Skip to main content
Plan to lay out bag while in TINGIRA
Plan to lay out bag while in TINGIRA

Plan to lay out bag while in TINGIRA

Date1920-1929
Object numberANMS0831[021]
NamePlan
MediumInk on paper
DimensionsOverall: 203 x 124 mm
ClassificationsEphemera
Credit LineANMM Collection Gift from Margaret Kiley-Balas
DescriptionThis plan was issued to John Berchmans Kiley while he trained aboard HMAS TINGIRA. The small printed card illustrates how the boy sailors should lay out their bag. It specifies the location of items of clothing, ditty box, soap bag and housewife, as well as shoes, towels and caps. Diagonally stamped across the card is 'J. Kiley' in dark ink.HistoryJohn Berchmans Kiley was born on 29 January 1910 and joined the Royal Australian Navy in 1925. He began his naval service on HMAS TINGIRA, a ship for boy sailors moored at Rose Bay in Sydney, where he trained for 15 months. He went on to join HMAS SYDNEY and travelled to England, returning home on HMAS AUSTRALIA. Kiley also served in HMAS MELBOURNE, and undertook four years of training at HMAS CERBERUS studying a range of gunnery courses. Kiley reached the rank of Leading Seaman, and to his great disappointment was invalidated out of the navy around 1930 due to respiratory illness. TINGIRA, an Aboriginal word for open sea, was originally the clipper ship SOBRAON built by Alexander Hall of Aberdeen and launched in 1866. In 1891 the NSW Government purchased SOBRAON to replace the VERNON - a floating reformatory for boys. SOBRAON underwent a series of modifications and became an Industrial School Ship, or Nautical School Ship, for underprivileged boys. In 1911 the New South Wales Government decided to dispose of the Nautical type of reform in favour of a land based system. In 1911 the SOBRAON was purchased by the Commonwealth of Australia, and on 25 April 1912 HMAS TINGIRA was commissioned as the first naval training ship in the Royal Australian Navy. It became the training ship to thousands of young boys who chose the Navy as a career under the Department of the Navy’s boy enlistment scheme. The first intake of boys took place between 1 and 28 June 1912, and at the date of HMAS TINGIRA’s decommissioning in 1927, some 3,168 young boys had had their initial training on board. SignificanceThis plan card is a fascinating record of the lives of boy sailors on the naval training ship HMAS TINGIRA. It provides insight into the experiences and expectations of over 3,000 young boys who trained on the ship. It also enriches our understanding John Berchmans Kiley, who went on to become a Leading Seaman in the Royal Australian Navy.