Imagine that you sitting on the ferry and the Captain is not at the wheel. This is what happened on Tuesday, 16 November 1926, according to the Singleton Argus. Two young men prevented a disaster on the harbour on this day. The Sydney ferry steamer the Kosciusko with nobody at the wheel, was heading for Manly. Two young men from Neutral Bay, were sitting in the front of the wheelhouse wondering why the ferry was not changing her course and why the siren did not sound.
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Ferry Kosciusko, Sydney Harbour, ca. 1930 |
They went to investigate and looked in the wheelhouse and they were amazed to find that it was empty. Both boys rushed to grab the wheel, they telegraphed the engine room for “full speed astern" and they swerved the ferry from her course. They completed this manoeuvre just in time, for passengers say that the ferry the Baragool missed the Kosciusko by no more than a foot, running parallel along her side.
When the ferry left the wharf it went straight ahead, for the safety pin was in the wheel and the rudder was locked. It had not gone far when the Baragoola, heading for its berth appeared. The Captain of the Baragoola sounded its siren but there was no reply from the Kosciousko. Fortunately one of the young men, Russell Gillies knew something about the steering mechanism and he released the pin, swerving the Kosciousko just clear of the Baragoola, the master of which slowed down when the Kosciousko did not stop as expected.
Reports to the NSW State Navigation department concluded that the Captain had become ill and went onto the wharf, forgetting to inform the wharfinger that he would be temporarily absent from the wheel. In his absence the engineers were changed they started the engine not knowing that the Captain was not at the wheel (Sounds like the Labour Party).