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Read more about the article Balsa raft visits Newcastle, 1973
Guayaquil in Newcastle, 1973

Balsa raft visits Newcastle, 1973

In December 1973 Newcastle Harbour received a strange visitor in the shape of a balsa wood raft, not unlike the famous Kon-Tiki which Thor Heyerdahl used to cross the Pacific Ocean in the late 1940s. The raft, named Guayaquil after its point of departure in Ecuador, South America, had struggled across the ocean before its crew was lifted to safety from the apparently sinking raft off Ballina, NSW, HMAS Labuan. Guayaquil did not sink, however. Currents carried it down the east coast where it was found by a fisherman, K. Bollinger, who towed it into Newcastle.…

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Read more about the article A cavalcade of Newcastle shipping
Sailing ship Mount Stewart, photographed by Sam Hood.

A cavalcade of Newcastle shipping

Newcastle has long been a busy shipping centre, and the list of ships to have visited the city would be enormous - if it was even possible to compile. The interwar years were very busy, and our collection of negatives from that period is especially fascinating, particularly given the often-tragic fates that awaited some of the vessels during World War 2. Here are a few examples of some of the ship photos that appear in our most recent book, Travelling Through Time. The lovely photo at the head of this post shows the Glasgow-built steel ship…

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