''Booya'' was a three-masted
schooner
A schooner () is a type of sailing vessel defined by its rig: fore-and-aft rigged on all of two or more masts and, in the case of a two-masted schooner, the foremast generally being shorter than the mainmast. A common variant, the topsail schoon ...
with a steel hull built in the
Netherlands in 1917. She was originally named ''De Lauwers''. The schooner was renamed ''Argosy Lemal'' in 1920 and carried that name until 1949. As ''Argosy Lemal'' the ship served as one of the early United States Army communications ships from 1942–1949. In 1949, on return to civilian use, the vessel was renamed ''Ametco'', ''Clair Crouch'' and finally ''Booya'' in 1964. ''Booya'' was last seen anchored off Fort Hill wharf in
Darwin Harbour at about 8.00pm on 24 December 1974, the evening
Cyclone Tracy hit Darwin. Nearly twenty-nine years later, in October 2003, she was discovered by chance in Darwin Harbour, lying on her
starboard
Port and starboard are nautical terms for watercraft and aircraft, referring respectively to the left and right sides of the vessel, when aboard and facing the bow (front).
Vessels with bilateral symmetry have left and right halves which are ...
side in about 20 metres of water.
[Wreck of the Booya]
(2005). Department of Natural Resources, Environment and The Arts. Retrieved on 8 June 2009.[Murdoch, Lindsay (2004)]
The Age. Retrieved on 9 June 2009.[Wreath laying ceremony over Booya site]
. (2007). NT Government Media Release. Retrieved on 9 June 2009.
History 1917-1942
''Booya'' was built in
Waterhuizen, the Netherlands in 1917 by
Gebroeders van Diepen, under her original name, ''De Lauwers''.
[Reynolds, Steve (2008). Marine Life Society of South Australia Inc]
The Schooner BOOYA
. Retrieved on 9 June 2009. She was a three-masted auxiliary schooner with a steel hull and a 130 bhp engine.
[ At the time of her loss, she was 35.8 metres long and had a gross register tonnage of 262 tons.][
In 1920, she became known as the ''Argosy Lemal'' after she was purchased and registered by the Argosy Shipping and Coal Company in Newcastle-on-Tyne in England.][ In 1923, she was brought to Australia and was purchased by Yorke Shipping Pty Ltd and subsequently played an active role in coastal shipping working numerous ports including ]Port Adelaide
Port Adelaide is a port-side region of Adelaide, approximately northwest of the Adelaide CBD. It is also the namesake of the City of Port Adelaide Enfield council, a suburb, a federal and state electoral division and is the main port for the ...
and Hobart
Hobart ( ; Nuennonne/Palawa kani: ''nipaluna'') is the capital and most populous city of the Australian island state of Tasmania. Home to almost half of all Tasmanians, it is the least-populated Australian state capital city, and second-small ...
.[Booya 1917 to 1974]
(2009). Department of Natural Resources, Environment and The Arts. Retrieved on 8 June 2009. That company later became a subsidiary of the Adelaide Steamship Company.
U.S. Army WWII service
In November 1942, the Commonwealth Government requisitioned
Requisition may refer to:
*Purchase requisition, a document issued by a buyer to a seller indicating types, quantities, and agreed prices for products or services
*Requisition in military logistics
*Requisition of property by a government under e ...
''Argosy Lemal'' and she played an important role in the US Army Small Ships Section
The US Army Small Ships Section was an improvised civilian fleet mobilized by Douglas MacArthur to provide logistical support to Allied Operations in the Pacific War. Between 1942 and 1945, over 4,372 Allied Merchant seaman served aboard command ...
, functioning as a radio communication vessel in the Arafura and Timor Seas during World War II.[Diving near Booya wreck a possibility]
(2007). Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved on 17 June 2009. The crew of 12 was made up of Australians, Americans, Norwegians, Scandinavians, Scots
Scots usually refers to something of, from, or related to Scotland, including:
* Scots language, a language of the West Germanic language family native to Scotland
* Scots people, a nation and ethnic group native to Scotland
* Scoti, a Latin na ...
