RMS NIAGARA and SS BAWEAN
Artist
Hallett Robertson Bartlett
(Australian, 1906 - 1989)
Date1919 - 1922
Object number00027488
NamePainting
MediumWatercolour on paper
DimensionsOverall: 395 x 575 mm, 0.05 kg
Copyright© Hallett Robertson Bartlett
ClassificationsArt
Credit LineANMM Collection Gift from Geoffrey Martin
DescriptionWatercolour by Hallett Robertson Bartlett depicting the RMS NIAGARA at sea and on the reverse, a watercolour depicting the SS BAWEAN of the Stoomy Maats Nederland Line near Cremorne Point, Sydney Harbour.
These watercolours were painted by Hallett Bartlett when a teenager (thirteen years old to sixteen years old) and were originally part of a watercolour album. See 00027420 - 00027528.HistoryRMS NIAGARA was an ocean liner launched on 17 August 1912 and used for transporting passengers and mail on the trans- Pacific trade route. It was built by John Brown & Company, Clydebank and owned by the Union Steam Ship Company and had accommodation for 590 passengers – 250 first class, 200 cabin class and 140 in third class. The liner became well known for its reliability and quality of facilities for its passengers, even featuring a new ventilation system, a precursor to modern air conditioning. It was hailed by the company as their 'perfect ship'.
On the morning of 19 June 1940, just out of Auckland on its way to Suva, the NIAGARA struck a mine and sunk. It is recorded that the passengers and crew were evacuated within 30 minutes and there was no loss of life, but the cargo on board went down with the ship. This included a secret load of nearly 300 boxes of gold on its way to the United States, payment by Britain for munitions. The mine had been one of many laid by the Germans in an attempt to disrupt shipping through the Pacific and block access to Auckland.
It took more than six months for salvage operations to get under way. Once the NIAGARA was located at an estimated depth of 438 feet, the effort of recovering the gold got under way. Tough environmental conditions, the depth of the wreck, equipment limitations and the threat of further mines, saw nine months pass before the first gold was brought to the surface. Over two months the small salvage team managed to recoup most of the gold, an effort which saw members of the team dive an estimated 300 times wearing a diving bell.
SignificanceKnown as "Queen of the Pacific" the NIAGARA was a popular liner for over 20 years, transporting thousands of passengers from Sydney to Vancouver - via Auckland, Suva and Honolulu.
Hallett Robertson Bartlett
1919 - 1922