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HMS Investigator Anchors

The HMS Investigator Anchors are the two anchors that jettisoned from HMS Investigator on the morning of Saturday, 21 May 1803, by her commander, Matthew Flinders, in order to avoid running aground on Middle Island in the Archipelago of the Recherche on the south coast of New Holland (now Western Australia). In 1973, the anchors were located and recovered by members of the Underwater Explorers Club of South Australia (UEC). The recovered anchors became the subject of an ownership dispute between various governments, particularly those of South Australia and Western Australia due to their historic significance as artefacts of a major voyage of European exploration. The dispute was resolved with the ownership of the anchors going to the Australian Government who subsequently gifted one of the anchors to the South Australian Government. The pair of artefacts is also known as Flinders' Anchors.

HMS Investigator Best Bower Anchor
The Best Bower Anchor, dropped from HMS Investigator, on display at the South Australian Maritime Museum in Port Adelaide.
MaterialWrought Iron.
SizeLength: 4,230 millimetres (167 in),
mass: 1,230 kilograms (2,710 lb)
Created1795 (Henry Rudd, Monkwearmouthshore, Co.)
Discovered1973, Middle Island, Recherche Archipelago, Western Australia
Present locationSouth Australian Maritime Museum
IdentificationHT2003653[1]
HMS Investigator Stream Anchor
MaterialWrought iron
SizeWidth: 1,570 millimetres (62 in), Height: 2,500 millimetres (98 in), Depth: 300 millimetres (12 in), Mass: 400 kilograms (880 lb)
Discovered1973, Middle Island, Recherche Archipelago, Western Australia
Present locationNational Museum of Australia
Identification1981.0024.0001[2]

Background edit

The outfitting of Investigator in early 1801 prior to her departure from the United Kingdom for Terra Australis included five bower, two stream and two kedge anchors. An additional bower anchor was included in stores sent to Port Jackson.[3]

Investigator departed Kupang in Timor on 8 April 1803 to sail to Port Jackson, where she arrived on 9 June 1803. The object of the voyage was to seek medical aid for the members of the crew who were suffering from dysentery and fever, and seek repairs to the sloop. Flinders' intention was "to stop a day or two" at the Archipelago of the Recherche for "the purposes of procuring geese for our sick people, seal oil for our lamps, and a few casks of salt from the lake on Middle Island." Investigator arrived on the evening of 17 May 1803 and anchored on the north side of Middle Island, between the island's north east point and Goose Island, in the area known as Goose Island Bay.[4] The visit to Middle Island also allowed the burial of the sloop's boatswain, Charles Douglas, who had died on 18 May 1803, to take place on dry land.[5][6]

Loss edit

On departure during the morning of Saturday, 21 May 1803, Flinders discovered that Investigator was in danger of being driven aground on Middle Island by a freshening breeze, before the sails could be loosed. That danger was mitigated by using the sloop's spare anchors to hold it in place. However, Flinders needed to abandon the best bower anchor, a stream anchor, and a quantity of cable, in order to safely depart from the bay. Instead of recovering the two anchors, Investigator continued towards Port Jackson, with the intention of retrieving them at a later time.[5]

The discovery and recovery edit

Doug Seton, an information officer at the South Australian Museum, found out about the loss of the anchors in 1969 during a conversation with Robert Sexton, a friend and a well-known South Australian maritime historian. Seton then commenced a four-year desktop study to identify the likely area in which the anchors could be found.[7]

In 1972, Seton, a scuba diving enthusiast, planned an expedition to find and recover the anchors with the assistance of fellow members of the UEC: Terry & Helen Drew, Peter & Rosalie Koch and John Summers, and residents of Esperance: Don Gulvan, Don McKenzie and Tony Moore of Cape Arid Farm. He was supported by sponsors BP, a boating business known as Lawton Agencies, and the Adelaide newspaper, the Sunday Mail.[7][8]

