Commonwealth Line
Company type | Australian Federal Government |
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The Commonwealth Line was a shipping company owned and operated by the
History
The Commonwealth Line began as a pet project of Prime Minister
After the war's end, the Commonwealth Line built five large ocean liners to carry immigrants from England. By 1921, the company was making only a small profit each year and was often a target for industrial action. In 1923, Hughes was replaced as prime minister by Stanley Bruce, who opposed the government's ownership of the line as a financial burden and an unfair competitor against private operators.[3] The Bruce Government sold off the fleet over the next few years, culminating in a final sale to the White Star Line in 1928.[4][5] They were later onsold to the Aberdeen Line, which renamed itself the Aberdeen & Commonwealth Line. On paper the fleet was valued at around £8 million, but the government received only £500,000 due to the buyer defaulting.[6]
In the final parliamentary vote to approve the sale, the entire Labor Party voted against and were joined by only non-Labor members, Percy Stewart and William Watson. Billy Hughes absented himself from the vote. In the prior debate, he described the line as "my progeny, and whether it be unique or a monstrosity, I, like most parents, am still attached to the poor thing ... I am present at the obsequies of the Line, as I was at its birth".[7]
Ships
The fleet of ships that were operated included requisitioned sailing ships [2]
See also
- Australian National Line, a similar government-owned corporation formed in 1956
References
- ISBN 0207132453.
- ^ a b "Commonwealth Line". www.theshipslist.com. Retrieved 29 May 2023.
- ^ Fitzhardinge, pp. 500–501
- ISBN 978-0-7256-0165-2
- ISBN 978-0-909434-11-3
- ^ AUSTRALIAN COMMONWEALTH GOVERNMENT LINE of STEAMERS, Flotilla Australia.
- ^ Fitzhardinge, pp. 556–557