire length, were deep-sea berths for three

vessels. Modern electric cranes and haulage were fitted

throughout. Also in 1913, Berth No. 4 was opened to

. shipping, and so five steamers were able to berth at once •

on that side of the Bay.

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The Sydney Harbour Trust Commissioners' plans and

descriptions had this to say about the structures:

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A new shed was constructed in 1903 at the rear of No. 2 Berth (this shed was later removed to No. 4 Berth, Woolloomooloo). In 1912-1916 the premises were completed reconstructed. The existing wharf was raised on blocks and widened and extended in a northerly direction, ·the piles and headstocks of the old wharf being incorporated in the remodelled structure. The old Nos. 1 and 2 sheds were demolished and No. 2A shed was removed to No. 4 Berth. The present Nos. 1, lA and 2/3 sheds and the brick office block were- erected and machinery installed in the sheds. No. 2/3 shed is double­decked. The seawall behind the old wharf was raised and a trestle wall constructed behind the new wharf.

Machinery consisted of:

1 I-ton hydraulic lift; 1 2-ton hydraulic lift; 1 2-ton electric semi-portal jib crane; . 3 electric wool bale elevators; 5 wool shoots; 1 cargo gantry - . (State Archives, MSB Special Bundles 7 n527)

Nos 2 and 3 wharf structures were agam renovated in 1933-4 (MSB Sydney Habour Wharves 1954, State Archives 7n526.2).

At this time, other works in W oolloomooloo Bay included

those undertaken at Berths 4, 5, 10, 11 and 12. At Berth

No. 4, the original wharf and sheds were demolished in

1916. A new wharf was built and the demolished sheds

were moved and re-erected, one at No. 5 Berth and the

other: to form part of No. 4B shed. The new shed on No.

4 was moved from the rear of the old No. 2 wharf, and it

was single storey of timber construction. Also in 1916,

the original shed on No. 5 was moved to No. 4B and the .

new shed, that was brought from No. 4, was erected. In •

1903, Berth No. 10 was widened and improvements were made to the shed and seawall.

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Iri 1911-12, No. 11 was widened and the shed from No. 6

(i.e. the old shed built prior to 1901 that was on the central

jetty) was erected on it. No. 11 was renovated again in

1920-21 when the whatf was extended at its north end and

a new cargo shed was erected.

No. 12 wharf, known as the Blue Metal Wharf, was

constructed in 1902 and consisted of sheet piling with

fi)]jng behind. Consequent upon the extension of No. 11

wharf in 1920-1, No. 12 was extended approximately 90ft

at the north end. This involved the removal of the

explosives landing (State Archives MSB Special Bundles

7nS27 andMSB Sydney Harbour Wharves 7nS26.2).

2.2 From Central Jetty to 'Cathedral of Commerce'

Work began on the massive central jetty, referred to early

on by the Trust as No. 6 Wharf, on 14 August 1910. The

progress of its construction was followed with interest by I

the press, as it was the Trust's most ambitious undertaking

to date and was (and siill is) the largest whatf in Australia.

By mid 1912, when the jetty structure itself was essentially

completed press reports (including that of the Daily

Telegraph of 29 August 1912) summed. up rather

succinctly the increasing pressure for whatf space and the , . ,

Sydney Harbour Trust's achievements to that date:

The more whatfage improvements the Harbour . Trust makes, the less wharves we have. So that, after the ~xpenditure of hundreds of thousands of po rinds, there are now actually 34 fewer berths than when the trust first took office.

'That may sound like an attack on the Harbour Trust. It isn't. The new ones are much bigger berths for the increasingly bigger ocean-going vessels. ... since the vessels grow in size quite

. as fast as they' increase in number it becomes just as necessary to add to the length of the old wharVes as to make new ones. ... Just at present we are in the midst of change, with all its worries. Half-built or nearly-ready wharves and sheds are scattered everywhere, and great undeveloped bays near the city hold out their

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• arms for wharves. They will all have to be filled in time.

The 'Cathedral9f Commerce - in the galvanised iron gothic

style', as it was referred to in 1914 (Daily Telegraph 25

June 1914, was to be 1040 feet long and 203 feet wide. It

was to consist of a 'concrete roadw~y 53 feet wide and

sunken 4 feet below the 75 feet wide timber wharves so as

to assist in the loading of the vehicles. Sheds of 40 feet

wide were to be constructed on each wharf and the most

modern of cargo handling equipment was to be •

incorporated. •

2.3 A Tour of the Wharf

By mid year of 1912, the central jetty's timber work was

almost complete and the centre reinforced concrete ,

roadway was compl~te save for 900 square metres of its

surface. A delay i!1 the supply of iron girder~ from •

'~ngland caused the erection of temporary sheds on the two

shore-end berths. Increasing shipping demand was such

that the new wharf was in use years before its finishing

touches were completed. In October 1912, it was reported that: I

Woolloomooloo Bay during the last few days has been the scene of much activity, so far as , shipping is concerned. The accommodation for overseas cargo. carriers has been fully taxed, and gives promise of continuing for some time.

The new jetty ~hich is to accommodate big ships, though not yet completed, was utilised and four steamers ... were taken alongside.

. This quartette fllled up, the space, and for the time being it was difficult to discriminate between the jetty and the bay. More pronounced than ever was this little problem, when' a look round at the other wharves disclosed the fact that (four other ships) were at separate berths.

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------ ------------------

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This fleet represented over 50,000 tons, while several thousand men found employment

It is claimed by the Harbour Trust that when the jetty is open for regular berthing a good deal of congestion, so far as deepset shipping in the season is concerned, will be relieved.

•.• while the water space has been curtailed the berthing room has been increased, and W oolloomooloo Bay will probably be known in the future as "Woolloomooloo Wharves".(Evening News 23 October 1912).

The approaches to the jetty were completed in August 1912 .

and erection of the four double-decked cargo sheds was

commenced on 30 July 1912. By mid 1914, the sheds on

Nos 7 and 9 berths, at the northern end, were completed

and by the end of that year the two berths at the southern

end (Nos. 6 & 9) were also finished. An ambulance room

was provided in shed No. 8 for the benefit of wharf

labourers and others. By mid 1915, four 3-ton goods lifts,

eight 3-ton travelling bridge cranes and eight pairs of

freight conveyors (each capable of handling 2 tons

continuously) had all been installed and haq been used •

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,'satisfactorily' during the year. (Sydney Harbour Trust •

Annual Reports 1912, 1914, 1915) • . •

In 1916, work was completed with the widening of the

wood-blocked approach to the jetty and the erection of a

new iron fence.

The sunken road has proved a great success at the big jetty built by the Commissioners in the centre of Woolloomooloo Bay. This jetty has

. been in full swing for some time, and the convenience of the loading bays off the sunken . road has facilitated the dispatch of wagons from the wharf. The wharf is now one of the busiest in Port J ackson. The gear for disposing of goods is of the most up-to-date pattern." (Evening News 1 September 1915).

There is nothing to beat this new shed and the appliances in any part of Australia" said Mr H.D. Walsh, engineer-in-chief of the :fruste (Sydney Morning Herald 9 September 1915).

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Even before the jetty's completion the Sydney Harbour Trust's works were receiving rave reviews, and a certain

amount of national pride was also engendered by the Bay and its Wharf:

... ships like the P&O "Benalla" constantly land a thousand passengers at a time, and enormous cargoes of all kinds come in and go out

Sydney sits enthroned with her heads to the sea, the great centre of a great country, and it is because her people, alive to their opportunities, are determined to spare neither foresight nor effort that she will remain the best as well as the most interesting port in the Southern Hemisphere. (Evening News 13 June 1913).

2.4 The Wharf and the Bay

The Sydney Harbour Trust Commissioners had advised

the Sydney Council of the need for an extra approach to

Cowper's Wharf and by 1913 a smart new avenue was

anticipated to run from Woolloomooloo along Lincoln and j •

Sir JOM Young Crescents across Phillip, Cook and Hyde

.. ParkS into Park Street at the College Street intersecdon.

Who shall say that visitors entering Sydney by this magnificent park-bound avenue will not be more impressed than they are from the Cove itself. (Evening News 13 June 1913).

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At the same time land on the western side of the Bay was

vested in the Commissioners for the formation of a road of access to wharves to be constructed there. •

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The decrepit condition of housing and roads in the 'Loo

continued to be a matter of debate. In a letter of the editor

of the Sydney Morning Herald in June 1914 a

correspondent by the pen name of "Progress" quoted a

cartoonist who had written of housing in the Rocks area: • • • • Fourteen feet from door to door,

; Fourteen feet,. and nothing more. · . •

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the correspondent continued: • •

But I do not know what the same writer would have said had he viewed the lower portion of .Woo - where some of the houses measure ten and twelve feet from door to door.

Mr or Ms Progress then went on to advocate the demolition

of houses for road-widening purposes (Sydney Morning

Herald 11 June 1914).

The new road from College Street was completed in early

1915, its opening, however, was delayed considerably by

the fact that the laying of tram lines had not been finished. (Sydney Morning Herald 8 June 1915).

The delay in having the tram lines installed, along with

their planned sudden termination at the west side of the

I . Bay caused a deal more controversy amongst residents and

civic-minded visitors to the area, and another campaign of

I letters and press articles was begun. A good example is

• the 'Tram to Nowhere' article: . •

Several highly-placed officers .of the Australian Army Medical Corps were discussing the 'tram to nowhere', which runs from 'the Domain to

I somewhere by the City Bowling Green', as one of them put it. ..•

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I The officer continued:

In a short time we shall have thousands of

I wounded Australian soldiers returning here, and by a little extra expenditure, the line could ! be run round Woolloomooloo Bay. When the wounded begin to return we must have an

I ambulance station on one of the new wharfs, and a tram car could be fitted up as an ambulance car in a couple of days. With the •

I line run round the, bay we could take the wounded straight from the ship into the ambulance car, and run them via Darlinghurst

• • direct to the Randwick Institute, where our •

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biggest base 'will be. The sooner the I • Government finishes this line round the wharfs •

I the sooner can we 'Complete arrangements to handle the wounded. We want to save Australian lives, and if the suggestion herein

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thrown out is acted up to, both the Government and City Council will be doing a good work of which they may be justly proud (Sydney Morning Herald, 8 June 1915).