The expedition departed Adelaide for Esperance on 26 December 1972. Later that day, the expedition was paused due to a vehicle accident north of Port Wakefield which resulted in Terry and Helen Drew being hospitalised, their vehicle being destroyed, their boat being damaged, and the death of two occupants of the other vehicle.[9] Terry and Helen Drew later re-joined the expedition to witness the recovery of both anchors.[10]

The expedition resumed and arrived at Middle Island on 4 January 1973. After a week of rough weather, the search commenced on 11 January using a manta board constructed from driftwood and other materials. On 14 January, the best bower anchor was discovered by Peter Koch in 15 metres (49 ft) deep water. After reviewing his desktop research, Seton re-organised the search and, several hours later, found the stream anchor about 9 metres (30 ft) away from the best bower anchor.[8] The news of the discovery was announced on 15 January.[11]

As pre-arranged with the then Commonwealth Department of Shipping and Transport, the lighthouse supply tender, MV Cape Don, arrived on 19 January to lift both anchors off the seabed and convey them to Fremantle for conservation.[12][13][14]

Dispute over ownership edit

As soon as the news of the discovery of the two anchors was announced, a dispute erupted over who was the owner of the artefacts. The protagonists were the governments of Australia, South Australia and Western Australia. The Australian Government argued that it was in the national interest for it to own the anchors. South Australia argued that the anchors were significant as a part of the sloop that charted most of its coastline, while Western Australia argued that the anchors were found in its waters. The dispute was resolved when the Australian government took ownership of both anchors in April 1973, with the best bower anchor being subsequently gifted to South Australia.[15][16][17][18]

Display edit

In 1974, after completion of the conservation process at the Western Australian Museum, the anchors were handed over to the Australian Government. The best bower anchor was officially presented to the South Australian Government on 1 March 1974 and was immediately placed on display at the Art Gallery of South Australia.[10] In 1986, it was transferred to the collection of the newly created South Australian Maritime Museum in Port Adelaide.[19]

The stream anchor was retained by the Australian Government for possible inclusion in the collection of a proposed national transport museum.[18] It was subsequently added to the collection of the National Museum of Australia in Canberra.[2]

Significance edit

 
Portrait miniature of Matthew Flinders in 1801

The Collection statement for the Best Bower Anchor, prepared by the South Australian Maritime Museum, advises the following:[1]

Matthew Flinders was the first to chart the then uncompleted coastline of South Australia and use the name Australia for the continent. The anchor is one of the few remaining physical relics linked to Flinders' exploration of the southern coastline and one of the earliest relics of European presence in South Australia.

The Collection statement prepared by the National Museum of Australia for the Stream Anchor advises the following:[2]

This collection highlights one of the important voyages of discovery and the naming of Australia by Matthew Flinders. Flinders circumnavigated Australia and confirmed its island status after many years of conjecture and uncertainty.

Aftermath edit

The positive public response to the successful UEC expedition was a major driver in the creation in 1974, by Seton and others, of a dedicated amateur maritime archaeology organisation, the Society for Underwater Historical Research (SUHR).[20][21] Many of the approaches used by the UEC during the expedition, such as seeking major corporate sponsorship, engagement with both political leaders and local communities, and the pro-active use of print and electronic media, were continued in the work of the SUHR, particularly on projects concerning the Loch Vennachar and Water Witch shipwrecks.[22][23]

