Model of the ship MV ORMISTON
Datec 1979
Object number00047864
NameModel
DimensionsOverall (display case): 543 x 1440 x 410 mm
Copyright© CSR Limited
ClassificationsModels
Credit LineANMM Collection Gift from CSR Pty Ltd
DescriptionModel of the ship MV ORMISTON.
Accompanying certificate reads "The Commandant of the United States Coast Guard is pleased to present this Certificate of Merit to ORMISTON VJIK in recognition of outstanding dedication to the Automated Mutual-assistance Vessel Rescue System in support of world maritime safety."HistoryThe Colonial Sugar Refining Company (CSR) was established in 1855 for the commercial production of sugar from the cane fields in New South Wales and Queensland. Sugar mills were built all along the north-eastern coast of Australia. Many mills were on rivers where the raw materials from the cane fields were conveyed on barges towed by small paddle tugs, to be crushed before final shipment to the refineries.
The erection of mills, installation of machinery and management of the operations required staff and materials that were in most cases transported by ship. Shipping coal in particular was vital to the operation of the sugar mills.
Vessels for this purpose were not readily available in Australia in the late 19th century and CSR decided to have a ship purpose-built in the UK to suit their specific requirements. Thus in 1873 CSR began managing its own shipping to transport materials and products to and from its sugar mills.
FIONA, a twin screw steamship named after Managing Director Edward Knox's daughter, was built in 1874. With the increase in cane production in Queensland and Fiji in 1892 this course of action was amply justified and other vessels followed. Refineries were built in Melbourne (Yarraville 1874), Sydney (Pyrmont 1878), Auckland (Chelsea 1884), Port Adelaide (Glanville 1891), Brisbane (New Farm 1893) and Perth (Cottesloe 1930). CSR vessels, ranging in size up to 6000 tons were employed carrying sugar and sugar products, including molasses in tanks, between the various mills and refineries. Good accommodation was also provided on all the CSR ocean-going ships for a limited number of passengers, mainly staff on transfer from one mill to another.
The company managed everything from cane punts, sugar lighters, tug boats and ocean-going ships, however it did not create a separate shipping department until 1945. This was done to more effectively build and manage its own ships and profit from collaborating with other Australian companies wanting cargo space en route. In 2008, after several years of spiraling costs and declining productivity, CSR ceased operating as a shipping manager.
In Sydney, the Colonial Sugar Refinery (CSR) refined and manufactured sugar and sugar by-products on the Pyrmont peninsula. The sweet smell of molasses and sugar is burnt into the memories of everyone who lived in the area. From 1875 CSR dominated the northern tip of the suburb. Horse and drays, ships and trains transported CSR goods in and out of the peninsula. The company created work, controlled housing and like most harbour industries in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, regularly polluted the air and water.
CSR first acquired land at Pyrmont in 1878, and eventually owned 31 acres (77 hectares). Houses and streets - such as Jones Street between Bowman Street and the Harbour - disappeared as the company expanded. CSR provided thousands of jobs, some of them unpleasant, dangerous and unhealthy. Products included sugar, golden syrup and molasses from the refinery, industrial alcohol and rum from the distillery, and particle board from the caneite factory.
Operations in Pyrmont were eventually wound down by the early 1990s, and much of the former CSR site is now occupied by the Jacksons Landing residential development.
CSR ships, built and managed by the company since 1874, were a common sight at the Pyrmont docks until the area was redeveloped.
CSR sugar production continues to make up around 60% of the sugar on the Australian domestic market.
Named after the first commercial sugar mill in Queensland (1864) the M.V. ORMISTON was a 16,000 tonne deadweight bulk carrier purpose-built in 1979 by Tsuneishi Ship Building Co. in Japan to carry bulk cargoes of raw sugar from Queensland to CSR's sugar refineries in Brisbane, Sydney (Pyrmont), Melbourne and Fremantle.
Owned by Austocean Pty Ltd., a subsidiary of CSR, the ship was also used to carry 'back cargoes' such as gypsum (used to make plasterboard) from Ceduna and Kangaroo Island in South Australia to CSR/Boral discharge facilities in Melbourne, Sydney and Brisbane. For most of its working life (almost 30 years as an Australian coastal bulk carrier) M.V. ORMISTON was one of only two Australian flagged and Australian crewed dry bulk commodity carriers operating on the Australian coast. CSR sold M.V. ORMISTON in 2007.
SignificanceCSR is a significant and well known Australian company with historical links to the Pacific as well.
The expansion of and diversification in shipping by CSR reflects the history of how industries developed in and around Sydney Habour, how the habour was used for water transport, and the history of Australian coastal shipping.
The decline of the shipping arm of CSR is an important example of the final phases of Sydney Harbour as a working harbour and the decline of Australian registered and crewed coastal shipping. CSR shut down its shipping arm in 2007 after more than 130 years operations.
Australasian United Steam Navigation Company Limited
17 February 1929
Samuel J Hood Studio
1927-1939