The City Council pre-empted this suggestion at a meeting

where a motion was carried that representations be made to

the government to have the tram line continued, 'so that it

may be of some service to thosefor whose convenience the

construction of the road was designed (Sydney Morning Herald 3 June 1915).

A certain amount of satisfaction was derived when, some

months later, the Minister for Public Works announced that

.1. . the tramway, that had opened for traffic in August, would

1 I I I I

I

be extended to the steps leading down from Victoria Street

(Sydney Morning Herald 20 October 1915).

2.5 Passenger Ships and Troop Ships

With the completion to adequate deep-sea wharfage, the

Bay was transformed from a port that handled the overflow

from Sydney Cove into a major terminal catering for ever • •

,. increasing overseas goods and passengers • •

Woolloomooloo also became one of the major wool

. dispatch points and the terminal for some of the larger ships.

! To the western side of the Bay, Brown's Wharf was

dredged in 1913 to provide sufficient depth for P&O

steamers being regularly berthed there (Sunday Sun 5

January 1913). Even before Berth No. 7 became an

overseas passenger terminal, the central finger jetty took

much of the passenger trade; for instance, the P&O liners

used various Berths of 6 to 9 during the 1930's (MSB Annual Report 30 June 1938).

: During the Boer War and both the first and second World

Wars, Woolloomooloo was an embarkation and arrival • i

• . point for troops who had been posted to foreign countries

on converted passenger liners.· The 'Moravian' left the •

'Loo in 1902, while troops of the first AIF marched from

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Moore park and the Showground to their transports in the B~ .

While overseas, many of the Australians' songs

immortalised the name of W oolloomooloo. The following

parody was allegedly sung by a group of disabled soldiers as their transport carried them from England's shores at the

end of World War I (Sydney Morning Herald 21 June . 1924):

It's a long way to Woolloomooloo, It's a long way to go . It's a long way to Woolloomooloo, And lots of good, old girls we know Farewell, bully beef-o, Farewell, cobbers square, It's a long way to Woolloomooloo, But we're going back there.

An ironic aspect of life in the Bay during World War I was

that German steamers continued to dock there. On one

particular day in August 1914, there were five German •

ships in Port, three of which had not been given clearances

and were under detention and berthed in W oolloomooloo

Bay (Daily Telegraph 6 August 1914). In the same month

of that year, much was made of the fact that it was a

German steamer, Elsass that crashed into the Municipal

Baths when it was moving out from the jetty, headed for

Bremen. It was reported th'at a fair amount of damage was

done but that there was no one in the pool at the time of the

accident (Evening News 4 August 1914).

! In 1921, relatives, of troops who had departed Australia

from the Finger Wharf and ~ho had subsequently lo~t their • •

lives, erected a Memorial drinking fountain on a rock close

to the gates of the docks (probably the iron gates to the

central Jetty) 'The me~orial was dedicated by. the

Archbishop .of Sydney, in ;the presence of the Govemor-. .

General. ne fountain, the work of Messrs Budden and I • ,

Greenwell, ~hitects, is beautifully kept and the dazzling

brass plaque contains in its design a rosemary bush' •

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The novel, Say No to Death (1951) by Dymphna Cusack,

opens with a World War IT troopship returning to berth at

the central jetty in Woolloomooloo Bay. During World

War n, the 'Aquitania', the 'Queen Mary' and the 'Queen

Elizabeth' berthed at the jetty for the purposes of taking on •

troops.

The Woolloomooloo Finger Wharf was, for many 'new

Australians', their fIrst experience of Australia. Refugees,

and later, immigrants in the post-war period arrived in

ships that berthed there.

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3. THE WHARF AND THE PORT •

3.1 Depression and War

The world f'mancial depression that commenced in 1929

severely curtailed the Sydney Harbour Trust's construction

program. The port trade declined and was just seeing a

return to nonnality at the outbreak of World War n in 1939

when, once again, almost all work stopped. •

The period 1921-30 saw at least some activity in all of the

shipping areas, whereas, in the period 1931-45 only one

wharf was constructed - No. 1 in White Bay. In the

1950's the Bay was virtually as it had been in 1916, with

the exceptions of the western longshore Berths 10-12 that

were rebuilt between 1921-30 and Berth No. 1 on the east

side that became, with the construction of the Captain

· Cook Graving Dock, the Na~al Fitting Out Wharf. I

~ In 1950, the Woolloom0610o wharves were usually •

occupied as follows: • •

1 Naval fitting out wharf.

2 - 3 Open B~rths (upper storey of shed 3 used as a I wool warehouse by 1968).

4 Will WIlheImsen.

5 Red Funnel Trawlers Ltd (this wharf was still j dealing with fish in 1968).· •

6 - 9 Finger Wharf - open berths (wool, general ~ cargo and overseas passengers).

10 Murrells • .

• 11 McArthur Shipping Agency

: (Maritime Yearbook 1950)

••

Although the Finger Wharf continued to be a port for

overseas passengers and a major export facility for general

cargo and wool, the post-war technical changes in

---'± ---, .......... -..... -....... __ .... -..... __ .... --, .. -..... _------.-» '""~-

27

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,

international shipping and cargo-handling made the

equipment at W oolloomooloo increasingly obsolete. At the

same time, air, rail and road transport was carrying an

increasing proportion of passengers and freight . •

Particularly significant was the decline in the wool trade

and its concentration in the Pyrmont/Ultimo area. At this

time practically all of Sydney's woolstores were in

Pyrmont. General cargo handling too was relocated to the

west of the Harbour Bridge as it was uneconomic to run

rail lines to Circular Quay and Woolloomooloo.

• •

3.2 Overseas Passenger Terminal

A sharp increase in immigrant and tourist traffic in the port

in the early 1950s m~de it necessary to provide additional

passenger facilities and a decision was made in 1955 to

convert the two storey shed at No. 7 Berth for use as a

passenger terminal. (Berth No. 13 Pynnont had been

successfully converted to a passenger terminal in 1949) . .

An additional pa$senger service between the ~est coast of I

the USA and Sydney was to be instituted in Sydney in ., . ,November 1956 and it was proposed to have the new

terminal operational in time for the vessels inaugurating the

service (MSB Annual Report 1955-56).' •

The new terminal was placed in commission according to I

schedule - November 1959. The upper floor of the former

cargo shed at No. 7 'was converted to a modem passenger

terminal with special facilities for Customs examination

and amenities for travellers and their friends, including •

offices for tourist and travel agencies, banks, post office

facilities and a buffet for light refreshments'. Remnants of

these establishments still survive on the upper floor of

Wharf 7. In conjunction with the provision of passenger

facilities, the timber decking of this berth and the adjoining

one at No. 6 was: replaced with concrete for the full length

~d the foundations of the two storey sheds at each berth · . . were reconstructed. All cargo and stores were designed to

I Ix: handled on the lower floor of the building leaving the

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upper storey free for passengers and luggage. Windows

were installed to provide more light and to give passengers

a view of the eastern side of the Bay. Once again the .

Finger Wharf was equipped with the most up-to-date

equipment wh<?n lifts and baggage conveyors were

installed. The portable luggage conveyors handled

baggage from side ports of passenger vessels to the upper

floor of the Terminal (MSB Annual Report, 1956157)

The importance of the Finger Wharf as a passenger

terminal declined with the opening of the new overseas

tenninaI at Sydney Cove in 1961. It is significant that the

largest vessel visiting Sydney during that year was the liner

"Canberra" and it berthed at Sydney Cove Passenger

. Tenninal on its maiden voyage in June 1961. Although

overseas passenger traffic was still increasing Wharf 7 was.

relegated to handling the overflow from Sydney Cove •.

3.3 Gradual Decline

I

In the' early 1960s the Finger Wharf, like most other

Maritime Services Board wharves in Sydney: became

redundant, because of the rapidly increasing mechanisation

of shipping and cargo-handling. (Extensive reconstruction

and modernization of No. 2 Berth took place in 1962-3). ,

In 1959 the first 'roll-on, roll-off ship, the 'Princess of

Tasmania', came into service between Hobart and the

mainland.· The late 1950s also saw the growth of

'unitisation' with the use of pallets, pre-slinging and shore

based cranes. Despite protests by waterside workers and

the Waterside Workers' Federation, containerisation·

proceeded rapidly from the late 1960s. Woolloomooloo

succumbed in 1969 when Berth 11 was rebuilt as a

concrete bulk berth. Two 26-ton capacity travelling cranes

and two large hoppers were installed. When fully

commissioned at the end of 1971, the roll-onlroll-off car

I . vessel 'Jinyo'Maru'became the fl!St vessel to·use the new

berth and unloaded, in record time, 400 cars by use of a

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quarter ramp angled onto the wharf (MSB Annual Report 1970-71). .

In the same year, the New South Wales Government

approved a Maritime Services Board proposal to develop

Port Botany as a container terminal. In 1977 the

government approved the establishment of two container

terminals and the establishment of a bulk liquid storage

facility that was opened in 1979 (Mahony 1979)., With this

new development the Port of Sydney was destined to be

overtaken by Port Botany.

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4 WOOLLOOMOOLOO WHARF RELICS

4.1 Wharf Technology •

The wharfs structure has changed little over time except

for the total revamping of the first floor of No. 7 Cargo

shed. These changes were undertaken so that

W oolloomooloo could serve as the passenger terminal

while the Overseas Terminal at Circular Quay was being constructed.