, and English personnel. As operations against the enemy began in the island and ocean areas northward from Australia in 1942, amphibious communications became necessary. The SWPA chief signal officer, General Spencer B. Akin, created a small fleet that served as relay ships from forward areas to headquarters. Their function and number soon expanded when they took aboard the forward command post communications facilities as the Army's CP fleet. The small communications ships, part of the U.S. Army's Small Ships Section of Australian, acquired vessels known officially as the "catboat flotilla," proved so useful in amphibious actions that Army elements in SWPA operations continually competed to obtain their services. The first Australian vessels acquired by General Akin to be converted during the first half of 1943 by Australian firms into communications ships, were the ''Harold'' (S-58, CS-3), an auxiliary ketch, and ''Argosy Lemal'' (S-6).[These initial ships would be joined by the U.S. sailing ships ''Volador'' and '' Geoanna''.] From Milne Bay, the vessels then served at Port Moresby, at Woodlark, and in the Lae-Salamaua area through mid-1943.
A graphic account of some of the vicissitudes of the ''Argosy Lemal'' and its mixed crew came from S/Sgt. Arthur B. Dunning, Headquarters Company, 60th Signal Battalion. He and six other enlisted men of that unit were ordered aboard her on 9 September 1943, at Oro Bay, New Guinea, to handle Army radio traffic. The commander of the ship reported to naval authorities, not to General Akin. After six months' service along the New Guinea coast, the skipper was removed for incompetence. His replacement was no better. Among other things, he obeyed to the letter Navy's order forbidding the use of unshielded radio receivers at sea. Since the Signal Corps receivers aboard the ship were unshielded and thus liable to radiate sufficiently to alert nearby enemy listeners, the men were forbidden to switch them on in order to hear orders from Army headquarters ashore. As a consequence, during a trip in the spring of 1944 from Milne Bay to Cairns, Australia (on naval orders), the crew failed to hear frantic Signal Corps radio messages to ''Argosy Lemal'' ordering her to return at once to Milne Bay to make ready for a forthcoming Army operation. On the way to Australia the skipper, after a series of mishaps attributable to bad navigation, grounded ''Argosy'' hard on a reef. Most of the crew already desperately ill of tropical diseases, now had additional worries. The radio antennas were swept away along with the ship's rigging, and help could not be requested until the Signal Corps men strung up a makeshift antenna. Weak with fevers and in a ship on the verge of foundering, they pumped away at the water rising in the hold and wondered why rescue was delayed till they learned that the position of the ship that the skipper had given them to broadcast was ninety miles off their true position. As they threw excess cargo overboard, "some of the guys", recorded Dunning, "were all for jettisoning our skipper for getting us into all of this mess." Much later, too late for the need the Signal Corps had for the ship, the ''Argosy Lemal'' was rescued and towed to Port Moresby for repairs to the vessel and medical attention to the crew, many of whom were by then, according to Dunning, "psycho-neurotic." Besides Dunning, a radio operator, there were T/4 Jack Stanton, also a radio operator; T/Sgt. Harold Wooten, the senior non-commissioned officer; T/4 Finch and T/5 Burtness, maintenance men; and T/5 Ingram and Pfc. Devlin, code and message center clerks. Dunning described the ''Argosy'' as a 3-mast sailing vessel with a 110-horsepower auxiliary diesel engine. "She was the sixth vessel," he wrote, "to be taken over by the Small Ships Section of the U.S. Army, her primary purpose was handling adio Adio may refer to:
Business
*Adio (company), the former skateboard footwear and apparel company
Music Songs
* "Adio" (song), a song by Montenegrin recording artist Knez that represented Montenegro at the Eurovision Song Contest 2015
*"Adio", a 19 ...
traffic between forward areas and the main USASOS headquarters."
History 1949-1974
After the war, she was purchased by the Middle East Trading Company in 1949 and renamed ''Ametco'' (acronym for Australian Middle East Trading Co). The ''Ametco'' sank at Low Wooded Island
Low Wooded Island is the name of an island 30 km south-east of Cape Flattery in the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority and within the Three Islands National Park. The island is an important seabird nesting site. It is around 45 hec ...
off the Queensland coast, but was salvaged in poor condition, and taken to Melbourne for repairs. She was purchased in 1952 by shipping company MB Crouch & Co Limited, who renamed her ''Clair Crouch'', after the owner's daughter.[ The ''Clair Crouch'' traded around the Australian coast until 1958 when she was converted to carry ]sulphuric acid
Sulfuric acid (American spelling and the preferred IUPAC name) or sulphuric acid ( Commonwealth spelling), known in antiquity as oil of vitriol, is a mineral acid composed of the elements sulfur, oxygen and hydrogen, with the molecular formu ...
between Port Pirie and Port Lincoln in South Australia.
