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Tom Brennan (barge)

MV Tom Brennan
TirariCooperCrossing.JPG
MV Tom Brennan memorial
History
Name: Tom Brennan
Owner:
Operator: Tom Kruse
Ordered: 1949
Builder: South Australian Harbors Board
Launched: 1949
Completed: 1949
Maiden voyage: 1949
In service: 1949
Out of service: 1960 or 1963
Fate: Withdrawn from service due to replacement by larger vessel
Status: Established as a memorial at Etadunna in 1986
General characteristics
Type: barge
Length: 4.9 metres (16 ft)
Beam: 1.8 metres (5 ft 11 in)
Draught: 0.76 metres (2 ft 6 in)
Propulsion: outboard motor
Sail plan: not rigged

Coordinates: 28°37′49″S 138°42′30″E / 28.63024°S 138.708368°E / -28.63024; 138.708368

Tom Brennan (also known as MV Tom Brennan) was a barge built in the Australian state of South Australia in 1949 for use as a ferry at the crossing of the Birdsville Track over Cooper Creek when the creek was in flood in what is now the state’s Far North region. It was withdrawn from service in either 1960 or 1963 and since 1986, it has served as a monument. One of its operators was the mail contractor, Tom Kruse.

Tom Brennan was built in early 1949 by the South Australian Harbors Board in response to a proposal by the stock agency, Dalgety & Co. Ltd for a ferry to move people and goods across Cooper Creek at the Kopperamana Crossing on the Birdsville Track when creek was in flood.

It is described as being “a steel punt with airtight tanks, powered by a 4 horse power outboard motor.” The vessel was named after Mr. T. R. Brennan, the Livestock Manager with Dalgety & Co. Ltd, who is attributed as having the idea to provide a ferry service.

It was finished in May 1949 and was delivered by Dalgety & Co. Ltd by rail to Marree where it was collected by Tom Kruse who was the mail contractor for the area between Marree and Birdsville. The barge was reported as being in constant use for the first three years of service; in particular, the “Copper Crossing was impassable for six months” in 1949.


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