Other modifications have been relatively minor and the

external appearance has remained intact (with the exception

of Wharf 7). The goods conveyors, the cargo lifts, the

gateposts and fences and the perimeter bollards have all •

remained as they were when the work was completed in

1916. The cranes have gone and only three of the original

I eight gantries grace the eastern wharf a,pron. The main

reminder of the Second World War role of the Wharf - the • • •

. dolphins and large bollards on the eastern apron and the

tension ties and compression members beneath the aprons -can still be seen.

The relics at Woolloomooloo allow interpretation of the

function of the Wharf and examples of most are to be seen in the existing fabric.

4.2 Goods Conveyors

There are sixteen goods conveyors mounted in the central

roadway which moved goods from road level to the upper •

floor. The conveyors are in four sets of four which are

evenly spaced along the roadway. One pair of conveyors

in each set run up the eastern wall and one up the western.

Each pair has a common operators platform from where the

elevators were controlled. Each conveyor has its own

31

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unloading dock where goods were taken into the upper

level floor for storage prior to being loaded on ships . •

The conveyors are an apron wooden slat type as opposed

to the more modern fabric belt type. The travelling

,wooden slat is supported by a frame attached directly to the

wall of the wharf shed. The frame consists of two almost

identical simple Wooden trusses joined by cross members

between and below the slat belt. The frame is supported at

ground level by a simple post and at a further four places

by brackets attached to the posts of the wharf shed. The

brackets are simple triangular pieces made from 100 mm

by 150 mm hardwood. The use of the brackets rather than

post supports allows unrestricted movement on the

roadway beneath the conveyor.

There is a loading platform at the lower end of the

conveyor which consists of six lengths of double-headed

rail attached to the wooden frame. The platfonn fonned by

the rail is at a slightly lower angle than the conveyor belt. I ~ • ,

, The end of the platfonn is some 1.2 metres above the , ..

. roadway and was built to receive bales of wool from the

trays of horse-drawn wagons. The platfonn appears to be

too high to receive bales from conventional motor lorries

and some type of intennediate device may have been used

to supplement to conveyor.

The conveyor rises some ,seven metres at an angle of 26

degrees and then levels out to fonn a horizontal section

some five meters long. Double sliding doors open out

onto this section to allow goods to be removed from the ~

conveyor and stored in the upper level of the wharf shed.

The moveable bed, apron or belt, consists of a series of

hardwood slats 1220 mm long, 215 mm wide and 50 mm

deep which span the width of the conveyor. The slats are ,

bolted to the links of the driving chain with a gap of about

20 mm between ,each slat. The chain is a two and two •

. strap chain in which the twin steel straps or links are

connected to the adjacent strap and to the roller by a steel

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pin. Two slats are bolted to the inner of the twin straps.

The steel rollers are 140 mm in diameter, have a·12 mm

d~p flange and are 460 mm apart. The rollers run on a flat

steel rail which is supported on a beam by two hardwood

bearers which form the top and bottom chords of the

conveyors main frame.

The cargo which was always in boxes, bags or bales was

hauled up the conveyor by blocks or cleats which were

bolted to the conveyor slats at approximately 3 meter • •

intervals. The cleats are shaped hardwood quadrant pieces

about 400 mm high. The cleats pass between the rails of

the loading ramp, catch the bails and haul them up to the

unloading platform.

The chains with their attached wooden slats passed over .

twin terminal wheels at each end of the conveyor. The set

of wheels at the top platform was connected to the drive

system while that at the lower end was provided with an

adjusting device for varying the degree of tension in the I

chain. •

The wheels were made by the Jeffrey Manufacturing Co.,

. of Columbus, Ohio, USA. It is probable that this film also

manufactured the conveyor or at least designed it although

this could not be conf'mned by documentary evidence. The

wheels have an external idiameter of 650 mm with five

sprockets which extend some 75 mm to engage the chain.

Upper level unloading was to the side of the conveyor and , •

through the double doors. The unloading platform which •

is about 5 meters long probably allowed bales to be

removed without the conveyor being brought to a complete

stop.

According. to Broughton (1973, vol. 4; 20) the largest • .

model conveyor produced by the Jeffrey Manufacturing •

Co. was identical to this one with a similar width of apron,

size of slat, chain type and pitch and terminal wheel type.

It could handle bales of 800 lb (360 kg) capacity which

33

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,

I I was well in excess of the dumped bales which would have

been handled at W oolloomooloo in the 1920s. .

I Driving system

Each conveyor was a self-contained unit and was operated ' I' independently from the others having its own motor, motor

controller, gearbox, brake and circuit breaker. The motor,

I gearbox, brake and circuit breaker from each pair of

conveyors is housed in a small motor room located inside

I I I

the wharf shed.

The motor controller was located on the operators platform

which was mounted between and above' the unloading

platforms of each pair of conveyors .. The operator had an

unobstructed view of the loading and unloading of the

cargo. The motor control box was used to set the

conveyor in motion and to govern its speed.

• •

All motors were made by Mather and Platt, Parkworks, • •

. Manchester. Although DC motors of the series wound

. variety are better suited to the operation of cranes and.

conveyors because of the their characteristic high starting

. torque and ease of speed variation, induction motors are

more readily connected to the AC supply and for this I reason were more commonly used.

I I I

I The Mather and Platt motors used a three-phase, 415 volt,

50 Hz power supply and were rated at 7 BHP and 10.5

Amps. Speed control is achieved by the insertion of

I . resistances into the rotor circuits. These resistances are

located in a box at the base of the controller.

I I I I I

All controllers were manufactured by the British

Thompson Houston Company of Rugby, England and are

of the dru~ controller type. The operators handle is

connected to an insulate spindle which carries a number of

copper-faced contact discs. As forward and reverse .

operation is identical, the contact discs are arranged

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symmetrically around the central or 'off position. The

lower discs pass the three-phase supply to the stator, by

making con~act with spring-loaded fingers which have

copper contact surfaces separated by insulating discs. The

disc segments of the upper portion are used to switch

resistors in and out of the rotor circuit, by contact with

similar spring-loaded fingers.

The controllers are equipped with four notches for forward

and four for reverse. The resistor circuitry is such that

four different amounts of resistance may be obtained.

There are' three banks of resistors, each bank

corresponding to one phase in the rotor circuit Each bank

contains a large resistance and a smaller resistance which

can be switched' individually. Thus notch four

corresponds to no applied resistance, notch three to small

resistors only, notch two to large resistors only, and notch

· one to both large and small resistors combined. ,

Maximum torque is obtained on the third notch. As motor i

· speed increases a suitable combination of torque and speed • ! · · can be found to suit the load that the conveyor is carrying.

I. Drive System

I

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I

The drive system consists of an electric motor with starter,

a power takeoff through a standard worm gear at 90

degrees to the motor shaft and electromagnetic brake on the

motor shaft The brake is similar to the type used on the !

lifts in that it is in the on mode until the conveyor starts . ' movmg. The worm gear, made by Henry Wallwork and

Co. of Manchester, reduces the revolutions via a

crown wheel of 30 teeth and a single thread worm gear

from 940 rpm to 31 rpm with 80% efficiency. . •

• ·

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A shaft with a uni~ersal coupling transmits ;power to a :

small gear wheel on the outer edge of the conveyor. This

32 teeth gearwheel meshes with the large, 138 t;eeth driving

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wheel under the operators platform. The large driving

wheel is attached to the shaft of the twin terminal wheels. ~

The speed of the conveyor can be calculated as 55 feet per

minute or .28 meters per second.

4.3 Gantries and Cranes •

Woolloomooloo Wharf was designed to carry eight

travelling cranes of the gantry type and eight platform

gantries. These were to run on two rail lines on each side

of the jetty. One rail line ran along the perimeter of the •

wharf apron and the other, elevated line, ran on a rail

girder attached to the steel posts of the wharf shed by .

brackets. Both were used in loading and unloading ships.

The cranes lifted cargo from their own platform and swung

it over the ship's hold. The travelling platforms could hold

cargo for either the ships own cranes or the gantry cranes

to handle.

The elevated line meant that the cranes and gantries could

traverse the length of the wharf without interfering with

cargo movement on the wharf deck.

No photographs of the cranes have been found. However

it is certain that the cranes existed and as there are no other

drawings it is fair to assume that they were built according

to the contract drawings (Contract No. 14/10) of 1914.

The cranes are discribed as semiportal, multimotor, 3-ton

electric, radial, traversing and topping trolley hoists. The

boom could be lifted to an almost vertical position before it

was slewed and so clear the ships rigging.

The gantry platforms and the gantries for the cranes were

inverted L shapes and ran on dual sets of wheels on both

the deck rail and the elevated rail. The crane: sat on a

multiple roller race mounted on the platform -and was •

operated from a drivers cabin attached to the siCie of the

crane's superstructure. Each crane was fitted with a

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longitudinal traversing motor which drove one set of

wheels on both the wharf rail and the elevated rail via •

uncovered 50 mm steel shafts and driving cogs. Other

motors were provided for slewing, . for traversing the

trplley on which the hoisting gear was located and for

hoisting and derricking. It is believed that these cranes

were scrapp.ed before the last war when all cargo ships

began carrying their own cranes.

There are two types of gantry platform on the eastern

wharf. Three are of the early design which were . .

contemporaneous with the cranes and two are of the new

type which were introduced in 1963 when the alterations

were made to the first floor of Wharf 7 to accommodate the

passenger terminal.

The early gantries are constructed from rivetted angle and

channel steel: They were moved by means of a driving

wheel driven by a continuous rope. The driving wheel •

was connected to all four wheel sets by a chain ~nd

sprockets. The decking was of 100 mm by 150 mm '" :!J - ,

. brushbox although this was replaced in 1956 by reinforced concrete .

• . . Several other modifications were made over the years but

these were minor and usually consisted of fixing or

adapting a hinged flap ~hich would serve as an extension

of the deck.

. The condition of the derrick platforms is now only fair to , good. There are signs of heavy rust at all the lower joints

and .some spalling on the reinforced concrete decking is . evident.

