The Brisbane Courier, Friday 4 February, 1898.
SPECIAL ADVICE.
Special advice, 3 p.m. .- The tropical
disturbance named "Eline" is now central 200
miles east from Bowen, and has developed
dangerous energy. Shipping and all interested
are advised. Coast districts a hundred miles
inland between Rockhampton and Townsville
will experience the western edge of " Eline."
Vessels bound South from Townsville had better
remain in Cleveland Bay, and those bound North
from Keppel Bay should also remain at anchor.
The storm will probably recurve, and make
southing.
In 1898 the Meteorological Bureau was able to predict a cyclone 200 miles east of the mainland! If this cyclone moved at the maximum speed of 30 miles per hour (see previous post) it would have taken it almost 7 hours to make the coast. This warning issued gave shipping along the Queensland coast plenty of time to seek anchorage or stay put in port. Why 13 years later was there a deficiency in the speed of the warning issued regarding the Yongala cyclone ?? Or was a warning even issued - until it was too late ??
LAST NIGHT'S SPECIAL- ADVICE.
Capemba, 11 p.m.
8 hours later !!
We have received special data from our
coast stations, to-night. A discussion of
these shows that the centre of the storm
"Eline" at 9 p.m. was about eighty miles
east from Bowen, where the standard
barometer at that hour, fully reduced, read
29.280 in..
In fact, by 9 pm, 6 hours later, the Bureau was able to advise that the cyclone was still 80 miles offshore. This suggests that the cyclone was moving at about 20 miles per hour. The technology was astounding for the era !!
Now, as the simultaneous reading at
Rockhampton was 29.760 in., it shows
that gradients are very steep between Cape
Capricorn and Gloucester Island. Under
these circumstances, we again strongly
repeat our warnings to shipping given in the
afternoon. No vessels that may be anchored
in Keppel Bay, bound North, should proceed,
and the same remark applies to those bound
South that may be in Cleveland Bay. Highly
dangerous seas are certain to obtain among
the islands between the Keppel Group and
Whitsunday Passage, with whole gales from
east-south-east. High seas are reported from
Bustard Head, but south from that point the
weather has considerably moderated.--
(Signed) CLEMENT L. WRAGGE,
Government Meteorologist.
This is a somewhat shocking expose. We know that data warning of a cyclone off Cape Upstart was already gathered by 9 am, 23 March, 1911. The cyclone struck at its worst by 11 pm, 14 hours later. In the above example the cyclone in question moving at 20 miles per hour would have made land by 1 am, the following day. The initial warning came at 3 pm, 10 hours earlier !! Extrapolating to the Yongala case, the warning should have been readily available to all shipping at Mackay and Townsville by the very latest, 1 pm, 23 March. Yongala departed Flat-Top at 1.40 pm and Grantala departed Townsville at 4 pm. Both these masters must have known about the cyclone warning and departed nonetheless !!
But is this the full story ??
Read on...
But is this the full story ??
Read on...
The Brisbane Courier, Thursday 23 March, 1911.
OFFICIAL REPORT.
Divisional Meteorological Office, March 22.
Meteorological Notes.-The general distribution
of atmospheric pressure over and around
Australia has undergone very little change since
yesterday morning, so that in its principal features
to-day's chart is very similar to yesterday's. The
great anticyclone still covers the entire continent
except the Gulf country and Cape York Peninsula,
but its central area has moved a little to the rearward,
and an extension has been thrown forward, which
has caused barometers to rise rather sharply in a
north-easterly direction, that is, through eastern
Victoria and the coastal region as far north as the
tropic, the resulting strong and squally S. to S.E.
winds and showery conditions along the New
South Wales coast on the rear of the retreating Antarctic
depression, and similar effects on the Queensland
coast south from Broadsound, on the south-western
edge of the tropical disturbance. This latter does not
appear to be travelling towards the seaboard, but is
probably either stationary over the ocean between
Queensland and New Caledonia, or moving on a
south-easterly course at some distance from our
coast line. According to this afternoon's reports the
weather is still gloomy and unsettled, with rain
threatening or falling, along the entire coast line,
but the wind nowhere exceeds the velocity of a
moderate breeze from between S.E. and E. The
monsoonal tongue of low pressure still exists
between Port Darwin, Burketown, and Torres Straits,
but there are indications that it is developing energy,
and scattered thunderstorms are not unlikely under
its influence on the Peninsula and around the Gulf
during the next few days.
The following rainfalls were registered in
Queensland during the 24 hours ended 9 am.
to-day:
CENTRAL DIVISION.
Coastal - Central
Cape Capricorn 8 Aramac 28
Emu Park 43 Barcaldine 26
Port Alma 18 Lochnagar 27
Proserpine 6 Muttaburra 5
St. lawrence 7 Tangorin 40
The maximum temperature in Brisbane to-day
was 73.2 deg.
