*JANUARY 1947 - A "CULTURAL ICON" (peeping out!) MANLY BEACH
It may seem bizarre, but here I am with my Dad, going to the beach! Yes
that was the way we and most others dressed for a casual day out! Did
you spot the "Cultural Icon "peeping out? Take a close look at my beach
bucket - made in good sturdy tinware - no plastics then. (There was
Bakelite - widely used in the ever more popular mantel radios, but it
was brittle and far from suitable for any knockabout purposes.) On the
bucket you will see the reproduction of the bow of R.M.S. Queen Mary
whose image wrapped around the bucket - what more could a boy want!
"The
beach", for us almost invariably meant Manly -"7 Miles from Sydney and
1,000 miles from care!"as the signs inside the stately, steam powered
ferries used to say. I loved the trip! The ferries themselves were
impressive to me with beach names like "Barrenjoey", "Dee Why", "North
Head"and the latest and greatest was "South Steyne"- stories of her
sailing out from England ( where else!) were listened to in awe,
including the tales of the seating having been burnt when fuel ran
low!!These steam ferries had engine rooms that were visible from the
passenger decks - looking down onto the tops of the cylinders with
glimpses of the great piston rods and the cranks of the driveshaft.
Scent of steam, oil, grease, sounds of the engineroom telegraph bell,
the hiss of steam and the mechanical throb of the thrusting pistons and
turning cranks were all come together most powerfully and enchantingly
for this little boy.
The scent of the sea water at the Quay was complemented by the salt on the "Smiths Crisps" which were an inevitable complement to the journey.I can taste them now. Calls of "Stand Clear!"and the boarding ramps were withdrawn, the faces of disappointed late arrivers littered the wharf.The engineroom telegraph gave its double ring and gracefully we began to move away as the last of the mooring ropes were being coiled down. Generally we stayed on the Starboard or right side, the better to see the naval vessels at Garden Island Dockyard which is still the largest Naval Dockyard in the Southern Hemisphere, and had and still has*, the largest heavy lift crane in the Southern Hemisphere.
As we turned out of Circular Quay and headed East down the Harbour we passed on our right the red brick pile of Fort Macquarie which, its name not withstanding, was a large tram depot.( Someone later had the idea that this would make a fine site for an Opera House....and you know the rest!)
For all my later and continuing interest in the Navy and Naval Vessels, it is a cruel truth that I have no memory at all of the many USN, RAN and even RN ships of all sizes that I must have seen there. However I have a very clear memory of the Hospital Ship "MANUNDA" beautifully white with a green band around her hull and emblazoned with the Red Cross on her sides, passing our ferry on her way back to the war. I can still recall the appalled reaction of my parents when, having heard that "MANUNDA"was her name I, very pleased with my rhyme announced "The "MANUNDA"went under"!.Perhaps it was this audience reaction that led to my disinterest in poetry for very many years.
We swept past the homes of the rich and famous and the next point of interest was the Rose Bay Flying Boat Base - the Flying Boats themselves were sometimes to be seen at their moorings, and joy of joys, very occasionally taking off or landing - quite a show!
A
gentle turn to Port (left) around Bradley's Head where I was taught to
observe the masthead of HMAS SYDNEY ( I ) and reminded that "the SYDNEY
sank the EMDEN"in WW I. No-one mentioned the too-painful mystery of the
loss of HMAS SYDNEY ( II ) in WW II, still unexplained at that time.
Then
, by degrees we began to feel the influence of the sea as we ran by the
Heads. At times this was almost a non event - a mere tummy tickle, but,
at other times the effect could be challenging - everyone looking for a
handhold and the occasional person being ill. As the ferry headed some
of the heavier waves, water would spray on board , what fun!Sometimes it
was necessary to cancel the services due to rough seas.
But "all good things must come to an end"and all too soon we were past the Heads and gliding into Manly wharf.Then we walked off down the Corso past the intriguing string of Milk Bars, Fish and Chip shops etc. etc. to the Promenade which gave onto the beach backed by the tall and pleasant Norfolk Island Pines. Looking up to the right we saw the imposing sandstone bulk of St.Patrick's Seminary. There are several points of departure from this point - but I shall take them up on later occasions.
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