Queensland Maritime Museum

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Queensland Maritime Museum
Established 1971
Location Brisbane, Australia
Visitor figures 35,000 visitors per annum[1]
Director Ian Jempson
Website Queensland Maritime Museum
HMAS Diamantina K-377.
HMAS Diamantina K-377.

The Queensland Maritime Museum is located on the southern bank of the Brisbane River just south of the South Bank Parklands precinct of Brisbane, and close to the Goodwill Bridge.

The museum was founded in 1971 and contains a two level exhibition building presenting historic sailing ship models together with merchant shipping from early cargo ships to modern container ships, tankers and cruise liners. It is housed in the building used for the “Pavilion of Promise” at Expo 88, and the South Brisbane Dry Dock which was built in the 1870s and was 313 feet (95 m) long and 60 feet (18 m) wide. In 1887 the dock was extended to 430 feet (131 m) due to the increasing size of vessels.[1]

Information is also provided about some of the 1,500 plus shipwrecks that have occurred along the Queensland coast including the Great Barrier Reef.

Contents

[edit] Vessels

The 121 feet (37 m)[2] steam tug Forceful, the only remaining working coal-fired steam tug in Queensland, is berthed at the Museum wharf and there are regular sailings down the Brisbane River. It was built in 1925 by Alex Stephen & Son Ltd., Glasgow, Scotland. In 1941 it was chartered by the government for service in the Middle East, but did not sale because Japan entered World War II. She was then requisitioned by the Royal Australian Navy and became known as HMAS Forceful. She was armed with a 20mm Oerlikon Machine Gun and a .303" Vickers Machine Gun[3]

The HMAS Diamantina (a River Class Frigate) is in the South Brisbane Dry Dock (Graving Dock), and on board visitors can view the Museum's collection of Australian Naval memorabilia.

Another WW2 vessel located at the Museum is the Torres Strait pearling lugger "Penguin" which was used by the Americans during WW2, along with the dinghy from General Douglas MacArthur's motor Yacht "Shangri-La".[4]

Also visible is the Light Ship Carpentaria.

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b Queensland Maritime Museum. Retrieved on 2007-08-19.
  2. ^ Forceful specs
  3. ^ Tug HMAS Forceful. Peter Dunn's Australia at War. Retrieved on 2007-08-19.
  4. ^ Queensland Maritime Museum. Peter Dunn's Australia at War. Retrieved on 2007-08-19.

[edit] Gallery

[edit] External links

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