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SS NANKIN voyage report - voyage 7
SS NANKIN voyage report - voyage 7

SS NANKIN voyage report - voyage 7

Date7 April 1949- 7 July 1949
Object numberANMS1340[010]
NameVoyage report
MediumPaper
DimensionsOverall: 258 x 202 mm
Copyright© Hilda Farquar-Smith and Robert Dun
ClassificationsEphemera
Credit LineANMM Collection Gift from the family of Burnham Walker Dun
DescriptionTyped voyage report - voyage 7 for SS NANKIN written by the Commander to Messrs Macdonald, Hamilton and co, Managing Agents, Sydney. Written on The Eastern & Australian Steamship Co. Limited. The voyage commenced on 29 January 1949 in Melbourne. The report details the cargo (including livestock), mail, bunkers, passengers, arrival, departure and averages of the voyage from Melbourne to Sydney, Newcastle, Sydney, Manila, Hong Kong, Yokkaichi, Naggya, Shimizu, and Yokohama. It also reports on the stalls for the live stock, working damage that occurred, survey work and maintenance. It is by B W Dun. Also included is a continuation of the report dated June 1949 including the ports: Yokohama, Kobe, Kure, Shanghai, Hong Kong, Manila, Sandakan, Bohihan Is, Tarakan, Rabaul, Samarai, Gamadobo (Milne Bay), Samarai, Brisbane, Newcastle, Sydney. A third part of the report was written on 9 July 1949 continuing the information about the voyage from Sydney to Melbourne, Port Pirie and Port Adelaide. It ends with the averages of the round trip journey. The voyage ended on 7 July 1949. Each part of the report is signed by BW Dun at the end. HistoryBurnham Walker Dun 1905-1992 began his apprenticeship with the Australasian Steam Navigation Company in 1921 when he was just short of his 16th birthday. After four years in the coastal ships of AUSN he gained his Second Mate's certificate in Sydney and joined the Eastern & Australian Steamship Company (E&A) as Fourth Officer on the TANDA. He served 43 years with this Company sailing to ports between Australia and eastern Asia, retiring in 1967. He gained his Master's Certificate in 1929, at the age of 24. In 1942, when he was Chief Officer on the NANKIN, the ship was captured by the German raider THOR. He spent the rest of the war with the surviving crew labouring in Japanese POW camps. He returned to Australia in poor health and spent years trying to get compensation. Although he was an Australian resident employed by an Australian company (managing agents Macdonald Hamilton) the ship was British owned and registered, and he obtained only limited compensation. He went back to sea with E&A in 1946, had his first permanent command in 1947 on the second NANKIN, and served in the company's ships EASTERN, NELLORE, ARAFURA and ARAMAC until he retired. During this time he carried cargo regularly to Japan, where he established friendly relationships with his former captors. During his career he made a number of rescues at sea and survived several severe typhoons. On retirement, he became a Nautical Assessor and took part in marine Courts of Enquiry, including the enquiry into the collapse of the Tasman Bridge, caused by the cargo ship LAKE ILLAWARRA striking one of the bridge's piers. E & A Line actually consisted of four successive companies bearing the same name, Eastern and Australian Steam Ship Company, between 1873 and the early 1980s. It was established to serve routes between Australasia and 'Far Eastern' ports - Singapore, Hong Kong, and Japan, and was originally named Eastern & Australian Mail Steam Company Limited. It only ever had a small fleet of ships but those it had, such as the NELLORE and the NANKIN, were well known. Ownership of E&A Line was involved in other companies in the 20th century, notably the AUSN Company, and from 1946 P&O. Through its history E & A Lines carried cargo and passengers, and was involved in trooping and supply in World War I. In World War II its entire fleet of three of its ships was lost. In the post-war period it operated cargo-passenger ships until 1975 when passenger service was given up and the ships were progressively sold, though in 1983 it continued to staff and operate AJCL containerships. The Eastern & Australian Steamship CompanySignificanceW Olson, 'Lion of the China Sea: a History of the E & A Line', 1976.

G A Hardwick, 'E & A Line - the Eastern and Australian Steam Ship Company Limited', The Log, volume 16, number 1, issue 71, February 1983, pp 3 - 12.

Notes provided by Ian Farquhar-Smith, on file