Voyage from Tilbury to Sydney on SS STRATHMORE
Date1953-1956
Object numberANMS1135[005]
NamePhotograph album
MediumPhotographic prints on paper.
DimensionsOverall: 242 x 192 mm
Copyright© Carolyn Smith
ClassificationsPhotographs
Credit LineANMM Collection Gift from Carolyn Smith
DescriptionSouvenir of the migration of John and Gladys Gill from Buxton in England to Sydney, Australia, in 1956 on board SS STRATHMORE. It includes photographs taken by the couple and postcards collected at the various ports of call; Port Said and Suez Canal in Egypt, Aden in Yemen, Bombay in India, Colombo in Sri Lanka, Perth and Melbourne in Australia.It also includes photographs of passengers on board the ship and of the ship itself.HistoryJohn Vivian Gill (1919-1994) and his wife Gladys Patricia Gill (nee Parker) (1924-1994) migrated from Buxton, England to Sydney, Australia in March 1956 under the Assisted Passage Migration Scheme. They were accompanied by John's mother Mrs E Gill, sister Mrs J Griffin, 11 year old nephew Teddy and brother-in-law Mr T E Parker. The family was joining John's father Frederick John Gill in Sydney, where John believed "the prospects are better and the climate a good deal more favourable."
The family sailed from Tilbury on the P&O liner STRATHMORE on 30 March 1956. STRATHMORE was launched on 4 April 1935, with accommodation for 445 first and 665 tourist class passengers and air conditioning in the first class dining room - a first for a P&O vessel. It departed Tilbury on its maiden voyage to Bombay and Australia on 26 October 1935, setting a new record for the run to Bombay.
STRATHMORE was requisitioned as a troopship during World War II. It was involved in the North African landings and was then used to repatriate troops after the war. In 1948 STRATHMORE was refitted in Newcastle to accommodate 497 first and 487 tourist class passengers. In the early 1960s, as demand for assisted migrant passages declined, it was converted to a one-class ship for 1,200 passengers.
STRATHMORE completed its final voyage to Australia in 1963 and was then sold to Greek ship owner John S Latsis. It was renamed MARIANNA LATSI and used to transport pilgrims to Jeddah in Saudi Arabia, before being broken up in Italy in 1969.SignificanceThe collection relates to a significant period in Australian immigration history, when the Australian Government assisted more than one million Britons to emigrate after World War II in a bid to 'populate or perish.'
Frederick Garner Wilkinson
1924
Frederick Garner Wilkinson
1924