Thursday, 23 July 2020

'IS A DISGRACE TO A PEOPLE WITH ANY PRETENCE OF CIVILISATION.'

Truth, Brisbane, 2 April, 1911.

THE LOST YONGALA
MODERN METHODS WANTED.

In last Sunday's issue, "Truth" commented 
crisply on the supposition— which is now
alas! a dread certainty— that the Adelaide 
Shipping Company's passenger steamer 
Yongala had foundered with all hands, with 
the cheery optimism of the People's Paper,
it was hoped that all was well, even in
the face of disturbing evidence, and reference 
was made to the desirability of installing a 
system of wireless telegraphy, to operate between 
coastal steamers and receiving stations on the
mainland. 'During the week, the "Daily Mail"— 
a paper which has recently amended its ways 
in one or two of those apparently trivial details 
which never escape our notice — has calmly 
collared the idea previously enunciated by
"Truth," and has put up a feeble squeak on 
the question of the installation of such a wireless 
system as was demanded by the People's Paper. 
Considering the advertising risks involved, 
and the terror which the great Firms and Combines 
who are included in the Chamber of Commerce 
exercise over the Queen-street dailies, this recognition 
of a crying necessity— even though it be stolen from 
"Truth"— may be counted for righteousness to a 
journal which never keens the recording angel, 
working overtime in that regard.

Mere suggestion is, however, not nearly strong 
enough, and "Truth" demands, in all seriousness, 
that both State and Federal authorities take up a
sinfully-neglected task and remove the possibility
as far as the future is concerned, of any more fearful 
happenings such as have attended the loss of the 
Yongala. Here was a ship, of modern, design, 
powerfully engined, and fit to sail any sea of the 
world, hopelessly lost on one of the most frequented 
of shipping highways, and what is infinitely worse,
not only lost, but unnoticed for three or four days. 
No human provision can ensure the safety even of 
such ships as the Yongala, but that such a craft, with 
her freight of valuable cargo, and far more precious 
human lives, should vanish into the unknowable while 
the dwellers on the fairly well-populated coast in the 
vicinity of her disappearance were in utter ignorance of 
her fate, is an unspeakable thing. 

It is an atrocity beside which ordinary methods of massacre 
sink into insignificance, and its iniquity is increased a 
hundredfold when we recall the fact that a miserable two 
or three hundred pounds would have installed a system of 
wireless telegraphy between the Yongala and a mainland 
base. The apparatus required for such short distances as 
would be needed in the case of the coastal steamers 
is trifling, and the horrible thoughtless parsimony 
of the Government, and the greedy, disgraceful voracity 
of the bloated shipping companies are responsible for much, 
perhaps all, of the tragedy which has shaken Queensland 
from one end to the other. How much they have been aided 
by the fawning, lickspittle daily press in maintaining their 
attitude of "don't care a damn" need not  be enlarged on here, 
since it is scandalously evident to anyone.

Of course, Premier Denham will try, characteristically, to 
shuffle out of the soup, by throwing all blame on the 
Commonwealth's convenient shoulders. The Federal 
Government control lighthouse and such shipping matters 
generally as come within the scope of the authorities. 
Nevertheless, it is upon the State that the stigma of the 
circumstances attending on the loss of the Yongala must 
rest. For many years the State of Queensland controlled the 
lighting and marking of what is in all probability the most 
dangerous and intricate stretch of coastal navigation in the 
world. The methods adopted in those dark days were 
left as a dangerous legacy to the Commonwealth, 
to whose discredit lies the fact that they have not been 
improved out of existence.

Matters are not one whit improved since the Quetta foundered 
twenty years ago. As far as, provision for saving life, or for 
alleviating disaster goes, the coast line of Queensland in particular, 
and of Australia generally,  'is a disgrace to a people with any 
pretence of civilisation.'

Ten days ago— it is forgotten now in this new and more tragic 
wonder— the daily press was conducting an idiotic campaign 
of' unplaced sympathy, because an asinine Papuan official had 
lost himself. A Sydney inventor was rushed off by steamer to 
Papua, equipped with several sets of exceedingly expensive 
long-distance "wireless" apparatus. ' 'Before this had been fixed 
up, the lost explorer was brought in by some natives, who, 
apparently, did not think him worth eating. If half the money 
wasted in the silly preparations for getting wireless news of 
Staniforth Smith had been expended on two or three receiving 
stations on the dangerous northern coast, and if Federal, or State 
authority had compelled a cheap wireless installation on the boats 
which help the companies to fatten on Queensland money, we 
should have known exactly how the Yongala met disaster, and 
the tugs and other craft who are, a week after the tragedy, 
picking up useless wreckage might have been able to arrive 
on the scene of the wreck in time to save some one of those 
120 souls who have gone

"To the weed's unrest;
To the shark and the shearing gull."

State or Commonwealth, whoever is to blame, have but one 
duty plain before them. The fat and overfed shipping companies 
have battened unchecked for years on the great coastal trade of 
Australia, and no section of that trade has been more profitable 
than that which lies up and down the Queensland coast. The 
profits of the great Combine are notorious, and out of all 
proportion to the comforts and facilities given by the companies 
to the people who, willy-nilly, have to submit to their exorbitant
rates and their very inferior provision for travellers.It is absolutely 
imperative that, these people should be compelled to spend a 
fraction of their enormous gains in partially insuring the safety of 
their clients by installing wireless telegraphy. In this week's daily 
press, there are three or four cables announcing the rescue of 
passengers from wrecked craft, through the medium of wireless 
telegraphy. As "Truth", has said, the installation for short-distance 
work costs but a trifle. It is up to the great companies to make
a move. 

If they are not shamed into doing so, they should be kicked into it.


Marconi courtesy Daily Beast.

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