Showing 34 items
matching mystery ship
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Wangaratta RSL Sub Branch
Poster - Framed Poster, HMAS Sydney, Unknown
The striking image on the poster shows men crowded on the deck after the successful action against the Italian Cruiser Bartolomeo Colleoni on 19 July 1940. On 19 November 1941, while returning from convoy duty in Java, HMAS Sydney was engaged by the German armed merchant cruiser Kormoran 130 miles off the West Australian coastline. The faces of many of the 645 servicemen who died in Australia’s greatest naval tragedy feature on this special poster produced to commemorate the anniversary of the loss of the HMAS Sydney. For more than six decades the location of the Sydney had remained a mystery until the wreckages of both HMAS Sydney and the German Armed Merchant Cruiser Kormoran were discovered around 112 nautical miles off Steep Point, Western Australia. The sinking of the Sydney and the loss of all her crew in the Second World War is the single greatest naval tragedy Australia has experienced in Australian waters.Black plastic frame with grey mount containing poster/photograph of Navy crew on ship and in foreground. top left corner - Lest We Forget Bottom of print - HMAS SYDNEY 19 November, 1941 hmas sydney, ww2, 19/11/1941, kormoran, ran -
Lakes Entrance Historical Society
Book, Loney Jack, Wreck 1891 and other Maritime Memories, 1992
Full descriptions of the wrecks of the 'W B Godfrey', 'Joseph H Scammell', 'Craiburn', 'Gambier' and 'Fiji' on the Victorian coast in 1891. Also many other maritime stories and mysteries from the author's research collection. Indexed. Illustrated with photographs.ships and shipping, shipwrecks -
Bendigo Military Museum
Book - MARITIME, WW2, David L Mearns, THE SEARCH FOR THE SYDNEY, 2009
From the front dust cover; "The Search for the / SYDNEY/ HOW AUSTRALIA'S GREATEST MARITIME MYSTERY WAS SOLVED". See original owner details Cat. No. 9917.Hardcover book with dust cover. Hardcover, cardboard, aquamarine colour buckram, with silver colour print on front and spine. Dust cover - aquamarine colour paper with silver, gold and white colour print on front, spine and back. Illustrated front and back, naval shipwreck and naval ship. The dust cover unfolds to show detailed diagrams of H.M.A.S. SYDNEY for the Wallstead Shipyard in beige and brown colours. 264 pages - cut, plain, white colour paper. illustrated black and white and colour photographs. publication, book, hmas sydney, ww2 -
Flagstaff Hill Maritime Museum and Village
Article - Reward Poster - Portuguese Caravel, 1992
... of its relationship to an ongoing mystery (the Mahogany Ship ...The mystery of the Portuguese Caravel, commonly known as the ‘Mahogany Ship’ is today regarded as legend and refers to an ancient wreck that is said to lie beneath the sand between Warrnambool and Port Fairy. Its location is currently unknown, but many people have searched for it through the years since the first reported sighting of an unidentified wreck in 1836. For over a century this mystery has fascinated Australians because the existence of such a vessel could throw light on the earliest phase of exploration of Eastern Australia by Europeans. The interest in the mystery was high enough for the Victorian Government to offer a reward in 1992 which was subsequently withdrawn a year later with no monies being paid.This item is historically significant because of its relationship to an ongoing mystery (the Mahogany Ship) that may throw light on the early exploration of Australia. The offering of a reward, 150+years after the first recorded sighting, by the Victorian Government points to the ongoing fascination with this subject to the Victorian people.A reward poster printed on calico. Even though the poster was created in 1992 it follows the regular structure of a reward poster from earlier times; the word REWARD in large print at the top, the amount $250,000 in bold type and an imagined drawing of the missing Portuguese Caravel.Printed text: REWARD Notice is hereby given that the Government of Victoria is offering a REWARD of $250,000 for the DISCOVERY of an international invader that has eluded authorities for more than 400 years. Believed to be a PORTUGUESE CARAVEL, this traveller is thought to be hiding somewhere along the world's most scenic coastal drive- Victoria's Great Ocean Road. Positive sightings could rewrite the HISTORY OF AUSTRALIA. More than 20 unconfirmed sightings have been reported since 1836. Description: Approx. 26 metres long, 12 metres wide, 20 metres in height, dark brown in colour. BOUNTY HUNTERS AND INTERESTED PARTIES SHOULD APPLY TO: FLAGSTAFF HILL MARITIME MUSEUM, PO BOX 574 WARRNAMBOOL 3280 OR TOURISM MANAGER, DEPARTMENT OF CONSERVATION & ENVIRONMENT, 8TH FLOOR 250 VICTORIA PARADE, EAST MELBOURNE 3002 BY ORDER OF THE VICTORIAN MINISTER FOR TOURISM. Printed image: back view of a Caravel in full sail flagstaff hill maritime museum and village, great ocean road, shipwreck coast, warrnambool, port fairy, portuguese caravel, mahogany ship, reward poster, victorian government