PS Pevensey is a historic paddle steamer, with its original steam engine, in the fleet of steamers at Echuca Wharf, Victoria, Australia. Built in 1911, it traded on the Murray River until about 1958. In 1973 it was brought by Echuca for restoration and now operates as a tourist boat.

PS Pevensey (2021)
History
Australia
NamePevensey
Port of registryMelbourne, Victoria[1]
RouteRiver Murray, Australia
BuilderPermewan Wright & Co. Ltd.
Laid down1911
HomeportEchuca, Victoria
Identification120770
StatusTourist vessel
General characteristics
Class and typePaddle steamer
Tonnage130 grt
Length111.6 ft (34 m)
Beam23.0 ft (7 m)
Depth6.9 ft (2 m)
PropulsionSide-wheel paddle steamer
NotesRegistered Heritage Vessel[2]

Particulars

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Pevensey was of composite construction, with timber on iron frames, built at the Moama slipway in 1911 by Permewan, Wright & Co. Ltd. The hull is 111.6 ft (34 m) in length, with a 23.0-foot (7 m) beam and 6.9 ft (2 m) in depth, was measured at 130 grt.[3] It still has its original steam engine and boiler, built by Marshall, Sons & Co. of Gainsborough, England. It is a 20 nhp high-pressure, two-cylinder engine, No 55721, which gives Pevensey a speed of 8 knots (9.2 mph; 15 km/h).[3][4]

History

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The PS Pevensey with covered load of timber (c. 1939)
 
Ada barge (Moama Slipway – 2022)

Pevensey began life in 1910 as a barge named Mascotte, but was rebuilt as a paddle steamer within twelve months.[5] The completed steamer was named after a sheep property on the Murrumbidgee River called Pevensey Station.[4] It was first operated by its builder and collected bales of wool from sheep stations and brought them to the Echuca wharf. From the wharf, it was loaded onto trains and taken to Melbourne for export overseas. Pevensey, with a cargo capacity of 120 tons, could carry 815 bales of wool and a total of 2,000 bales when barges were towed along behind.[4] Pevensey's barge, also composite built, was called Ada, and is also preserved at Echuca.[6]

Pevensey was sold to Murray Shipping Ltd in July 1919. In October 1932 it suffered a major fire at Koraleigh Landing, near Swan Hill, but returned to service in 1935 after rebuild at Morgan, South Australia, running between there and Mildura. After the river trade ended around 1958, Pevensey was tied up at Mildura where it was sunk by vandals in 1967, though later raised. In 1968, Pevensey was purchased by the Collins brothers (of Mildura) with intention of use as a tourist attractions. The vessel was refloated and moored at Gol Gol; however, the intentions were never carried out. The Collins brothers later sold the paddle steamer to the Mildura City Council, with no further restoration being completed.[7] In 1973 the steamer was purchased by Echuca City Council for $20,000 and towed there for restoration (leaving Mildura on 22 July 1973), with assistance of the Victorian Government.[3][7] PS Pevensey arrived in Echuca on 5 August 1973, and was slipped in December 1974 (however, restoration work was delayed by several major floods until 1976). Pevensey was launched back into the Murray River on 29 October 1976.[7]

 
Pevensey with steam up at Echuca

Pevensey starred in the role of the fictional PS Philadelphia in the Australian television mini-series All the Rivers Run, made in Echuca in 1982–1983, alongside fellow Echuca steamer Emmylou.[4]

The Pevensey's composite barge, Ada (built in 1899), was purchased by the Port of Echuca in 1974. In an preservation effort, the 52-tonne barge was removed from the Murray River in August 2012 (at a cost of $33,000), and now resides towards the rear of the Moama slipway. The current condition of the barge is described as "poor", with "no funds available, nor plans in place, to restore the Ada barge".[8]

References

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  1. ^ "P.S. Pevensey in Morgan area". State Library of South Australia. 10 May 2001. Retrieved 14 June 2021.
  2. ^ "PS Pevensey". Echuca Historical Society. Retrieved 14 June 2021.
  3. ^ a b c Parsons, Ronald (1996). Ships of the Inland Rivers (3rd revised ed.). Gumeracha, South Australia: Gould Books. p. 116. ISBN 0-947284-34-6.
  4. ^ a b c d "P.S. Pevensey". Echuca Paddlesteamers. Archived from the original on 22 October 2020. Retrieved 22 May 2012.
  5. ^ "PS Pevensey". Australian National Maritime Museum. Retrieved 14 June 2021.
  6. ^ "A black and white photograph, Approx.1980s". Victorian Collections. Archived from the original on 23 September 2020.
  7. ^ a b c Plowman, Peter. Murray Darling Paddleboats. Dural Delivery Centre: Rosenberg Publishing Pty Ltd. p. 61. ISBN 1877058378.
  8. ^ Lamb, Jessica (14 June 2017). "Ada barge needs fixing but with what money?". PressReader. The Riverine Herald. Retrieved 14 June 2021.
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