The recovery of the anchors, and their connection to the voyage of HMS Investigator, is commemorated in the inclusion of the best bower anchor and the outline of the Australian continent on the SUHR emblem.[24]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b . History SA. Archived from the original on 29 October 2013. Retrieved 1 March 2015.
  2. ^ a b c "Stream anchor from Matthew Flinders' ship the 'Investigator'". National Museum of Australia. Retrieved 1 March 2015.
  3. ^ Geeson, N.T. and Sexton, R.T.; (1970), 'H.M. Sloop Investigator', pages 293-294, in Mariner's Mirror, v.56, no. 3, Society for Nautical Research, London, pages 275-298.
  4. ^ Flinders, Matthew (1966). A voyage to Terra Australis undertaken for the purpose of completing the discovery of that vast country, and prosecuted in the years 1801, 1802 and 1803, in his majesty's ship the Investigator, and subsequently in the armed vessel Porpoise and Cumberland schooner. With an account of the shipwreck of the Porpoise, arrival of the Cumberland at Mauritius, and imprisonment of the commander during six years and a half in that island. By Matthew Flinders Commander of the Investigator. In 2 volumes with an atlas. Volume 2. London: 1814 [Facsimile Edition, 1966] printed by W. Bulmer and Co. Cleveland row, and published by G. And W. Nicol, booksellers to his Majesty, pall-mall. G. and W. Nicol. p. Book 2, Chapter 10. Retrieved 2 March 2015.
  5. ^ a b Flinders, Matthew. "Log of the Investigator, ADM55, Log 76, 14 Mar 1803 to 10 Jan 1804". British Atmospheric Data Centre. p. 32. Retrieved 2 March 2015.
  6. ^ Green, Jeremy; Souter, Corioli; Baker, Patrick (2001). "Department of Maritime Archaeology Visit to Middle Island, Recherche Archipelago, Esperance, 29 April–4 May 2001, Report–Department of Maritime Archaeology Western Australian Maritime Museum No. 154" (PDF). Western Australian Maritime Museum. pp. 2–3. Retrieved 27 February 2015.
  7. ^ a b "Team of divers hooked on anchor". The Sunday Mail. 24 December 1972. p. 17.
  8. ^ a b Seton, Doug (1973). "The search and recovery of the Investigator anchor, a 4 page brochure whose publisher is not identified and which was viewed at the State Library of South Australia, Call No. 909.096576 S439b". Retrieved 1 March 2015.
  9. ^ 'Three more killed: Holiday road toll now eight', The Advertiser, 27 December 1972, page 1.
  10. ^ a b "SA gets anchor". The Advertiser. 2 March 1974. p. 4.
  11. ^ 'SA divers trace old anchors', The Advertiser, 16 January 1973, page 3.
  12. ^ 'Anchors aweigh!, Must come to SA', The Sunday Mail, 21 January 1973, page 128.
  13. ^ 'The return of Flinders anchors', BP Shield International, October 1973.
  14. ^ ’Flinders anchors’, Fremantle Cockburn News, 6 February 1973
  15. ^ ’Keep Anchors here’, The Esperance Advertiser, 12 January 1973.
  16. ^ ’After 170 years the battle begins for Flinders’ anchors’, The Australian, 16 March 1973.
  17. ^ ’Let’s pull together to keep anchors’, The News (Adelaide), 26 March 1973, page 15.
  18. ^ a b "SA succeeds in claim to anchor". The Advertiser. 14 April 1973. p. 3.
  19. ^ 'Last 'voyage' for ship's anchor', The Advertiser, 9 October 1986.
  20. ^ Brock, A.E., 1977, 'The Society for Underwater Historical Research of South Australia', In Green, J. (Ed.), 1977, Papers from the First Southern Hemisphere Conference on Maritime Archaeology, Perth, Western Australia, Oceans Society of Australia, Australian Sports Publications, Melbourne, Victoria, pp. 114.
  21. ^ O'Donnell, I.; (2001), 'Sport Diving on South Australian Shipwrecks', Soundings (2nd series), Vol. 2 No. 4 (October–December 2001), Society for Underwater Historical Research, Port Adelaide, SA, page 9. However, the founding year is stated as being 1975 rather than 1974.
  22. ^ Marfleet, B. & Hale, A.; (1977) 'Logistics of Loch Vennachar Expedition 1977', Annex A (4 pages) in Loch Vennachar Expedition Report, Society for Underwater Historical Research, North Adelaide, SA.
  23. ^ Jeffery, W.F., (1987), The Water Witch Wrecksite, A Report on the Identification, Survey & Partial Recovery of the Wrecksite, Department of Environment & Planning, Adelaide SA, page xi.
  24. ^ 'Second Annual Report, September 1976', pp.2, in Cowan, David (editor), (2007), The Society for Underwater Historical Research – Publications 1974-2004, Society for Underwater Historical Research, Port Adelaide, SA.

