SHIPS IN CORIO BAY,
GEELONG 1840-1980
Jack Loney (1981 First Edition) “rare” FREE POSTAGE
ANYWHERE IN AUSTRALIA $47
Ships. Victoria. Corio Bay, 1840-1980 — Early years —
Navigation to Corio — Cavalcade of ships — Geelong to Melbourne Bay trade —
Famous ships — Mosquito fleet and its skippers.
CONTENTS:
·
Early Years
·
The Navigation to Corio
·
A Cavalcade of Ships
·
Geelong to Melbourne Bay Trade
·
Famous Ships
·
The Mosquito Fleet and its Skippers
·
Wrecks, Burnings, Disasters and Major Strandings
·
Wharves, Piers and Jetties
·
Tales of the Port
·
Major Industrial Expansion After the Formation of the
Harbour Trust – 1910
Corio Freezing Works; 1922 - Cresco
Fertilizer Works; 1925 – Ford Motor Company; 1928 - Phosphate Co-operative; 1936 - Grain Elevator Board
Terminal; 1937 Pilkington Glass; 1938 International Harvester; 1953 – Rylands
Bros; 1954 – Shell Refinery; 1955 -Henderson’s Spring Works; 1955 – Bermid Auto
Castings; 1961 Commonwealth Explosives Jetty at Point Wilson; 1961 – Alcoa of
Australia.
·
Bibliography
·
Index of Ships
AUTHOR: JACK KENNETH LONEY (21 October
1925 – 13 February 1995) was an amateur Australian maritime historian who
published over one hundred books and numerous newspapers and magazine
articles. He was a schoolteacher and principal until his retirement. He became
interested in maritime history after preparing several general history
booklets covering the Otway region and Port Philip Bay and the Surf Coast
of Victoria.
He is acknowledged as the most prominent expert on the
history of early shipping in Victoria.
FACT FILE: The Port of Geelong is
located on the shores of Corio Bay at Geelong, Victoria, Australia. The
port is the sixth-largest in Australia by tonnage.
Major commodities handled by the port include crude oil and
petroleum products, export grain and woodchips, alumina imports and fertiliser. Major
port industries include Graincorp’s grain elevator and Viva Energy’s
Geelong Oil Refinery.
The Port of Geelong handled $5.6 billion worth of bulk cargo in
2004–05, made up of 12 million tonnes of cargo from 543 ship visits.
History
Before the initial settlement of Geelong, a sandbar across the bay
from Port Lillias to Point Henry only allowed small ships to enter the
inner harbour. Larger ships were required to drop anchor in the bay, and their
cargo was brought into Geelong on lighters. At times it was possible to walk
across the bay on the sandbar at low tide.
The first channel through the sandbar was started in 1853,
providing less than four metres draught for ships. This channel was
straightened out and dredged at a depth of seven metres in the 1860s. In 1881
dredging of a new channel was started which took 12 years to complete. It was
named the Hopetoun Channel after the then Governor of Victoria, Lord Hopetoun,
who opened it on 20 December 1893.
By the early twentieth century shipping traffic had increased and the
existing piers in the city area were proving inadequate. As a result, new port
facilities were progressively provided in the North Geelong area.
Management
Management of the channels and port of Geelong was the responsibility of
the Geelong Harbor Trust that was formed in December 1905.[7] In addition, the Authority was responsible
for the associated ports at Queenscliff, Barwon Heads, Lorne and Apollo
Bay.
In 1981, the trust was reconstituted as the Port of Geelong
Authority as an attempt to follow modern practice with the naming of
organisations responsible for ports operation throughout the world. The
authority was privatised by the State Goverment, being sold to Ports Pty Ltd
for $49.6 million on 1 July 1996. Ports Pty Ltd was a joint venture
between Primera, a wholly owned subsidiary of TNT (30%) and Infrastructure Investment Corporation (70%). The
port was later rebranded as Toll GeelongPort after the
acquisition of TNT by Toll Holdings. The port is now branded as GeelongPort,
and is a joint venture owned 50% by State Super and 50% by Brookfield’s Linx
Cargo Group, following the sale of the Asciano group of companies in
August 2016 (Asciano formed from the demerger of Toll Holdings in 2007).
In 2008 the Australian Competition & Consumer Commission (ACCC)
revoked Asciano's exclusive equipment contract with the Port of Geelong. The
ACCC found that the compulsory use of Asciano cranes for dry bulk and
fertiliser unloading was anti-competitive, and that the negative effects of the
arrangement outweighed any productivity improvements derived from use of a
single equipment type.
Facilities
Major piers in the Port of Geelong include:
·
Cunningham
Pier: opened as the Railway Pier in
the mid-1850s,[11] the pier was rebuilt in the late 1920s and
renamed Cunningham Pier in 1929. Disused by the 1980s, it was later occupied by
a Smorgy's restaurant. Currently used as a restaurant
and social venue called 'The Pier'.
·
Moorabool
Street Wharf: located at the end of the
street of the same name. Main terminal for bay steamers until the last one
ceased running in 1942. Demolished in the 1950s.
·
Yarra
Street Pier. Destroyed by fire in 1988 and
mostly removed, but has been the subject of a number of rebuilding proposals
since.
By the early 1900s, shipping traffic has increased and the existing
piers in the city area were inadequate. As a result, new port developments were
started in the North Geelong area.
·
Corio Quay. Construction started in the 1900s, and the wharfs
are still in use today for woodchip and bulk cargoes. As of 22
October 2022 Corio Quay is the Victorian port for the Spirit of Tasmania.
·
Grain Pier. Built to export grain from the adjacent grain
elevators in 1937. Replaced by a newer pier to the north in the
1990s.
·
Lascelles
Wharf. Caters for general cargo, as
well as minerals and fertiliser for the adjacent phosphate works.
·
Refinery
Pier. Opened by Shell in 1953
to cater for their nearby Viva Energy’s Geelong Oil Refinery.
There are also a number of special purpose piers on Corio Bay:
·
Point Henry
Pier. Established by Alcoa ay Point
Henry for alumina ore imports for their former Port Henry smelter
that closed several years ago.
·
Point
Wilson Pier. Established for the import of
explosives that were then stored at the adjacent reserve.
Cruise ship
visits
In addition to daily visits by the two new Spirit of Tasmania
Ferries. Geelong also serves as a stop for cruise visits and visits by
Royal Australian Navy ships
PUBLISHER: Neptune Press, Geelong. Cardcover 223mm
x 175mm. 222 pages. Index. Black & White photographs. ISBN: 090913177.
Weight: 450g.