SS ORONTES with people milling on the wharf
Photographer
Harry Brisbane Williams
(1869 - 1959)
Date1915
Object number00017045
NamePhotograph
MediumSilver gelatin print on paper
DimensionsOverall: 115 x 154 mm
ClassificationsPhotographs
Credit LineANMM Collection Gift from Piers Jones
DescriptionUntitled image by Harry Brisbane Williams depicting a crowd on a wharf watching the passenger ship SS ORONTES which is moored alongside.
HistoryThe Harry Brisbane Williams photographic collection provides an interesting record of a range of activities on Sydney Harbour from the 1890s into the 1920s. An enthusiastic amateur boater and photographer, Williams’ photographs capture a range of subjects – pleasure cruising on his motor launch on the Lane Cove River, yachting on Sydney Harbour, foreshore social activities, surf lifesaving, cargo ships, battle cruisers of the United States fleet, model yachting and the shipbuilding industry. In particular, they are a wonderful personal record of the new phenomenon of leisure motor boating in the early twentieth century. He also photographed a range of ship building activities, dry docks, slip ways and waterfront construction.
SS ORONTES was a 9,028 ton Royal Mail steamer built in 1902 at Clyde, Scotland and managed by the Orient Line. The ship was designed specifically for the Australian mail and passenger service. It could accommodate 320 first class and 320 third class passengers. Its maiden voyage left from Tilbury, Britain on 24 October 1902 for Sydney, Australia travelling via the Suez Canal. The ship became popular with passengers and conducted numerous trips to Australia for 14 years until it was requisitioned in 1916 for service in World War I as a troopship. For a short period after 1921 the vessel was renamed BRITISH TRADE and used as an exhibition ship. In 1922 it once again came under the management of the Orient Line who renamed it ORONTES and placed the vessel back on the Australian passenger trade route until 1926 when it was scrapped.