There . are a further two derrick platforms at •

Woolloomooloo .. These appear to have been built in the · , · , early 1960s to allow embarkation and disembarkation from

· "

the newly commissioned passenger terminal. These are of • •

predominately welded steel construction and are stepped

down rather than having a flat deck as do the cargo

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I • gantnes • They are in similar condition to the earlier • gantnes. •

No evidence of the gantries exists on the eastern side of the

wharf. The gantry girder and the perimeter rail have both

I been removed and the deck has been relaid in concrete. It

is not known where the cranes from either side were taken

. when they became redundant nor is the fate of the gantry

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platforms known. It is most probable that they were .

scrapped before the last war when almost all cargo vessels

began carrying their own cranes.

4.4 Bollards and Dolphins

Bollards •

There are 96, evenly spaced, heart bollards made from cast

steel attached to the apron beam which runs around the

. perimeter of ~e jetty. These aresome 400 mm high and

500 mm across the square base. They were used for •

, general berthing purposes and were sufficient to secure all

vessels which docked there up until the Second World . War. Woolloomooloo jetty was in fact four wharves

where four ships could tie up simultaneously and no

isolated dolphins were necessary.

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In 1942 the massive ocean liners, which had been

converted to troop' carriers, were to berth at

Woolloomooloo as it was the only wharf capable of I

handling ships of that size. The small bollards were clearly

inadequate and a program of works was instituted to

provide mooring dolphins, larger bollards, fender

pontoons and fender dolphins as well as strengthening the

wharf structure itself with tension ties and compression reinforcing. • :

•• • • •

It is believed that four sets offender pontoons and fender

dolphins were installed on the eastern perimeter of the jetty •

but were moved sometime after the war as they were no

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longer necessary. No photographs of these relics has been _

found and it is unlikely that many ever existed because of the war-time security.

Four large and four small concrete pads were set into the

deck of the wharf, again on the eastern side, to each of

which two new large steel bollards were bolted. These •

concrete pads were secured to the other side of the wharf

structure by massive tension bars which were cast into the

pads and fastened to the second row of piles on the

opposite side of the jetty. The tension bars were in fact

lengths of double-headed, or bull, 56-5 lb rail. To

counteract.the·compressive forces when the ship moved

against the wharf, as opposed to the tensile forces

generated as it pulled away from the berth, two sets of

compression reinforcing beams were added to each side of . . the central roadway. These beams are 300 mm X 220 mm

hardwood butted against the third row of pil,es from the

roadway and the reinforced deck of the roadway itself • . I

Dolphins

The dolphins are turpentine mooring piles independent of

the wharf structure itself, which possess their own system

of stays. One dolphin was set at the centre of the north end

of the jetty. It was probably set in this position to allow it •

to be .used for berthing ships on both sides of the wharf.

However the spur piles, which act as stays, took the forces

generated by mooring ships only from the eastern side.

. The other dolphin was set through the wharf deck at the

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southern end of the east side of the jetty close to the deck • penmeter.

The dolphins are significant artefacts in their own right and they are valuable intexpretive relics .

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4.5 The Northern End Shed

The shed at the northern end of the jetty was designed in

1926 to serve basically as a store and a carpenters shop.

The shed was initially rectangular and was placed closer to

the Orient Company's wharves on the eastern side than the

P&O wharf. The shed's design complemented the wharf

sheds in both materials and style. ,

Originally it was planned to erect two sheds. The second

was to be somewhat smaller and was to be built backing •

onto the first. It is believed that this shed was never

commenced.·

In 1942 as part of the plan to allow the docking of tr90P ships at W oolloomooloo three and a half of the original

seven bay length of the shed was demolished and a further

small rectangular section was removed from the north east • I

. corner. This was done to allow a line from the largest

. troopship: the 'Queen Mary', to be fastened to the north

dolphin. The shed remained in this condition until 1989.

4.6 The Electric Lifts • .

There is one lift in each of the four wharf sheds. Three are

the original goods lifts while the fourth, in wharf Shed 7,

i~ a passenger lift which was installed in 1967 when the

wharf was converted to passenger-handling only. This lift

is typical of the many short rise lifts which still abound in

Sydney.

The three goods lifts were designed to take cargo, which

had been stored on the fIrst level, to the second level rather • •

than take the longer route via the conveyors. They could . . .

also take cargo, unsuitable for the conveyors, from the

central roadway to the second level. The lifts are almost

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identical and appear to be in original condition with some slight modifIcations. .

The lift wells were all constructed of a frame consisting of

six 330 mm by 300 mm posts builts into the wharf shed

members. The well is sheathed internally with a series of

100 mm X 75 mm horizontal wooden guard battens spaced

at 450 mm centres, behind which the counterweights run.

Externally they are sheathed with 75 mm X 35 mm battens at 100 mm centres.

, .

The well is fItted with three gates, one of which is behind a

roller shutter opening onto the central roadway and one

opening into the wharf shed on the fIrst and second levels. •

. The gates, which are the single unit vertically opening

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type, are framed in 25 mm diameter galvanised pipe and

sheathed in 10 gauge (3mm) 1.25 in (30 mm) wire mesh

panels. The gate counterweight runs inside steel channels

fixed inside the end frame post. The electrical circuitry is

quite simple as there are no doors on the lift car itself. , There are cutout switches on both floors whIch prevent the

• • • , lift operating if the gates are not properly closed. The lift

car is guided by six tallow wood guides 150 mm X 100

mm which are fIxed to special 200 mm square posts which run the height of the well . . ,

The lift car is a steel and timber framed open-topped box

clad internally with tongue and grooved kauri pine. The

car is 6.5 m long, 3 m wide and 2.7 m high and capable of

taking a load of 3000 kg. The car is very heavy by modern

standards and the six guides are necessary to steady it.

The car is equipped with four counterweights. Two of the

counterweights are sheaved and two are unsheaved.

The car is raised and lowered ~y a twin cable. The cable

passes through a diverter sheave which is mounted on the

top .of the c.ar on a crossmember of the steel frame. The

cable is linked to the safety mechanism which clamps on to

the central wooden guides automatically if the cable breaks or the descent is too fast.

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The lifts have the now unusual feature of twin drums. The

drums are identical and are mounted on the same shaft.

The twin lift cable passes around the first drum and down

to the diverter sheave. The single cables pass from the

second drum, one to the right and one to the left, over

sheaves mounted at floor level and through the sheaves of

the sheaVed counte~eights. Thus the car and one set of

counterweights are operated by the drums. :me second set

of counterweights, which are unsheaved, are attached by

cable directly to the car. These cables pass over a double

set of sheaves mounted in the motor room.

The motor of each lift was made by the Electric

Construction Co. of Wolverhampton, England in 1914.

They are standard three-phase 415 volt, 50 cycle motor

with 3 slip rings, operating at 725 rpm. The motor is '

mounted at right angles to the gearbox. The brake is of the •

electromagnetic central plunger type held in the off position

when the lift is moving. When the lift is stationary or . when the power is cut the brake is applied to the shaft

• • • . The shaft passes into a reduction gearbox which has a cast

iron cover bearing the inscription Warburton Franki,

Sydney, but there are no further specifications. The worm

type gearbox is mounted between the two identical cable

drums.

Each car is fitted with a call bell which is activated by

buttons beside the lift well on both floors. The cars are . operated by controller handles within the car. The handle

is connected to the switchboard in the lift motor room by

traiI1ing flexes which run down the side of the well and

into the car from beneath.

In the lift motor room the switchboard is grey slate and

bears no maker's name. There are basically three banks of .

contacts. ne top is the up bank which consists of four

contacts for the brake circuit and five large contacts for the

motor. The motor contacts are activated by a single DC

master coil mounted to the right of the contacts.

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Immediately below the master coil is the 'down' bank' •

which has an identical configuration. There are four

accelerator coils which knock out the resistors and allow

the lift to accelerate. The resistors are of the heavy iron

type and are mounted behind the switchboard. As the lift

activation handle is turned the current is fed through both

the motors and the resistors and it is allowed to build up in

the motor as the lift accelerates to about 1 m per second.

A timer is mounted adjacent to the accelerator coils. The

timer has a capacitor behind it which prevents the lift from

having its direction changed without first being brought to

a stop.

Each lift is fitted with three safety systems. The travel of

the car is determined by the operation of the handle. If the

car overtravels the lift is stopped automatically by the travel

limiting system. This mechanical cut out system is chain­

driven by a sprocket mounted on the drum shaft. The

chain drives a steel shaft to which a cam is fixed. When a I

set amount of overtravel is reached the cam trips a breaker •

. and the up and down circuit is isolated and the brake is

automatically applied. If this circuit, for some reason is . not broken, the overtravel tappet system is activated.

• .. This system has a continuous cable which passes around . two small sheaves; one at the oottom of the well and one in

the motor room. Attached· to the cable are two large

collars. A bracket on the lift car fits around the cable.

when the overlimit tolerance is exceeded the bracket bears :

. on the cable collar which in turn moves the sheave in the

• motgr room. This trips a lever which isolates the whole

415 volt power circuit and the brake and safety are

activated. •

. .

The DC electricity supply whi~h activates the coils on the

switchboard and the electromagnetic brake is supplied by a •

bank of plate rectifiers mounted on the top of the •

switchboard ...

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The lifts are among the oldest in Sydney and were

. operational until 1984. They have subsequently been

. decommi ssioned and have had their cables disconnected,.

all three existing lifts could be conserved and brought back

into service. However, it is best that the one in the wharf

Shed 8 be restored using elements wherever necessary

from the other two lifts.

4.7 Gates, Gateposts, Fences and Fenceposts

During 1913 and 1914.elevations of the new jetty were

produced showing the elaborate half-timbered front of the •

wharf sheds and the proposed new gates and fences. The

posts for these gates and fences were of two pieces of mild

steel channel measuring 75 mm X 225 mm and 3.4 m long

joined for their length by lattice bars and surmounted by a

cast iron bill. The gates themselves were to be made from

heavy mild steel lattice. • I

A drawing of May 1915 shows the very elegant spear

fence which was subsequently installed. It appears clear •

from this drawing that the fence to, be used was in fact

secondhand as no construction details are given, nor do

construction details appear on related drawings. Also the

drawings indicate that the present fence is identical to the .

one shown in the 1915 drawing.