Further reading edit

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The HMS Investigator Anchors are the two anchors that jettisoned from HMS Investigator on the morning of Saturday 21 May 1803 by her commander Matthew Flinders in order to avoid running aground on Middle Island in the Archipelago of the Recherche on the south coast of New Holland now Western Australia In 1973 the anchors were located and recovered by members of the Underwater Explorers Club of South Australia UEC The recovered anchors became the subject of an ownership dispute between various governments particularly those of South Australia and Western Australia due to their historic significance as artefacts of a major voyage of European exploration The dispute was resolved with the ownership of the anchors going to the Australian Government who subsequently gifted one of the anchors to the South Australian Government The pair of artefacts is also known as Flinders Anchors HMS Investigator Best Bower AnchorThe Best Bower Anchor dropped from HMS Investigator on display at the South Australian Maritime Museum in Port Adelaide MaterialWrought Iron SizeLength 4 230 millimetres 167 in mass 1 230 kilograms 2 710 lb Created1795 Henry Rudd Monkwearmouthshore Co Discovered1973 Middle Island Recherche Archipelago Western AustraliaPresent locationSouth Australian Maritime MuseumIdentificationHT2003653 1 HMS Investigator Stream AnchorMaterialWrought ironSizeWidth 1 570 millimetres 62 in Height 2 500 millimetres 98 in Depth 300 millimetres 12 in Mass 400 kilograms 880 lb Discovered1973 Middle Island Recherche Archipelago Western AustraliaPresent locationNational Museum of AustraliaIdentification1981 0024 0001 2 Contents 1 Background 2 Loss 3 The discovery and recovery 4 Dispute over ownership 5 Display 6 Significance 7 Aftermath 8 See also 9 References 10 Further readingBackground editThe outfitting of Investigator in early 1801 prior to her departure from the United Kingdom for Terra Australis included five bower two stream and two kedge anchors An additional bower anchor was included in stores sent to Port Jackson 3 Investigator departed Kupang in Timor on 8 April 1803 to sail to Port Jackson where she arrived on 9 June 1803 The object of the voyage was to seek medical aid for the members of the crew who were suffering from dysentery and fever and seek repairs to the sloop Flinders intention was to stop a day or two at the Archipelago of the Recherche for the purposes of procuring geese for our sick people seal oil for our lamps and a few casks of salt from the lake on Middle Island Investigator arrived on the evening of 17 May 1803 and anchored on the north side of Middle Island between the island s north east point and Goose Island in the area known as Goose Island Bay 4 The visit to Middle Island also allowed the burial of the sloop s boatswain Charles Douglas who had died on 18 May 1803 to take place on dry land 5 6 Loss editOn departure during the morning of Saturday 21 May 1803 Flinders discovered that Investigator was in danger of being driven aground on Middle Island by a freshening breeze before the sails could be loosed That danger was mitigated by using the sloop s spare anchors to hold it in place However Flinders needed to abandon the best bower anchor a stream anchor and a quantity of cable in order to safely depart from the bay Instead of recovering the two anchors Investigator continued towards Port Jackson with the intention of retrieving them at a later time 5 The discovery and recovery editDoug Seton an information officer at the South Australian Museum found out about the loss of the anchors in 1969 during a conversation with Robert Sexton a friend and a well known South Australian maritime historian Seton then commenced a four year desktop study to identify the likely area in which the anchors could be found 7 In 1972 Seton a scuba diving enthusiast planned an expedition to find and recover the anchors with the assistance of fellow members of the UEC Terry amp Helen Drew Peter amp Rosalie Koch and John Summers and residents of Esperance Don Gulvan Don McKenzie and Tony Moore of Cape Arid Farm He was supported by sponsors BP a boating business known as Lawton Agencies and the