HISTORY OF FLYING BOATS IN ROSE BAY
You don't see them much nowadays - hardly any at all in fact.
Lasting little more than 12 years, the golden age of the flying
boat in Australian aviation history was as brief as it was
dramatic. Luxurious Empire Class flying boats that were designed to
open international air routes and strengthen ties within the
British Empire became targets of Japanese attacks on Australian
soil during the World War II. Flying boats set records, suffered
tragedy and played a crucial role in keeping Australia connected
with the outside world. Following the war, however, the development
of longer-range land-based aircraft signaled a slow demise in the
role of the flying boat in commercial aviation.
On a sunny day a small white seaplane comes home to roost on the
peaceful waters of Rose Bay, Sydney Harbour. Gliding gracefully
over the surface, the single-engined Beaver eventually touches the
water, leaving a trail of white foam and noise, until finally
coming to rest. A lone seabird riding on waters that were once home
to a large flock of mechanical pelicans.
None of the truly wonderful Empire Class flying boats nor hardy
Catalinas that were once native to Rose Bay remain here. A small
commemorative plaque is all that exists to remind passers by of a
bygone era in aquatic aviation. It was a time when trans-oceanic
flight was a novelty. A time when flying boats were symbols of
modernity and luxury; when international travel was not simply a
matter of getting from point A to point B, but an adventure.
Flying boats were primarily designed to carry first-class air
mail. However, they subsequently characterised romance and
adventure. In the 1930s, when international aviation was in its
infancy, there were only a limited number of airfields capable of
coping with larger aircraft. Added to this was the rather frequent
need to stop for refueling on longer journeys - the average flight
from Australia to England at the time involved some 31 stops - and
the navigational difficulties of flying over open water. An
aircraft, which could land wherever there was a large enough patch
of calm water and a mooring buoy, presented obvious
advantages.
In July 1938, two C Class Empire flying boats arrived in Sydney.
Only a month later, the first of these set out for Singapore via
Brisbane, Gladstone, Townsville (where it stopped for the night),
across the Cape York Peninsula, to Karumba, Groote Eyelandt and on
to Darwin. The aircraft then crossed the Timor Sea, flying to
Kupang, Bima, Surabaya and Jakarta, before finally arriving in
Singapore. There, the service was taken over by British Imperial
Airlines, who flew the rest of the route to London via India, the
Middle East and Egypt.
The service was started at the behest of the British Government,
who was keen to launch the Empire Airmail Scheme, in which all post
would be transported by air to every corner of the empire with no
surcharge. It was a grand idea that was never to eventuate.
Favoured by Qantas, the introduction of the flying boats
dramatically strengthened Australia's aerial links with the wider
world, consolidating a commercial air route originating in Sydney
Harbour that had been in operation for barely four years.
By today's standards as well as of the time, they were luxurious.
The flying boats carried 15 passengers from Sydney Harbour and a
crew of five, as well as 3000 pounds of mail and cargo. There was
only one class: first. For slightly more than the average annual
wage of the time, passengers experienced interiors so spacious that
a game of minigolf or quoits aloft was not out of the question.
Cabins could also be converted into sleeping accommodation at
night, in much the same way as on a rail journey.


Fysh, one of the founding members of Qantas and managing
director at the time was quoted as saying: "Getting up out of his
chair, a passenger could walk about and, if he had been seated in
the main cabin, stroll along to the smoking cabin for a smoke,
stopping on the way at the promenade deck with its high handrail
and windows at eye level to gaze at the world of cloud and sky
outside. Beautiful views from the flying boat could be seen from
Sydney Harbour to Singapore"
Lumbering along at a stately 160 miles per hour, the flying boats
reduced the time taken to travel from Sydney to England by air to
an unbelievable nine days. Significantly faster than a sea journey
and three days faster (and oh so much more comfortable) than the
much smaller, land-based DH86 biplanes they had replaced. Although
fast and efficient, the journey gave passengers an experience that
has wholly vanished from international air travel today. A
leisurely taste of exotic lands from the comfort of a flying palace
that, although part owned by an Australian company, was most
definitely British.