There are five gateposts and two fenceposts. Three

gateposts form the entry to the central roadway while the

other two are at the entry to the eastern wharf apron. All •

posts are of cast iron. All the gateposts and one fencepost

were manufactured by J. Connolly and one fencepost by

Hudson Brothers Ltd, Clyde. It is probable that the posts

were moved from their original positions and are alrpost •

certainly relics of the former wharves at W oolloomooloo. • •

All the posts are simiJar in overall form, although there are

variations in detail. Three have the inscription 'VR" cast

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into the column face; two posts with the letters 'CW'

(Cowper Wharf); one with the date '1889; and the other

with '1897'. Five of the columns appear to be complete

with apexed pyramid capitals, decorated with scalloped

shell patterns, while two have only a flat capital.

All the posts are painted Brunswick green and are about 2

m high. All appear to be in excellent condition except for

two which are missing their capitals.

The actual fence and gates are supported by the posts or the

adjacent wharf structure. It is made of cast iron brackets

and wrought iron or mild steel t:ails and spears. The main

spears extend 1.8 m high and are spaced about 200 mm

apart with alternately spaced half-height spears or pickets

between. The main spears are topped with 150 mm high

ridged and decorated spikes while the half height spears

have simpler and smaller spikes.

It is certain that t4e fence and posts are not in their original

positions. However they are historic elements i which

. belong to the precinct and should be 'conserved as relics of •

cultural significance.

4.8 The Cart Docks I

The cart docks are important elements in the interpretation

of the wharf and its function. The cargo or wharf sheds

were entered on the ground floor through doors: which

opened directly onto the central roadway or through three

cart docks in each of the four cargo sheds. The cart docks, , ,

which were about 3 m long and 2.5 m wide were let into

the floor of the cargo sheds and were placed behind roller •

shutters rather than the rolling wooden doors. They were

not initially fitted with hinged dobrs and security was . .

achieved through two identical hat~h covers whi~h were

lowered into place. These covers were wooden and were

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-very heavy. It is not known what mechanism was used to

assist in lifting them. .

The cart docks, which still exist in modified form were

sheathed internally with vertical 175 mm X 75 mm slabs

and had 175 mm X 175 mm hardwood kerbing. The

capping or sill was of chamfered hardwood 300 mm X 150

mm.

Above each cart dock there was a hatch in the floor of the

second level. A 13 cwt winch is also indicated on the

second level which would allow cargo unsuitable for the

conveyors to lift directly to the upper floor. However no

trace of any hoist portal or frame has been found

The cart docks still exist but they have been closed by new

flooring in the cargo shed and by hinged doors at the

central roadway level. They remain as small interpretive

pieces of fabric .which indicate the method in which the

wharf was worked. •

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5. THE WHARF AND THE COMMUNITY

The residents and workers of W oolloomooloo have been

subjected to an extraordinary amount of urban change in •

the last twenty-five years. Sandwiched between the

Central Business District and the eastern suburbs

W oolloomooloo' has been forced to take more and more of

the traffic moving between those two districts. For many

years the boundaries of the suburb have been the major •

traffic arteries to the west (Sir John Young Crescent) and

the south (William Street) and the landscape barriers to the

north (the Bay, although a much altered landscape) and the

east (the escarpment between Brougham Street and Victoria

Street). While landscape barriers remain, the traffic pattern

and the traffic volume have both changed and increased

since 1960 The completion of the Cahill Expressway in

1962 meant that Woolloomooloo became a distribution

point for traffic heading for the eastern and southern .

. suburbs. Riley Street, CroWn Street, PaImer Street and

Bourke Street soon became major traffic arteries.

5.1 A Grand Redevelopment Scheme •

In May 1972 the Sydney City Council was presented with

the Woolloomooloo Redevelopment Project, at $400

million the largest redevelopment project in Australian

history. The developers of the 11 acre site proposed to

build 18 high-rise buildings of an average height of 20

storeys, drawing an estimated workforce of 80,000 of

whom 68,000 would be office workers. The Council •

approved the development despite the fact that it went

against the recommendations of its own Strategic Plan that

Woolloomooloo remain an area of low rise residential

development. The BLF placed a green ban on the ••

Woolloomooloo project which was also actively opposed

by the Federal Labor Government which offered to help

finance a public housing scheme for the area. Finance for

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the commercial redevelopment eventually fell through and

the election of a State Labor Government in 1976, a •

government committed to greater spending on public rental

housing, ensured that a substantial part of W oolloomooloo

would continue to be reserved for its traditional residents,

low income tenants. The NSW Housing Commission was

charged with rehabilitating existing dwellings and building

new structures to a similar. scale. This rehabilitation and

rebuilding, that is predominantly located between Palmer,

Cathedral, Dowling and Plunkett Streets, is widely

regarded as one of the best examples of inner city low-rise

housing in Australia. III the 1980 City of Sydney Strategic

Plan the Council commented:

The· environment of Woolloomooloo . has already been enhanced immeasurably .... however •.. the Woolloomooloo Bay Foreshore Project ... should be implemented in 1982 to coincide with the completion of the Woolloomooloo Housing Project. By realigning Cowper Wharf Road so as to reduce its width, a substantial amount of additional foreshore open space can be provided as foreshore recreation space and as. a pedestrian promenade. (1980, 215). .

While the Sydney City Council and the NSW Housing

Commission were busily rehabilitating much of the

Woolloomooloo's housing stock the wharf area was also

changing, chiefly at the instigation of'the Navy, which

took over wharves 2, 3, 4 and 5. Between 1981 and 1983

the Navy removed the 'old sheds' to 'allow new views of

the harbour to open up', realigned. Cowper Wharf •

Roadway and built a car park to accommodate 1150

vehicles against the cliff face. The roof of the car park was

to be 'landscaped as a recreation area for the local

community (Department of Defence-Navy, Modernisation

of Garden Island, no date, c. 1981). ~t the time of the

construction of this car park the Navy assumed that •

Sydney would remain its fleet headqu~ers and Garden

Island its premier dockyard. In 1985 it was announced

that the Navy's headquarters would be transferred to Jervis

Bay but the higher echelons of the service have shown little

48

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I 49

I inclination to abandon their numerous and spectacular holdings on Sydney Harbour. • •

I ,

5.2 Workers, Residents and Dwellings

I It is difficult to get accurate historical data on workers,

residents and dwellings in Woolloomooloo because the , area is subsumed within the ambit of the City Council. •

I I Nonetheless from a variety of sources we know that I Woolloomooloo was predominantly composed of rental • ;

I housing tenanted by blue collar workers and their families. , • I • • • I From the 1860s to the 1960s a considerable proportion of I •

I W oolloomooloo's adult population found employment on

the wharves or with government employers such as the •

I Maritime Services Board (and before that the Sydney

Harbour Trust) and the Navy. The state and status of the •

• suburb in 1945 is delightfully summed up by Commander I

I I H. C. Brewster, R.D., R.N.R. ,

From Victoria Street is a sheer drop of rock •

I wall t9 the Loo, which is reached by steps from I I

the higher strata. Lately there has been an •

• attempt to blot out any stigma which is attached .

I to this district by changing the name to East Sydney. This. I think is a pity, not only because of the historical associations of the

I place, but also because the name is one of the I • I best known in Australia. The stigma lies not • I • with this soft-sounding name with all its double f O's, but with landlords who place humans in • ,

I habitations not fit for pigs. Changing the name will not improve the housing (Kings Cross

, Calling 1945, p.122). I I I Brewster painted a bleak picture of the 'Loo as a 'mining I

town whose mines are closed', replete with hotels. Some •

I like The Bell (it still stands) rebuilt in 1922 on the tide of , • • • post-war OptiIDlsm.

• • • • I I

• .

Between 1920 and 1960 many oithe 'Loo's so-called • ,

• 'slums' were demolished to make way for factories, •

• warehouses and garages, the latter catering more to city •

• . businessmen than to locals, few of whom could afford a I I car. Under the threat of demolition, both by the state

government and private entrepreneurs, Woolloomooloo

I

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= = , - = .'.......--- .... , .... , ....... _ ....... - ..... ..u.......,d" ', .......... ,.."~ ........ ' ......... e<= ..... ·;d=f"Id'-. =_ 101'_=_, ,-. __ , ____ .. _. __ .... __ -Y_ ........... = __ .. --.,.= ......... "'_ • ______ "'-____. M.- _ 1_ _~ __ ~ ...... ,- ,.,,....5 . • -..... .

50 , I I • ,

I remained stagnant throughout the 1960s. Only the resident •

action battles of the 1970s and a sympathetic Federal and

I then State Labor Government provided the opportunity for

some of the poorest housing to be rehabilitated.