Forecast for Queensland for the 24 hours ending
noon on Thursday:- Cloudy along the eastern sea
board and thundery in Carpentaria, and on Peninsula,
with further showers, chiefly north from the tropic;
fine inland, but temperature moderate; S.E. winds,
fresh on parts of the tropical coast.
Ocean forecasts and remarks on storms:- Some
fresh winds along the North Queensland coast.
The Mercury, Friday, 24 March, 1911.
Queensland - Cloudy with further rains
along the seaboard, unsettled on the
peninsular with probability of stormy
weather and heavy falls, fine inland
with warmer temperatures, SE winds.
Ocean forecasts and remarks on storms:
Squally off the SW coast of West Australia
Fresh south winds on the N coast of N. S.
Wales and on girths of Queensland coast with
rather rough seas. Indication of tropical
storm developing over the Queensland
peninsular.
The Argus, Melbourne, 24 March, 1911.
THE WEATHER
OFFICIAL FORECAST
Forecast by the Commonwealth Meteorologist
Mr. H. A. Hunt, Thursday 9 pm. (23 March)
"Fine throughout, some cloud in southern districts
and one or two misty showers along the coast.
Variable winds tending east and northeast."
Queensland: cloudy with further rains along
seaboard: unsettled along Peninsular, with
probability of stormy weather with heavy falls.
Fine inland, with moderate temperatures;
southeasterly winds.
And there you have it !! By as late as 9 pm, 23 March, Mr. Hunt of the Commonwealth Meteorological Bureau had issued no cyclone warning for the Queensland coast.
At last we can fully understand why Captains Knight and Sim departed their respective ports into what turned out to be a cyclone striking the Queensland coast between Townsville and Mackay. No wonder Captain Knight thought he was outrunning a stormy frontal system and only discovered, when it was too late, that he was steaming into the heart of a hybrid cyclone. By this time when conditions had deteriorated dramatically, 11 pm, 23 March, there was nothing Captain Knight could have done, caught in no man's land, to avert the disaster fated for the Yongala and her souls.
Mr. Hunt messed up !!
It must be noted that although there was no official cyclone warning, Bowen via Cape Bowling Green Lighthouse, issued a cyclone warning late 23 March (+/- 5 p.m.) which was sent to Brisbane and from there back to Flat Top and Townsville, too late for either Yongala or Grantala. If there had been communications linking Dent Island Lighthouse with the mainland, there might still have been a narrow window of opportunity to issue a warning to Yongala, by flag signals, as she passed at 5 p.m. - visibility reasonable.
None of this was explored at the Inquiry which potentially would have led back to an element of culpability on the part of the Queensland authorities.
This deficiency was neatly summed up in 1933:
On the same day, a small rotary
storm of great intensity was operating
about 130 miles north from Willis Is-
land. There was then no meteorological
station on Willis Island, so that no-
body knew of the storm's existence, and
even had its presence been suspected,
few people would have connected this
small, virulent body upwards of 1000
miles away with the proud steamer
which passed rapidly out of the Brisbane
River to the open sea and sped
northwards with her living freight.
On the 22nd at noon the Yongala
was not far from North Reef lighthouse.
A ship at sea really was more of a
colony in those days before wireless,
than now the ether carries its messages
of shore doings with incredible speed
and unswerving fidelity. The company
on board soon settled down to the en-
forced isolation from the kind, and
looked forward to the next port when
contact with world doings would be re-
established.
By this time, the cyclone had moved
on a south-south-west course, and was
about 50 miles west south-west from Willis
Island. These two strangely unlike bodies
had moved much closer together in the last
24 hours. Their paths were converging, and
for a large ship and 120 souls the sands of
life were running low.
120 SOULS ON BOARD.
On the morning of the 23rd the Yongala
steamed into Flat Top, the anchorage at
Mackay, where she landed 60 tons of cargo
and some passengers. Whatever was the
changing of personnel at Mackay, when the
Yongala steamed away on her last journey at
1.40 p.m., she had on board 120 souls
made up of crew 72, 1st class passengers
29, and 2nd class passengers 19. About
two hours after she sailed the Meteorological
Department at Melbourne advised coastal
towns that cyclonic conditions prevailed
between Mackay and Townsville. That
warning was issued on data which were
collected at 9 that morning and telegraphed
to Melbourne.
The reason for this seems to have been
that Melbourne was the seat of the
Federal Government-that is to say, no
other reason worth considering has been
propounded. Whatever the reasons, the
facts were that the 9 a.m. readings
that day showed the existence of a
dangerous storm moving down on to the
coast, and a valuable ship and 120 lives
steamed to their doom, nearly five
hours after those observations were
taken without any warning reaching
them. Bureaucratic pundits in Mel-
bourne knew, but the master of a ship
on the Queensland coast with 120 lives
in his charge knew nothing of the menace
ahead.
courtesy Trove
courtesy Trove