But it was all short-lived. With the onset of the World War II,
the luxury of sleeping accommodation, cabin crew and all other
trappings were stripped from the aircraft to be replaced by guns
and bomb racks. The size and versatility that had made these
aircraft so attractive in peacetime were to make the same craft
indispensable in wartime. For although during the first three years
of the war, from 1939 -1942, the empire route from Sydney to London
via Singapore remained in operation; the cargo of mail that had
been routinely carried was gradually supplanted with loads of
ammunition. Important wealthy passengers who had once been carried
in luxury were replaced on return journeys by refugees eager to
flee the path of the advancing Japanese forces.
Tragedy was to strike quickly though. On the 30th of January 1942,
the flying boat Corio was attacked and shot down by Japanese Zero
fighter aircraft, while ferrying Dutch refugees from the port of
Sourabaya. Only five of the 18 passengers and crew on board
survived. Two weeks later Singapore fell; the Empire route was
broken. Four days afterwards, the first of the Japanese raids on
Darwin caused massive destruction. One of the seaplanes, the
Camilla, was moored in the harbour at the time. Avoiding the wrecks
of burning and sinking ships, the plane was able to take-off during
the raid and managed to escape to Groote Eyelandt, miraculously
undamaged.
As the Japanese advanced rapidly through Java, an urgent demand
was placed upon the remaining craft - the evacuation of stranded
Dutch civilians to Broome and the relative safety of Australian
soil. The evacuation was carried out by the Empire Class flying
boats of Qantas, as well as by German-built Dornier DO24 flying
boats, operated by the Dutch KLM airlines. On 28th February 1942, a
large flock of these aircraft rode at anchor off the coast of
Broome. When the Japanese attacked, many of these flying boats were
still loaded with civilians waiting to be carried south to more
populated parts of the country. Some were also refueling; there was
little or no chance of escaping the onslaught. Of the 15 flying
boats that were moored off the coast at the time, only two
survived. Sadly, seventy lives were lost.
It was a dark time in Australian aviation history. The Empire
route that had been so successful no longer existed. Even if it
had, there were simply not enough aircraft available to operate a
regular service. Of a fleet of 10 Empire Class flying boats owned
by Qantas, only four remained. Five aircraft were lost as a result
of enemy action, one as a result of RAAF action - a landing
incident at Townsville. Qantas was left with only two flying boats;
the other two had been pressed into service with the RAAF. Apart
from a handful of much smaller conventional aircraft, suitable
mainly for domestic use, Qantas was largely incapable of delivering
either international or internal services. The company did retain
however, a collection of flying boat experienced and capable
pilots.


Two years previously, Qantas pilots had been given the task of
ferrying 18 new PBY Catalina flying boats to Australia for use by
the RAAF. Differing greatly to the C Class Empire flying boat, the
Catalinas had been specially designed as a patrol bomber for the US
Navy. Arguably the most successful flying boat ever built,
Catalinas were unbelievably versatile and seemingly indestructible.
With a range of 5000 kilometers (over 3000 miles), it was
inevitable that they would one day wind up in use in
Australia.
The first Catalina to make its presence felt in Australia was in
1939. Chartered by the Australian and New Zealand Governments, the
aircraft was used by the famous Captain P G Taylor to survey an
alternative air route from Sydney to Britain, in the event that the
empire route from Sydney via Singapore should ever be severed. His
journey took him from Port Hedland in Western Australia to Mombassa
in Kenya via Batavia, Cocos Island, Diego Garcia and the
Seychelles.
Although Capt. Taylor gained distinction for having pioneered this
and many other international air routes (he also used a Catalina,
the 'Frigate Bird', to fly across the Pacific from Sydney Australia
to South America in 1951), he may be best remembered for his
efforts in walking on the struts of Charles Kingsford Smith's
aircraft, 'The Sydney' in mid-flight to gather oil from one engine
and transfer it to the other. This Herculean effort did not go
unnoticed by the designers at Boeing (manufacturers of the stately
China Clippers, and America's answer to the Empire Class flying
boat). These large aircraft actually contained small tunnels inside
each wing, through which an unlucky engineer could crawl, in the
event that some form of in-flight maintenance was necessary.