Meanwhile, from the mid 1960s, perspicacious private

I owners had been buying up those terraces that were structurally sound and quietly gentrifying them

I • •

I 6 EVALUATION: THE WHARF TODAY, AN I • , EMPTY CATHEDRAL? •

I ! • I ,

• ; 6.1 An Empty Cathedral I • ,

I With the opening of the Overseas Passenger Terminal at

I • Sydney Cove in 1961 the Finger Wharf lost most of its I cruise liner, and passenger trade. It continued to handle • , •

I • , some passengers and general cargo but this was very much I • , I a residual trade. Wharf 11, in the south-western corner of I ,

the bay, was rebuilt in 1969 as a concrete longshore berth I designed for bulk steel, containers, and heavy cargo such

as cars. By the mid 1970s wharf 11 with its heavy-duty I

I • .craneage was the only wharf in the bay regularly used for

I commercial purposes. The finger wharf is still used. from , time to time as a berth for ships awaiting facilities

I elsewhere in the port or for naval vessels. In June 1987

I three ships of the US fleet, in Sydney for 'Battle of the ! , • •

I Midway' celebrations, took over the entire wharf. The

wharf and the streets around it were milling with sailors •

and the local pubs were filled to the overflowing (see j

• accompanying photographs). With sailors and visitors I

, coming.and going and shore police manning the gate the t • • • , • I • · wharf resumed something of the atmosphere it must have · •

had during World War One and World War Two. While •

• · the wharf is no longer the 'Cathedral of Commerce' that it • • • •

was in its heyday, it remains a mighty cathedral • • •

I nonetheless, best viewed when in use. ••

Woolloomooloo Finger Wharf is one of Australia's most

I historic wharves. The origins of Woolloomooloo and the I

historical importance of the wharves and the suburb rest

I •

I

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almost entirely on the use of the Bay for fishing vessels

and later as a major port for cargo and passengers. The

Finger Wharf, the largest timber pile wharf in the world, is

the only survivor of the wharves built and rebuilt at

W oolloomooloo between the 1890s and the 1920s. Within •

the context of the Bay and the extensive naval

redevelopment it is the one remaining link with the most

important period in the 'Loo's history, its heyday as a port

from the 1890s to the early 1960s. This is not a short-

. lived, transient historical phenomenon, but an important

part of late 19th and 20th century ~ustralian history. In

literature, in oral memory, in professional photography and

in reputation the sole surviving wharf in W oolloomooloo

Bay ranks highly on a scale of social/historical

significance.

. ,

The Finger Wharf has dominated the bay since 1913. It

has been the central feature of the landscape of this deep,

narrow. bay for over seven decades, whether viewed from

the Botanic Gardens, the Domain, the 'Lob itself, Potts

Point or Kings Cross. It is overlooked by more permanent

residents, more tourists and more recreational users than

any other wharf in Sydney. It was included on the

National Trust Register in 1977, on historical architectural

and engineering grounds.

I 6.2 Timber Pile Wharves: The Australian and

I

I I

World Context

The twenty-year period following the turn of the century

was one in which governments throughout the world were

taking more interest in and control of ports and wharves,

and were building larger wharves and upgrading others in

order to bring their ports to such a standard as w01.!ld

accommodate the growth in the shipping industry. Other

ports experienced the same difficulties existing in the port

of ,Sydney; In that wharves were still mainly privately­

owned and were built prior to the era of very large cargo

and passenger vessels.'

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,

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Most of the larger of the world's cargo and passenger piers

were constructed in an entirely different manner from the

Woolloomooloo Wharf. For example, piers built 1300 to

1800 feet in length built in Brooklyn, New York, prior to

1916 were of the solid fill rather than pile type and had

one-storey sheds. Pile platform piers used in New York

around this time only had concrete decks, timber decks

having been 'abandoned'. Hoboken, New Jersey, could

boast a pier of 600 feet in length and 180 feet wide, and.

were built in 1915 (Green, 1917). Twelve Staten Island

piers, built prior to 1928, ranged from 1000 to 1160 feet,

widest being only 130 feet. Most of the New York

Harbour piers were too narrow and insubstantially built for

heavy equipment and they lacked apron width

(Cunningham, 1928).

Boston's showpiece, the 1914 'Commonwealth Pier No.

5' was 1200 feet long and 300 feet wide. Wider than the

W oolloomooloo Wharf but not as long, it had three parallel

double-storey sheds and tWo single rail tracks run in pits

between the sheds and was a solid-fill pier rather than ~ • I timber pile pier (Cunningbam, 1928). .

Other notable piers were Manila's 1906 600 feet long and

70 feet wide jetty on iron and steel columns and Haiti's

Port au Prince 1912 composite pile pier 825 feet long and

50-60 feet wide. San Francisco had a pier built in 1914

that was 975 feet long on its longest side and 200 feet

wide, but the piles were of concrete (Green, 1917). , • •

Philadelphia's biggest, Pier No. 98, built during World

I War I, was 1500 feet long by 290 feet wide; its two three-

' storey reinforced concrete warehouses took up all the deck

I leaving no apron space. The concrete sheds indicate metal

or concrete (or composite) piers and the structure had no •

aprons (Cunningham, 1928). I • • •

The Guinness Book 'of Structures only gives examples of

I breakwaters and amusement piers in its section on longest

jetties and piers in the world. Not comparable with cargo

I I ,

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and passenger jetties, but notable nonetheless, were the

large pleasure piers at Southend, England and -Santa

Monica, USA. The world's longest, Southend, was built

on cast iron screw piles in 1889 and was 2.6 kms (1.34

miles) (Stephens, 1976). The Santa Monica recreation

pier, that also carried a sewer outfall pipe, was' built in

1908 to a length of 1600 feet and 35 feet 8 inches in width

(Green, 1917). The latter pier no longer exists, and

Southend pier was destroyed by fIre in the late 1970s.

Large piers. were also built in Melbourne and Hobart,

however these differed in their dimensions, in method of

construction and the purpose for which they were . designed. The Marine Board in Hobart built five large

piers after seeking advice from H.D. Walsh, then Chief

Engineer of the Sydney Harbour Trust. The largest of

these was 1210 feet long and 122 feet wide and was served

by five lines of rail. It was built principally for the export of fruit.

I . Melbourne's Ne~ ~aih.vay Pier, completed in ;915 (later

. called Princes Pier) was 1460 feet long and 186 feet 2 I I

I I

I

inches in width. Although on turpentine piles with timber

decking, it had only two small steel shelter sheds and four

lines of rail ran on each side of the pier: its central roadway

. was uncovered. The building of Station Pier (almost

parallel to Princes) was commenced in 1922 and completed

in 1930. It had a raised concourse in the middle and four

rail lines on each side but no sheds were built. Mter

several alterations, its current length IS 2329 feet. Unlike

the Woolloomooloo Wharf, these wharves were not

notable architecturally, but in any case, they have been

drastically altered in the last two decades (Melbourne Harbour Trust Commissioners, 1927 and Sydney Morning . Herald 28 February 1914),

Trends in wHarf-building in latter decades have resulted in •

longshore wharves supported partially on solid fIll so as to

enable the decks to withstand the heavy equipment

I

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necessary for unloading containers and other bulk items.

The Woolloomooloo Finger Wharf appeared

during an era of large finger wharf building. It is larger than any remaining timber pile wharf

built in Australia and is the largest extant timber

pile wharf in the world. The wharf is actually

1310 feet long, and 210 feet wide.

The wharf is unique in Sydney: it is the only wharf

having a central roadway on timber piles; it is the largest all

pile finger wharf ever built in Sydney. The

Woolloomooloo Finger Wharf is two and a half times as

long and 21/4 times wider than the Walsh Bay wharves.

None of these wharves is as unique as the Woolloomooloo

Wharf and none has a central roadway. •

The case' for Woolloomooloo wharf being the

largest extant timber pile wharf in the world is

supported by the fact that no examples of

comparable, large tin,tber pile jetties. can be

found, despite the fact that in tidal waters, 'most of the • •

. ship accomm$tion in the past has consisted of very large

jetties in preference to wharves along the shore (du-Plat­

Taylor 1928). The argument is strengthened when one

considers the fact that there are only 16 ports in the world

that have deep channels capable of accommodating large

ships. As well, timber wharf and jetty construction was

largely abandoned in Europe by 1910 due to the high range

of tide (and consequent necessity for long lengths of piles)

and lack of suitable timoer materials (Walsh, 1910).

However, the port of Sydney took advantage of its small

tidal range of only 51/2 feet and its access to the best hard

timbers in the world to build enduring timber pile

structures with timber warehouses.

• 6.3 Conclusion •

• • •

The Woolloomooloo finger wharf is the most historically

important structure in Woolloomooloo Bay" the last

remaining evidence in this locality that Sydney Harbour

54

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-

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• •

was Australia's largest port from the 1890s to the early

1980s, pivotal years in the development of modern

Australia. Since its completion in 1916 this finger wharf

has been one of the major symbols of Australian maritime ,

history. With the demolition of other wharves in

the Bay and at Darling Harbour, the Finger

Wharf now stands as one of Australia's most •

striking and most historic maritime structures.

t

• ,

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• • •

, .

ss

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• •

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, • , • • •

t , • • • ! ! , ! • • • I • , , ,

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I 7 AR~mv AL, PUBLISHED AND UNPUBLIS~D . SOURCES, INCLUDING MAPS, ARCIllTECfURAL

I DRAWINGS PAINTINGS AND PHOTOGRAPHS

I I I

·1 I

·1 I

I I

7.1 Ln'ERATURE; NOVELS & AUTOBIOGRAPIllES

Anderson, Jessica. Tirra Lirra by the River, MacmiIlan, Melbourne, 1978 .

Bamard Eldershaw, M. Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow, Virago, London, 1983 (1st ed. Georgian House, Melbourne, 1947)

Campion, Edmund. Rockchoppers. Penguin, Ringwood, 1982

CUsack, Dymphna. Say No to Death, Angus & Robertson, Sydney, 1951

Tennant, Kylie. Tell Morning This, Angus & Robertson, Sydney, 1967

Wrightson, Patricia. Down to Earth, Hutchinson 8? Co. Ltd, I 1965 .

• · •

7.2 SOURCES FOR INDUSTRIAL ARCHAEOLOGY (excluding information about the wharf itself which is listed by repository)

'Recent advances in conveyers', Scientific American, I November 1913

Atherton, W.H., Conveying Machinery, London, 1937

Broughtonb,H.H., The Electrical Handling of Materials, ! Benn Brothers, London, 1923

Hess,H.D., Machine Design: Hoists, Derricks, Cranes, London 1928

Hetzel,F.V., Belt Conveyors and Belt Elevators, New York, 1936 \

· Materials Handling Cyclopaedia, Simmons, New York, 1921 . • ,

Parrish, etat, eds., The British Encylopaedia, Odhams, : · London, 1933. .