Adelaide newspaper the Sunday Mail 7 8 The expedition departed Adelaide for Esperance on 26 December 1972 Later that day the expedition was paused due to a vehicle accident north of Port Wakefield which resulted in Terry and Helen Drew being hospitalised their vehicle being destroyed their boat being damaged and the death of two occupants of the other vehicle 9 Terry and Helen Drew later re joined the expedition to witness the recovery of both anchors 10 The expedition resumed and arrived at Middle Island on 4 January 1973 After a week of rough weather the search commenced on 11 January using a manta board constructed from driftwood and other materials On 14 January the best bower anchor was discovered by Peter Koch in 15 metres 49 ft deep water After reviewing his desktop research Seton re organised the search and several hours later found the stream anchor about 9 metres 30 ft away from the best bower anchor 8 The news of the discovery was announced on 15 January 11 As pre arranged with the then Commonwealth Department of Shipping and Transport the lighthouse supply tender MV Cape Don arrived on 19 January to lift both anchors off the seabed and convey them to Fremantle for conservation 12 13 14 Dispute over ownership editAs soon as the news of the discovery of the two anchors was announced a dispute erupted over who was the owner of the artefacts The protagonists were the governments of Australia South Australia and Western Australia The Australian Government argued that it was in the national interest for it to own the anchors South Australia argued that the anchors were significant as a part of the sloop that charted most of its coastline while Western Australia argued that the anchors were found in its waters The dispute was resolved when the Australian government took ownership of both anchors in April 1973 with the best bower anchor being subsequently gifted to South Australia 15 16 17 18 Display editIn 1974 after completion of the conservation process at the Western Australian Museum the anchors were handed over to the Australian Government The best bower anchor was officially presented to the South Australian Government on 1 March 1974 and was immediately placed on display at the Art Gallery of South Australia 10 In 1986 it was transferred to the collection of the newly created South Australian Maritime Museum in Port Adelaide 19 The stream anchor was retained by the Australian Government for possible inclusion in the collection of a proposed national transport museum 18 It was subsequently added to the collection of the National Museum of Australia in Canberra 2 Significance edit nbsp Portrait miniature of Matthew Flinders in 1801 The Collection statement for the Best Bower Anchor prepared by the South Australian Maritime Museum advises the following 1 Matthew Flinders was the first to chart the then uncompleted coastline of South Australia and use the name Australia for the continent The anchor is one of the few remaining physical relics linked to Flinders exploration of the southern coastline and one of the earliest relics of European presence in South Australia The Collection statement prepared by the National Museum of Australia for the Stream Anchor advises the following 2 This collection highlights one of the important voyages of discovery and the naming of Australia by Matthew Flinders Flinders circumnavigated Australia and confirmed its island status after many years of conjecture and uncertainty Aftermath editThe positive public response to the successful UEC expedition was a major driver in the creation in 1974 by Seton and others of a dedicated amateur maritime archaeology organisation the Society for Underwater Historical Research SUHR 20 21 Many of the approaches used by the UEC during the expedition such as seeking major corporate sponsorship engagement with both political leaders and local communities and the pro active use of print and electronic media were continued in the work of the SUHR particularly on projects concerning the Loch Vennachar and Water Witch shipwrecks 22 23 The recovery of the anchors and their connection to the voyage of HMS Investigator is commemorated in the inclusion of the best bower anchor and the outline of