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Yacht, possibly the first HOANA, sailing with the Sydney Amateur Sailing Club, Sydney Harbour
Yacht, possibly the first HOANA, sailing with the Sydney Amateur Sailing Club, Sydney Harbour

Yacht, possibly the first HOANA, sailing with the Sydney Amateur Sailing Club, Sydney Harbour

Photographer (Australian, 1877 - 1951)
Datec 1925
Object number00013711
NameGlass plate negative
MediumEmulsion on glass
DimensionsOverall: 120 x 164 mm, 2 mm, 0.05 kg
ClassificationsPhotographs
Credit LineANMM Collection Gift from the Royal Sydney Yacht Squadron
Description That this vessel is likely to be the first HOANA is due to the position of the sail number. While both the first and then the second HOANA carried the number 'A5' at SASC in the 1920s and 1930s, the first HOANA had the number right at the top of the mainsail as on this photo, however the second HOANA had the number further down the sail.HistoryThe vessel HOANA was built in 1925 and raced with the Sydney Amateur Sailing Club (SASC) for a short period before being wrecked in a storm. The owner commissioned a new, almost identical yacht with the same name and continued to race this second HOANA with SASC. Meanwhile the wreck was bought and salvaged by HOANA's original builders and the vessel was rebuilt (but not raced) under the same name. In the 1940s the first HOANA changed hands and returned to the SASC while the second HOANA was sold and taken to Queensland. It is thought that the second HOANA was wrecked soon after and no longer exists. The original HOANA stayed in Sydney aside from one circumnavigation of the world and, in almost original condition, it is now on the Australian Register of Historic Vessels. Photographer William James Hall was born in Woolloomooloo, Sydney on 11 May 1877. His Australian-born mother, Caroline Asimus, married William Frederick Hall, a butcher from England, in 1883. William Hall senior had had a variety of occupations, including fingerprint expert at Long Bay gaol, before he established a photographic studio in in 1890 in Phillip Street, Sydney. William James Hall joined his father in the photographic business from a young age and took over its operations in 1902. In August 1901 William James Hall married Alice Rosina Hopson in Bowral, and in 1904 he set up Hall & Co, a photographic business at 44 Hunter Street, Sydney. William James Hall developed a keen interest in sailing and sailing craft and became a fixture on Sydney Harbour, photographing the weekend sailors and yachts. Between the late 1890s and the 1930s William James Hall created an extensive collection of maritime photography that provides an important pictorial record of recreational boating in Sydney Harbour. His images document the great variety of activities and technologies that were an integral part of Sydney’s sailing community, from the large racing and cruising yachts, to the jostling skiffs and even the new phenomenon of the early twentieth century – motor boats. The collection also includes images of the many spectators and crowds who followed the sailing races. Each Monday morning in his shop window, Hall would display the photographs he had taken of the weekend races. The shopfront became a part of Sydney yachting life as people filed past, vying to view the images and dissect the weekend’s activities. William James Hall was not himself a sailor, and mainly used a motor launch to mingle and chase the yachts of the harbour as he worked. However Hall’s interest in photography was not limited to the subject of sailing and he came to cover a wide variety of themes such as landscapes, portraiture, aerial photography, military work and livestock. He came to be known as one of the best photographers of animals and was in great demand at Royal Sydney Show time. His work was widely published in rural industry journals and stud stock advertisements and from July 1928 to December 1929 he made an extended tour of South Africa to photograph merino studs. Survived by his second wife, Edith Hannah Gilkes, William James Hall died on 26 August 1951 at St Luke’s Hospital, Darlinghurst. A number of photographic studios were established by William F Hall and William J Hall. Known at different times as Hall studio, Hall & Co, W F Hall and Hall W the businesses were located variously at 7 Castlereagh Street, 39, 44 and 70 Hunter Street, 91 Phillip Street and 21 Blight Street in Sydney city from 1890 onwards. SignificanceThe Hall photographic collection provides an important pictorial record of recreational boating in Sydney Harbour from the 1890s to the 1930s. The collection documents the lively sailing scene in Sydney during this period and features images of vessels ranging from large racing and cruising yachts to the great array of skiffs and the emerging technologies of motorboats. Images of the many spectators and crowds who supported and followed the sailing races are also included in this visual record.