Roshkin,S.G., Modern Materials Handling, London, 1932, •

• •

. • I

• ,

1

·

. I

• •

• •

• · I •

• •

f

. 56

• •

·

I

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_ _______ _~l· ____ --.... __ .* __ n 7=__ ._ _ __ __ _ - __ .' _ •• __ .. - 4 iOI __ = •. .. ___ Je_ .ef .~ ... _= . ;zt1 .. --... ' ...... __ ... I -- -- -_'·'.-0-_.-. -______ -4_. _" ... _ ... _ ....... c-_____ • __ ~_ .... ~ ••..

I •

I I I I I I I

I I

I I

I I I I

Stuelpnagel,P., Hoisting and Conveying Machinery,London, no date

Zimmer,G.F., Mechanical Handling and Storing of Material. 2nd ed, Crosby, Lockwood and Son, London

Zimmer,G.F., Mechanical Handling of Material and its National Importance Before and After the War, London 1917

7.3 MARITIME SERVICES BOARD LmRARY

Aplin, Graeme & John Storey. Waterfront Sydney 1860-1920. George Allen & Unwin, Sydney, 1984

Bach, John. A Maritime History of Australia. Nelson, , Melbourne, 1976

Emery, John. The Port of Sydney 1788 - 1945, MA (Hons) Thesis, 1965,

Maritime Services Board of NSW. Annual Reports. years ended 30 June 1936 to date

Maritime Services Board of NSW. Port of Sydney Journal. vols 1-3, July 1946 to Apri11952

. Sydney Harbour Trust Comp:lissioners, Reports for the years ended 30 June 1910 to 30 June 1917

• , •

. 7.~ WfCHELL LffiRARY

Atkins, A. S. et. al. Port of Melbourne Environmental Study. Centre for Environmental Studies, University of Melbourne, Parkvill~1976-81 .

Barnard Eldershaw, M. Phillip of Australia, Angus & Robertson, Sydney, 1977 (1st ed. George Harrap & Co. Ltd, 1938

Bird, James. Seaport GateWays of Australia, Oxford University Press, London, 1968

Brodsky,Isadore Sydney's Little World ofWoolloomooloo, Old Sydney Free Press, Sydney, 1966

Brewster, H. C. & V. Luther. King's Cross Calling, the Author, Sydney, 1944 .

, • •

Butel, Elizabeth & Tom Thompson. Kings Cross Album, . Atrand, Syi:lney, 1984 .

Cusack, Dymphna. Say No to Death, Angus & Robertson, Sydney, 1951 .

• •

l

,

I •

• • I

57

• •

• I

• •

• •

• ·

• ,

I •

I

· ,

I • • • I • •

• · ,

,

i , , • • I

• , ,

• !

• • •

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,

I ,

-1 ......... '..-..- 1Je" "',.".... -..;..~ .... Il00;. • • ', "'f""= .... ' lIE ••• -' ~~ ......... ~' .... ...,.;"'" __ .;..,ai., .. -....

I I

I I I I I I I I I I

Debenham,~. J. 'The late Henry Deane Walsh: First engineer . in chief of the Sydney Harbour Trust', Sydney Harbour Trust

Officer's Journal, vol. 1, no. 4, September 1925, pp.I4-16

. Debenham, ~. J. 'The Port of Sydney' transcript of the Institute of En~eers of ~ustralia, vol. 8, 1927, pp 283-327

Dymock's Book kcade. The Guide to Sydney and New South Wales, 1918

Farwell, George Michell. Requiemfor Woolloomooloo, Hodder & Stoughton, Hornsby, 1971

George, Heather. 'W oolloomooloo' in Walkabout 28: 23-5 November 1962

King, M. comp. Way About Sydney, the ~uthor, Sydney, 1931

Lawton, G. H. ed. Longmans' Australian Geographies, No. 12 Sydney, by K. W. Robinson, Longmans, 1959-

MacDonnell, Freda. Before Kings Cross, Nelson, . Melbourne, 1967

The Maritime Journal, vol. 10, no. 3, 5, 26 March and 12 May 19~9, Sydney

· Maritime Yearbook and Dir~ctory, Port of Sydney, 1950, I

Penrod Publishers Pty Ltd, Sydney, 1950 • • • • •

· Poulsen, M. and P. Spearritt. Sydney: a social and political atlas, ~llen and Unwin, Sydney, 1981

Proudfoot, Peter. 'Maritime Land Uses in Central Sydney 1890 - 1970', Great Circle, vol. 6, No. 2, October 1984, pp 110-121

i Proudfoot, Peter. 'Changing Patterns of Maritime ~ctivity in Central Sydney', Great Circle, vol. 6, No. 1, ~priI1986, pp 33-53

Ruhan,Olaf. Port of Melbourne 1935 -1976, Cassell, Stanmore,1976 :

I Selfe, Nonnan. 'The Quays,: Wharves and Shipping of Port · Jackson ... reprcxluced from the Proceedings of the

Engineering Association of New South Wales, vol. 23,1907-

I 8

Spearritt, Peter. Syaney Since the Twenties, Hale & Iremonger, Sydney, 1978 I

I Stephensen: '~. R. The Histo~ and Description of Sydney Harbour,Rigby,~dehrlde, 1966

I •

• • I

# . , •

• 58

• •

• •

• I

• • • •

I • • ! · I · I I , j

t I 1

:

I i • I • • • •

• I

I

. I I

• l •

I • , •

, •

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- .Ok .......... == ..... _~~_-.-.._ .. _ ••• ".o .... _ .... ___ ""' .... F.= •• __ ... ___ ...... .J,. ... _ .. ~. ¥ ... " ......... ; mM _.1 .............. '~"'"". -...... ,.A'.I .... Ioo .. ··" ... ·~M ............ ,""'"""'_. CC_ •• 1_ ... ___ ........ ,. I ' '" ' '" . · ' 'J '.. , •

I •

I I I I I I

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I I I I

Sydney Harbour Trust Commissioners. The Port of Sydney, Official Handbook, The Commissioners. Sydney. 1913 and 1924 .

Tull. MalcoIm. 'The development of port administration at Sydney. 1901 - 1936'. Great Circle, vol. 4. October ~982. pp 92-104

Walsh. H. D. Notes on Harbour Engineering, paper read before the Sydney University Engineering Society, 8 November 1911

Walsh. H. D. Presidential address. 4 May 1910, Royal Society of NSW Journal, 1910

Wilkinson, Honora. Watch on the 'Loo 1920-1980. Inner Sydney Regional Council for Social Development Co-op. Ltd 1983

Ziegler. Oswald & John Thompson. Soul of a City, the City of Sydney. Oswald Ziegler Publications Pty Ltd. Sydney. c. '1959

7.5 STATE LffiRARY OF NEW SOUTIIW ALES •

Cunningham. Brysson. The Dock and Harbour Engineers Reference Book. London. Charles Griffen & Co., 1914

'~ ,

du-Plat-Taylor. Francis'Maurice. ];Jesign Construction and , maintenance of docks, wharves and piers. Emest Benn Ltd. London. 1928 .

Green. Carleton. Wharves and Piers, Their Design, Construction and Equipment, McGrawHill. New York. 1917

Stephens. John H. ed. The Guinness Book of Structures. Guinness Superlatives Ltd, EnfielCl. England, 1976

7 .6 NEWSPAPERS !

Daily Telegraph: 10/3/05; 28/8/12; 29/8/12; 11/11/12; . 11/6/13; 25/6/14; 6/8/14; 11/4/16

,

Evening News: 23/10/12; 13/6/13; 11/11/13; 4/8/14; 1/9/15

Illustrated Sydney News: 11 November 1854 •

The Sydney Mail: 20 June 1924 ; •

· '. The Sydney Morning Herald: 11/q/14; 1!l/15; 3/6/15; 8/6/15; 9/9/15; 20/10/15; 16/11/15; 11n/49; 14/11/56

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7.7 NEW SOUTIIWALES STATE ARCffiVES

MSB Special Bundles 7 n527

. MSB Sydney Harbour Wharves 7 n526.2

MSBX2032

Public Works, Woolloomooloo Bay Reclamation 1864-6, 2/892

7.8 UNPUBLISHED REPORTS •

Chesterman,D.,Spearritt,P and Thorp,W., CBD Heritage Study, Stage I, report to Department of Planning and the­Sydney City Council, 1988 (includes thematic history of Central Sydney)

National Trust of Australia (NSW) National Estate Program 1985-6, Heritage Study of 19th and early 20th century trading wharves in Sydney Harbour, by A. Brassil -

7.9 WOOILOOMOOLOO BAY - MAPS I I I I I

01 ML ZM4811.18112/1865/1 NSW Dept of Lands 1 fuch = 40 feet. Phin of Woolloomooloo Bay as reclaimed, ~hewing the allotments to be,offered. (This shows the ..

. curve of Cowper's Wharf but not the' 'sides' of the bay).

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. 02 ML Parish Map 1871 County of Cumberland Parish Alexandria, (wharf only)

03 ML ZM2811.17/1876/1 Anonymous ca 1:10-000. Shows streets, public buildings, wharves. Map appears to De the same as that in Australian Handbook for 1876. (Wharf, 3 baths western side)

04 ML Parish Map 1880 County of Cumberland Parish Alexandria, 2nd edition (Wharf and baths) !

,

08 MLZM3811.17/1897?/1 DeptofLands 1:9504

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~ ... -. " ... ~ _ _ .... --'''''' ~._ ......... ' ~_....-w=C'-~,t.t_&fIwIIo~~ .. _.'" ... • .. _", ____ .... '1W ... ,. .. ...... __ .... _ .... ., •• wtA" ..... _ ____ ~ .. ". _ _ _"

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09 ML ZM381l.16gph/1910/2 Compiled by 1:1,440 City of Sydney (Central) D. S. Cameron for Roberts & Moffat Ltd, Sydney .

10 ML ZM3811.15/1911/1 Sydney Har~urTrust.

ca 1:6 000. Map of part of the water frontage of the Port of Sydney showing parts of the land and wharfage vested in the SHT Commissioners. H. D Walsh, Engineer-in-Chief; S. E. Perdriau, Chief Surveyor. Shows vested area buildings and wharfs proposed erected altered and demolished and names of wharves and streets opened and widened, rat proof wall.

