- The Bluebell Collision
The sinking of the Newcastle harbour
ferry "Bluebell" after colliding with the coastalfreighter "Waraneen" in1934 was one of the worst maritime tragedies in Newcastle, Australia during the 20th Century.Collision
Carrying between 40 and 50 passengers, the Stockton-bound ferry came into a broadside collision with the "Waraneen" and sank half way across the
Hunter River shortly after 10:45pm on the night of August 9, 1934. Although it was first thought that all passengers had been saved, it was discovered the following morning that three passengers were still unaccounted for.The ferry had jammed against the side of the freighter for a period of almost a minute before it began to sink. The brief interval allowed sufficient time for six passengers on the upper deck to scramble in to the side of the "Waraneen", while the remainder jumped headlong into the water.
People standing on the Newcastle
wharf were unable to discern exactly what was happening in the middle of the harbour, but could hear terrified cries of women and children on board the ferry before it sank, and afterwards as they struggled frantically in the water.Rescue
The pilot steamer "Birubi", which was moving past the scene at the time of the sinking, lowered a boat and picked up two loads of people while others were rescued by the Water Police launch.
Fifteen people were treated at the Newcastle Hospital, two were admitted suffering severely from the effects of immersion. The
propeller s of the steamer "Wailhemo", heading out to sea the following morning, churned the water which broke up the wreckage and released the bodies of two women. A third missing woman who was seen on board the ferry by a neighbour was considered the only other victim of the sinking.Postscript
The
rudder of the sunken ferry was recovered by two fishermen in the Hunter River during 1974 and is now kept in the Newcastle Maritime Museum at Honeysuckle.The last survivor of the "Bluebell", Mr. Ed Felton, died two-weeks shy of the seventieth-anniversary of the sinking in 2004.
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