the Australian continent on the SUHR emblem 24 See also editA Voyage to Terra Australis by Matthew FlindersReferences edit a b HM Sloop Investigator anchor History SA Archived from the original on 29 October 2013 Retrieved 1 March 2015 a b c Stream anchor from Matthew Flinders ship the Investigator National Museum of Australia Retrieved 1 March 2015 Geeson N T and Sexton R T 1970 H M Sloop Investigator pages 293 294 in Mariner s Mirror v 56 no 3 Society for Nautical Research London pages 275 298 Flinders Matthew 1966 A voyage to Terra Australis undertaken for the purpose of completing the discovery of that vast country and prosecuted in the years 1801 1802 and 1803 in his majesty s ship the Investigator and subsequently in the armed vessel Porpoise and Cumberland schooner With an account of the shipwreck of the Porpoise arrival of the Cumberland at Mauritius and imprisonment of the commander during six years and a half in that island By Matthew Flinders Commander of the Investigator In 2 volumes with an atlas Volume 2 London 1814 Facsimile Edition 1966 printed by W Bulmer and Co Cleveland row and published by G And W Nicol booksellers to his Majesty pall mall G and W Nicol p Book 2 Chapter 10 Retrieved 2 March 2015 a b Flinders Matthew Log of the Investigator ADM55 Log 76 14 Mar 1803 to 10 Jan 1804 British Atmospheric Data Centre p 32 Retrieved 2 March 2015 Green Jeremy Souter Corioli Baker Patrick 2001 Department of Maritime Archaeology Visit to Middle Island Recherche Archipelago Esperance 29 April 4 May 2001 Report Department of Maritime Archaeology Western Australian Maritime Museum No 154 PDF Western Australian Maritime Museum pp 2 3 Retrieved 27 February 2015 a b Team of divers hooked on anchor The Sunday Mail 24 December 1972 p 17 a b Seton Doug 1973 The search and recovery of the Investigator anchor a 4 page brochure whose publisher is not identified and which was viewed at the State Library of South Australia Call No 909 096576 S439b Retrieved 1 March 2015 Three more killed Holiday road toll now eight The Advertiser 27 December 1972 page 1 a b SA gets anchor The Advertiser 2 March 1974 p 4 SA divers trace old anchors The Advertiser 16 January 1973 page 3 Anchors aweigh Must come to SA The Sunday Mail 21 January 1973 page 128 The return of Flinders anchors BP Shield International October 1973 Flinders anchors Fremantle Cockburn News 6 February 1973 Keep Anchors here The Esperance Advertiser 12 January 1973 After 170 years the battle begins for Flinders anchors The Australian 16 March 1973 Let s pull together to keep anchors The News Adelaide 26 March 1973 page 15 a b SA succeeds in claim to anchor The Advertiser 14 April 1973 p 3 Last voyage for ship s anchor The Advertiser 9 October 1986 Brock A E 1977 The Society for Underwater Historical Research of South Australia In Green J Ed 1977 Papers from the First Southern Hemisphere Conference on Maritime Archaeology Perth Western Australia Oceans Society of Australia Australian Sports Publications Melbourne Victoria pp 114 O Donnell I 2001 Sport Diving on South Australian Shipwrecks Soundings 2nd series Vol 2 No 4 October December 2001 Society for Underwater Historical Research Port Adelaide SA page 9 However the founding year is stated as being 1975 rather than 1974 Marfleet B amp Hale A 1977 Logistics of Loch Vennachar Expedition 1977 Annex A 4 pages in Loch Vennachar Expedition Report Society for Underwater Historical Research North Adelaide SA Jeffery W F 1987 The Water Witch Wrecksite A Report on the Identification Survey amp Partial Recovery of the Wrecksite Department of Environment amp Planning Adelaide SA page xi Second Annual Report September 1976 pp 2 in Cowan David editor 2007 The Society for Underwater Historical Research Publications 1974 2004 Society for Underwater Historical Research Port Adelaide SA Further reading editChristopher P amp Cundell N editors 2004 Let s Go For a Dive 50 years of the Underwater Explorers Club of SA published by Peter Christopher Kent Town SA ISBN 0958804427 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title HMS Investigator Anchors amp oldid 1163458461, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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