11 Parish Map 1913 County of Cumberland Parish Alexandria 1: 15,840, 3rd edition

12 ML ZM3811.15/1913/2 Sydney Harbour Trust 1:6 000. Description as for Map 10. Shows schedule of improvements effected by the SHT Commissioners between 1.7.12 and 10.6.13.

13ML ZM3811.1729/1914/1 ~nonymous 1:467. Plan for embarkation of troops, Woolloomooloo Bay 1914. (Stamped SHT - Drawing office No. 1039/1). Shows base outline of buildings of wharves positions of ships

· positions, positions of troops,· horses, police and with names of embarking officers and dates of embarkation:.

Arrows indicate route of each unit . • •

14 ML ZM3811.15gmfs/1919/1 : Sydney Harbour . Trust 1 inch = 495 feet Description as for Map 10

15 ML ZM3811.15gmfs/1921/1 Sydney Harbour Trust 1 inch = 530 feet Description as for Map 10.

16 ML Parish Map 1928 County of Cumberland Parish of Alexandria. 1:3,168, 4th edition. I

,

17 ML Parish Map 1930 County of Cumberland Parish St James 1:3,168

18 MLM2811.17/1874/1 NatWestAustBank. Sydney, A Bird's Eye View. Coloured l reproduction of the engraving issued with The Illustrated News and The Town and Country Journal, 1 Janu¥y, 1876.

ML 339.7/N Sydney Harbour Trust Official Handbook 1913. Map, wharf accommodation, Port of Sydney. 8 chains to an inch. Including wharves and jetties proposed to be constructed. Mc Carron, Stewart & Co. Printers and Lithographers.. :

. ML 339.7/N SydneY Harbour Trust Official Handbook 1919. Bird's Eye View of the Port of Sydney.' Map, wharf accommodation, Port of Sydney. 8 chains to an inch. Including wharves and· jetties proposed to be constructed. Revised 1919.

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ML Q627.3/N Sydney Harbour Trust Annual Reports 1901-1935 (excluding years 1911 and 1912 which were unavailable or not held by ML). .

The reports for years 1908, 1909, 1913-23, 1929 and 1930 contain maps described as 'Map of part of the water frontage of the Port of Sydney showing parts of the land and wharfage vested in the Sydney Harbour Trust Commissioners' and the year.

7.10 WOOLLOOMOOLOO BAY -, PICTORIAL MA1ERIAL

The Mitchell Library small pictures file contains paintings and sketches of the Bay from 1835-53. These show only the natural bay. The first to show an indicatiion of structure or 'industry' is Elyard in 1862.

. MLSPF

1862 S. Elyard. Darlinghurst Wharf from the low land. 1862 watercolour

1865 John Vine Hall, watercolour

1868 S. Elyard, watercolour • • j

1868 Photograph or photograph of sketch • ,

• I .' 1868 J. B. Henderson sketch

1869 Photograph

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1870-80 Photograph

18721 Panorama

1877 Photograph

1878 J. Flynn, pen and ink •

1879 Newspaper illustration possibly The Illustrated News .

1890 Four photographs

1894 Photograph

1911 Panorama. Photograph from H. Phillip's Sydney and Surroundings, 1911

c.1925 Photograph of damage caused by storm to retaining wall opposite No.1 wharf which collapsed as result of rain.

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-. "'i' ___ ."". ___ ..... _ ~~ ,r;\". , ._ _. __ __ '-'l_. __ ~.,~ _._. __ ..- __ .,;1 .... _, __ ~ ... ~_ ....... _._ ....... _._ I -_._= ....... -- .. I .. .. _ .. _ .. ....J _____ .. ,_wJ .. __ .-_~_ .. , .... ____ , .. __ "_, -.'---~

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• There are also a number of undated photographs including a reasonably early one that shows houses and wharf but no protruding wharf. .

ML Q627.3/N Sydney Harbour Trust Annual Reports 1901-1935, excluding 1911 and 1912. (photographs at back of reports) .

1902 East side ofWoolloomooloo Bay

1914 Sea end of central jetty, berths 6, 7, 8 and 9. . Looking south down central roadway jetty, berths 6, 7, 8

and 9

1915 1 and 2 berths showing cargo shed 580 ft by 60 ft

1915 No. 3 berth showing large double-decked cargo shed 580 ft by 120 ft

1916. Lower floor of shed Nos 2 and 3,' 580 ft by 120 ft. Upper floor of shed Nos 2 and 3, 580 ft by 120 ft

1922 Aeroplane photograph of private wharfage.

1925 No. 1 berth showing 2-ton electric semi-portal luffmg jib crane. Interior of cargo shed showing type of 30 cwt eJectric trayelling bridge crane, used for stacking cargo.

, • ,1926 Central Jetty showing recent extension of lOO' and additional shed accommodation

1929 View taken above Double Bay looking west.

ML 339.7/N Sydney Harbour Trust Official Handbook 1913., Nywjetty 1,200' long. Double decked sheds to be erected

ML 339.7/N Sydney Harbour Trust Official Handbook 1919. Woolloomooloo Bay from Potts Point, 1887 (p.28)

ML Q627.3/N The Shipping and Commerce of Australia, 1 November 1911. Some of the deep-sea wharves, Woolloomooloo Bay, Sydney. The new wharf now under construction is shown.

7.11 ARCID'IECTURAL DRAWINGS HELD BY THE MARITIME SERVICES BOARD

• •

NORTH END SHED •

Plan of n~w 'shed at northern end of no.7 jetty •

Detail of roof truss new shed no.7 jetty

Alterations to shed at north end of no.7 berth •

"

Date MSB Ref.

5.3.1926 H4/87

, 19.3.1926

22.7.1942 H4/118

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Plan of change and mess room for obnoxious cargo workers. North end no.7 berth shed.

INTERNAL CRANES

. Stancheons for carrying floor girders and cranes

Runways for 3 ton electric travelling cranes no.6 jetty warf . buildings

Method of fixing live wire guards and supports

CONVEYORS

Outline,plan,showing,arrangement of· doorways, cartdocks, hatches, lifts and conveyors np,6 jetty

Details of attachments to delivery ends of cargo conveyors, centraIjetty, berths 6,7,8 and9

4 gangways connecting conveyor platfonns no.6 jetty

Proposed small platforms (8) fIlling space between top sections of conveyors

. , •

• ·CRANES

Typical cross section looking north no.6 jetty

No.6 jetty warf buildings

Electric semiportal travelling warf crane east side of central jetty

Electric semiportal travelling warf crane west side of central jetty

Layout of wiring to plug boxes for trailer cables to electric warf cranes.

No.6 jetty warf buildings

GANfRIES

. Travelling gantry no.6 warf • •

Travelliitg gantry no.1,2,3 and 6 warves

Travelling gantry no. 1,2,3 and 6 warves

. ,

1.7.1949 H 4/130

22.4.1912 H 419

26.4.1913 > H 4/24

27.8.1914 H4/52 •

30.10.1913 H 4/31 •

. 5.10.1915 H 4/62

5.11.1915 H4/63

10.7.1957 H 4/54 I

3.10.1911 H 4/5

--.--.1912 H 4/12

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30.4.1914 H 4/39

30.4.1914 H 4/40 !

8.5.1914 H4/46

6.1.1944 H 4/13

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• , 15.12 1913 H 4/34

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30.12.1913 H 4/36

30.12.1913 H 4/36

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Runner carriage for 5 ton block on movable gantry •

Trussing for gantry runway girders.central jetty •

Travelling gantries (lengths and joints of decking)

Hinged flaps for gantries

Details of travelling gantiies

Mechanical operation of swinging'brackets no.6 warf

Cargo spilling preventive flad. central jetty

Travelling gantry no.6 berth

No.6 jetty warf buildings ,

CARTDOCKS

Steel hatch covers for cart docks no.6 jetty

Cart docks no.6 jetty

GATES AND FENCES • •

Steel gates no.6 jetty •

Details of office block shore end jetties no.6 & 9

Entrance gates and fencing. central jetty ,

Steel gates no.6 jetty

Steel gates no.6 jetty

Steel gates no.6 jetty

BOILARDS

I . Typical slabs showing reinforcement

I

Mooring of large ships nos.6 & 7 warves

Mooring of large ships nos 6 & 7 warves

Location plan and details of compression reinforcing and the anchorage

Sewer support on berths 6,7,8 and9

30.12.1913 H 4/37

29.4.1914 H4/47

27.11.1914 H 4/54 •

5.5.1915 H4/55

16.12 1915 H 4/35

14.6.1922 H4/68

6.11.1922 H4n1

25.6.1936 H4/96

6.1.1944 H4/13

13.3.1914 H4/43

27.12.1916 H 4/6

,

.. 26.21913 H4/59

25.6. 1914 H 4/49

26.5.1915 'H4/56

N.D H4/58

N.D H4/57

N.D H4/60

14.7.1942 H4/116

25.7.1942 H4/114

25.7.1942 H4/115

23.8.1942 H 4[117

25.9.1942 H 4/99 •

65

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___ "--___ ._~~ _____ ..... '" __ tot~ __ •

hI" oH. n'",' •

DOLPIllNS ~

Mooring arrangements for large ships

'Details of dolphins for mooring large ships

Dolphiri at north end

Fender dontoon

Floating fender

Sketch showing queen mary berthed at no.6 & 7

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. , . • ri __ • -... od ,-... ..t,. ..... ·".F .. ·Cr''4 .... ' ~ ,.., , .. « .. ;-'ie ..... ..-J'" ' .... "-7·d~t' '-'~.t~~ ..... = ._m =-.~":"------""'"" l

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1.6.1942

12.6.1942

13.7.1942

5.8.1942

19.8.1942

N.D

H4/108 •

H4/109

H--

H4/119

H4/113

H4/102

66

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