Professional Skipper Magazine from VIP Publications

#91 Jan/Feb 2013 with NZ Aquaculture

The only specialised marine publication in Oceania that focuses on the maritime industry, from super yachts to small craft to large commercial ships, including coastal shipping, tugs, tow boats, barges, ferries, tourist, sport-fishing craft

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TSS EARNSLAW 100 YEARS: ���THE LADY OF THE LAKE��� BY KEITH INGRAM T he ���Lady of the Lake��� as she is affectionately known, sailed into Queenstown Bay on October 18, 2012, with flags flying, and blasting her whistle continuously while making a circuit of the bay, flanked by a flotilla of local commercial craft. Queenstown turned the clock back 100 years when a large crowd, dominated by school children waving flags, lined Queenstown���s Steamer Wharf to welcome their heritage steamship TSS Earnslaw. They were marking her official centenary with a sailing from Kingston to Queenstown on Lake Wakatipu, in a re-enactment of her maiden passenger voyage 100 years ago. From the shore a resounding response came from the whistles ation ter Peak St tty of Wal side the je Along of nine vintage steam traction engines, and a battery of canons fired in salute, while the band played on the wharf: all welcoming the steamer home. Three hundred and fifty guests dressed in period costume made the journey, and at Kingston, the vintage Kingston Flyer steam train waited on the wharf just as it had a century ago when it carried passengers from the south, to meet TSS Earnslaw for the trip across the lake. TSS Earnslaw was launched on Lake Wakatipu in 1912, the same year the ill-fated steamship, the Titanic left Southampton on her maiden voyage. Unlike the Titanic she has survived and is now the oldest coal-fired passenger steamer in the southern hem hemisphere proudly celebrating 100 years of outstanding service. T The ship was commissioned in 1910 after increasing public app apprehension about the comfort and safety of the existing lak lake steamers, particularly the paddle steamers PS Antrim, PS Mo Mountaineer and the SS Ben Lomond. Disparaging letters to new newspapers from as far afield as Sydney highlighted problems and created concerns about the impact on settlement growth in Qu Queenstown. F Following the initial excitement of the gold rush days in 1862, pre previous steamers had all in been in private hands, and they com competed for services operating out of Queenstown for 40 years. On Once the rush was over these operations were unable to provide a profitable service for the lakes settlements and stations, and so in 1902 the Government bought out the last remaining b business. These ships were thought to have been too small and s slow, so pressure was applied on the Government by the Prime M Minister Sir Joseph Ward to finance a modern and fast twin screw, freight and passenger steamer for the lake. A tender was let on behalf of New Zealand Railways in September 1910

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