GOOD SERVICE
IN THE ALLIED CAUSE
GIVEN BY DUTCH SHIPWRIGHTS.
INGENIOUS DOCKING DEVICE.
(By Wolfe Preger, Correspondent, Netherlands Indies Government Information Service.)
Among those who were ordered jay the Netherlands Indies Government to leave Java immediately prior to the Japanese occupation, was a party of naval shipwrights who, before leaving, had destroyed the naval base at Sourabaya. After being harassed by enemy aircraft and dodging Japanese naval units, these men eventually reached South Africa. There they found work of a different kind. Ships were literally queuing up for in Cape Town. At that time a large proportion of military supplies for the Middle East liad to be sent around the Cape and many raiders were prowling in the .waters of the South Atlantic and the Indian Ocean. One fairly large ship which was urgently required by the British could not be repaired as its chances of getting dry-dock facilities were remote.
Then the naval architect in charge of the Dutch shipwrights evolved a novel method which would enable his men to effect the necessary repairs without the help of a dry-dock. The fact that the ship had been confiscated from the Germans in Netherlands Indian waters at the time of the German invasion of Holland perhaps stimulated his brain to unusual effort and the possibility of repairing this German vessel for service in the Allied cause made the job all the more interesting. Two hundred and fifty Dutch shipwrights were put to construct a pontoon shaped to fit the underside of the vessel. The watertight tanks of the pontoon were then flooded to enable it to be pushed under the ship. This done, the tanks were blown and the water emptied and leaving a dry chamber between the floor of the pontoon and the bottom of the ship. The vessel had struck a mine on the high seas and the damage consisted of a buckled keel and a huge hole in the side with extensive damage for 75 feet from the bow. With the forepart of the ship high and dry inside the pontoon a sectional dry dock had, in fact, been provided. The whole fore-part of the ship was >rebuilt and this one-time German vessel' is now carrying military supplies for use against the German armies in Italy. Today some of these Dutch shipwrights are in Madagascar salvaging ships sunk in the harbour' of Diego Suarez and repairing others, whilst those who remained in Cape Town are applying the wet “dry”'dock system to other vessels and reducing the number of ships awaiting their turn to be repaired and made ready for service in the Allied cause.
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Wairarapa Times-Age, 9 November 1943, Page 4
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437GOOD SERVICE Wairarapa Times-Age, 9 November 1943, Page 4
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