Having proved itself in peacetime operations, the Catalina
heralded a remarkable chapter in Australian aviation history. Again
at the urging of the British government (without whom the pre-war
flying boat service would never have happened), the RAF supplied
Qantas with five Catalina aircraft, if Qantas agreed to open a
flying route from Perth to Ceylon (Sri Lanka). It was to be the
world's longest regular non-stop service - a total distance of
5632km (3520 miles). To enable a flight over such a long distance,
the aircraft were stripped of all unnecessary weight, including
almost all creature comforts, save for seats, a small basket of
food and a thermos. Airmail was carried on microfilm, thereby
reducing a load of several tons to a parcel of around 60 pounds,
and only three passengers were allowed. To further complicate
matters, these missions were flown in complete radio silence across
enemy-patrolled waters. This also meant that pilots had to navigate
by dead reckoning, using only a map, a compass and the stars to
find their way.
On 10th July 1943, the first service departed from Koggala Lake in
the south of Ceylon bound for Perth, where it would land on the
Swan River. This was the first of 271 flights that took place
between 1943 and 1945, all without incident. Depending on the
prevailing conditions, a typical flight lasted anywhere from 27 to
32 hours. Because of the length of the flights, passengers
witnessed the sunrise twice while airborne. At the end of each
journey, passengers were awarded a certificate admitting them to
the 'Secret Order of the Double Sunrise'.
The famous Catalina flying boat that were used to undertake these
missions were also distinguished in other theatres of war. The
Black Cats, as they were dubbed because of their matte black paint,
used to patrol the oceans searching for enemy shipping.
Just before dusk on the 4th of April 1942, a lone Catalina sighted
a large Japanese fleet (the same carrier fleet that attacked Pearl
Harbour four months earlier, with six aircraft carriers and 300
aircraft) 640km (400 miles) south of Ceylon. The fleet was sailing
to attack the headquarters of the newly established British Far
Eastern Fleet. The radio operator onboard the Catalina managed to
transmit the location of the fleet shortly before the aircraft was
shot down by six Japanese Zeros from the carrier Hiryu in high
pursuit. However, allied forces on the island had been alerted to
the enemy's presence and managed to prepare somewhat for the
ensuing Battle of Ceylon, which commenced Easter Sunday 5th April.
The heroic actions of the crew of that Catalina remain as part of
the island nation's folklore.
The years immediately following the World War II brought with them
something of a dilemma for Australian aviation officials. The
flying boat that had served them so well were now obsolete.
Advances in the field of aviation, such as pressurised aircraft
that fly much higher and faster than their pre-war counterparts,
coupled with a large increase in the number of land-based
facilities, combined to make flying boats redundant. The British
built three large flying boats after the war but only one ever flew
(just a few times) before all three were mothballed and eventually
scrapped.
Although they were luxurious, a journey from Australia to England
by seaplane took over five days. A converted Lancaster bomber on
the other hand, could make the journey in a little over 60 hours
(although providing much fewer passenger comforts along the way).
Until suitable civilian aircraft became available, the post-war
answer was to use a combination of Hythe flying boat and
Lancastrian aircraft. Passengers could either choose to travel
quickly in cramped quarters on a land-based aircraft; or,
comfortably in a slower flying boat.
Yet the hardy Catalina remained, being used in remote places or
for applications such as firefighting, where the ability to land on
either land or water presented an obvious advantage. In one bold
post-war experiment, the RAAF were to attach crude rockets to the
fuselage of a number of Catalinas to assist in providing greater
power on take-off. Trans-Australia Airlines and Ansett widely used
Catalinas in domestic aviation, especially in northern Australia,
until the early 1960s, when these services were gradually replaced
with newer, purpose-built land-based aircraft.
Flying boats were to remain a feature of domestic aviation in
Australia, until the mid-70s, when the last flying boat service to
Lord Howe Island was finally removed. The flying boats had, by that
stage, become too old to keep in regular service. No new models
being available, an all-weather airstrip was constructed on
land.
By the 1970s the terminal at Rose Bay was being used for a
different purpose - tourism, charter flights and other special
duties became its mainstay with the last of the gracious
flying boats departing in 1977.
Sources: Warwick Abadee
Qantas Airways Archives Department (Ted Malmgren)
The Royal Air Force

