Thursday, August 24, 2023

Issue:

Mackay and Whitsunday Life

Local Vessel Granted Historic Importance

Recreational boating is an avidly pursued pastime in the tropical waters around Mackay, and this was as true 100 years ago as it is today.

In 1914, local carpenter Henry Charles Rose completed his 22ft (6.7m) motor launch Eleanor and launched her at Cremorne.  Rose had built two other boats – the Rosebud and Rosebud II – but it was the Eleanor, named after his mother who had died the previous year, that he kept for himself.

Following the devastating cyclone of 1918, Eleanor really came into her own. All vessels in the Pioneer River were sunk or grounded and Eleanor, found outside the police station in Brisbane Street, was the only vessel to survive intact.

She was quickly put to use in making contact with areas cut off by the flood, and in ferrying messages between the town and ships which started to arrive off Mackay in the weeks following the disaster. The Sydney Street bridge had been destroyed, making the Eleanor’s job critical.

The Eleanor became a vital link between the north and south banks of the river, and with the outside world.

Henry Rose retained ownership of the Eleanor until his death in 1977, when she was sold to some fisherman. Some time later however, she was abandoned and neglected in Eimeo Creek. In 1987 she was retrieved by the Maritime Archaeological Association of Mackay and donated to the Mackay Museum. Eleanor can still be seen on display here, a significant part of the important maritime history of the region.

The 'Eleanor' has now been added to the Australian Register of Historic Vessels and will be able to receive funding for its conservation. You can visit the 'Eleanor' housed in the Mackay Museum when it re-opens in March, 2023.

Information thanks to Dr Melanie Piddocke, Queensland Museum.

Mackay Regional Council Museum Collection and Libraries

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