Uribes (1868-1942)


Summary:

Official number: 84150

Where built: Stockton-on-Tees, Scotland

Registered: Fremantle, Western Australia (1934)

Rig type: auxiliary schooner

Hull: iron

Tonnage: 117.9 gross, 81.4 nett

Length: 37 metres (104.3 feet)

Breadth: 7.3 metres (24.1 feet)

Depth: 2 metres (6.6 feet)

Port from: Thomson Bay

Port to: Fremantle

Date lost: June/July 1942

Location: Phillip Rock, Rottnest Island

Chart number: DMH 001

GPS position:

· Latitude 32° 00.2100 ' S

· Longitude 115° 33.3500 ' E

Finder: D. Robinson (found 1975, reported 1980)

Protection: Historic Shipwrecks Act 1976 (gazetted 1982)

MA file number: 3/81

ASD number: WA 377

Significance criteria: 1, 4, 5, 6

  

Uribes is one of the most accessible sites .


The vessel

Over the period of its lifetime Uribes was registered at a number of different ports. It was clinker-built and rigged as a barque with one bulkhead, three masts and elliptical stern. The shipbuilders were M. Pearse and Company and it was registered in Liverpool to the De Uribe family of Spain. After various changes in ownership the vessel was re-registered in Port Adelaide, South Australia in 1883 and it was reported that it was de-rigged and operated as a lighter with a short mast. In 1934 the new owners of the ship cut down to between its decks and rebuilt it as a three masted schooner, with petrol engine and crew accommodation. The kerosene-petrol engine was British built, made in 1929 with six cylinders and capable of speeds of 4.5 knots and operated at 75 BHP. By 16 July 1934 the vessel had been sold to Cossack Lightering and Trade, and was re-registered in Western Australia (McKenna, 1988:8).

 

The wreck event was described in information given by an army staff officer at Rottnest at the time of the vessel's loss, Mr Gordon Humphries of Tropical Traders and Patersons of Fremantle, (McKenna, 1988:9).

 

The wreck event

In either June or July 1942 the Uribes, laden with one hundred and fifty six inch shells, stores and a couple of motor vehicles, arrived at Thomson Bay jetty from Fremantle, but owing to a northerly breeze could not remain at the jetty and her master decided to return to Fremantle. Near Phillip Rock the ship's motors cut out and it was found that the anchors would not hold. The ship drifted in a southerly direction and struck a reef about 300 yards from the Natural Jetty. She was holed and sank. She quickly filled with sand to deck level. The motor vehicles and some of the stores were salvaged but owing to the sand it was found impossible to remove any of the shells. She was surveyed as unfit for salvage and remains where she foundered, presumably with the six inch shells still in her .

(RAN area archives officer n.d., quoted in McKenna, 1988:9)

Site location

The wreck is located 100 metres west of Natural Jetty, just off the beach in front, hard up against the reef.

Site description

The site lies on sand bottom in 2­3 metres of water and the gunwales of the port side break the surface at low tide. The wreck lies hard up against the reef on the shore line and is subject to seasonal scouring which occasionally clears the hull to the bilges. The hull appears relatively stable with the bows intact below the deck line while the rest of the hull except the stern is intact from below the turn of the bilge. With seasonal scouring the diesel engines and other machinery become visible, though the small deck winch, and the remains of the windlass are visible at all times (McCarthy, 1980d:2).

Statement of significance

Archaeological

Through the examination of the hull structure significant elements in the changing design of a trading vessel could be examined. Aspects on industrial and military history, and archaeology can be explored through the machinery and shells still left on board.

References

Cockram, C., 1988a, Isometric drawing of the Uribes, Maritime Archaeological Association of Western Australia Reports, 1987-1988.


McCarthy, M., 1980d, Uribes, unpub. Wreck Inspection Report, Department of Maritime Archaeology, Western Australian Maritime Museum, No. 60.


McKenna, R., 1988, History of the Uribes, wrecked off Rottnest, Maritime Archaeological Association Reports, 1987-1988.


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