In 1964, she was sold to the Mornington Island Fishing Company and renamed ''Booya''.[ She was used as a mother ship and fuel supply vessel for the Northern prawn fleets, but became laid up in 1965/66 until she was sold again in 1968 (some sources say 1971) to the Denham Island Transport Company, trading cargo mainly between ]Dili
Dili (Portuguese/Tetum: ''Díli'') is the capital, largest city of East Timor and the second largest city in Timor islands after Kupang (Indonesia). It lies on the northern coast of the island of Timor, in a small area of flat land hemmed in ...
and Darwin.[
On the evening of 24 December 1974, ''Booya'' was moored near Fort Hill wharf with four crew and one guest on board.][ As Cyclone Tracy approached Darwin, she – and all other vessels – were ordered off the wharves and instructed to find safe anchorage. ''Booya'' was last seen at about 8.00pm leaving Fort Hill wharf.][Reynolds, Steve (2005). Marine Life Society of South Australia Inc]
Cyclone Tracy Shipwrecks
. Newsletter April 2005. Retrieved on 10 June 2009.[Divers continue Booya search]
(2003). NT Police Fire & Emergency Services: Media Release. Retrieved on 10 June 2009. For the next 29 years she remained missing, presumed sunk with the loss of all lives in the huge seas whipped up by Cyclone Tracy's 300 km/h winds.[
]
Discovery
On 22 October 2003, divers discovered the wreck by chance in Darwin Harbour, lying on her starboard side in about 20 metres of water, five nautical miles (9 km) from shore.[ Her exact location was given as . The discovery and subsequent identification of the ''Booya'' led to a coronial inquiry.][Inquest to be considered for Booya wreckage]
(2004). ABC News. Retrieved on 17 June 2009. The Northern Territory Government signed an instrument re-declaring the wreck site subject to an Interim Conservation Order, under the ''Heritage Conservation Act'' ensuring an exclusion zone over the wreck.[ In 2005, ''Booya'' and the surrounding area was declared a 'heritage site'.][Interim Management Plan for the Wreck of the Booya]
. (2007). Department of Natural Resources, Environment and the Arts. Retrieved on 11 June 2009. Despite a thorough search of the ''Booya'' by police divers
Police diving is a branch of professional diving carried out by police services. Police divers are usually sworn police officers, and may either be employed full-time as divers or as general water police officers, or be volunteers who usually ser ...
, no human remains were found; however some personal effects, able to be identified by relatives of the deceased persons, were retrieved.[Cavenagh, Greg (2005]
Inquest into the Deaths of Raymond Curtain et al
Coroner's Court of Darwin. Retrieved on 11 June 2009. The Coroner's Court concluded that the vessel sank due to strong winds and high seas created by Cyclone Tracy and that the crew perished at sea late on 24 or early on 25 December 1974.[
]
Official number and code letters
Official Numbers were a forerunner to IMO Numbers
IMO or Imo may refer to:
Biology and medicine
* Irish Medical Organisation, the main organization for doctors in the Republic of Ireland
* Intelligent Medical Objects, a privately held company specializing in medical vocabularies
* Isomaltooligosa ...
.
''Argosy Lemal'' had the UK Official Number 144888[ and used the ]Code Letters
Code letters or ship's call sign (or callsign) Mtide Taurus - IMO 7626853"> SHIPSPOTTING.COM >> Mtide Taurus - IMO 7626853/ref> were a method of identifying ships before the introduction of modern navigation aids and today also. Later, with the i ...
KGHS from 1930[ and VJDF from 1933.][
]
See also
* HMAS ''Arrow'' (P 88)
Notes
References
External links
Official wreck site brochure
{{DEFAULTSORT:Booya (Ship)
1917 ships
1974–75 Australian region cyclone season
Shipwrecks of the Northern Territory
Maritime incidents in 1974
Underwater diving sites in Australia
History of Darwin, Northern Territory
Ships of the United States Army
South West Pacific theatre of World War II
Fishing ships of Australia
Australian Shipwrecks with protected zone
Cyclone Tracy