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"Beats me how nobody was killed," said John Malster. relief fireman in the Auckland tug, William C. Daldy, today. ''You could call it a saga of good luck.'' Townas Bray, a general hand on a Harbour Board floating crane. is shown working away with a crow bar on the buckled bow of the tug, today. The damage may take four to five weeks to repair. Mr Malster was one of two crewmen taken to Auckland Hospital on Saturday after the tug and the ship she was berthing, the Fremantle Star collided. The other man, who was relief engineer Barry Watkins. Both were later allowed to go home. | ![]() |
The collision put a sizeable dent in the
8400-ton Fremantle Star
and has put the tug out of action possibly for four or five weeks, Mr Malster had the luckiest escape. |
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There are scanned copies of the official accident reports available below:
'William C Daldy' Telegraph Failure report Page 1 © NZNMM - AHB file 715 DAL Conversion 15-Feb-75 'William C Daldy' Telegraph Failure report Page 2 © NZNMM - AHB file 715 DAL Conversion 15-Feb-75 'William C Daldy' and 'Fremantle Star' Collision Report Page 1 © NZNMM - AHB file 715 DAL Conversion 18-Feb-75 'William C Daldy' and 'Fremantle Star' Collision Report Page 2 © NZNMM - AHB file 715 DAL Conversion 18-Feb-75 'William C Daldy' - Accident repair estimate Page 1 © NZNMM - AHB file 715 DAL Conversion 26-Feb-75 'William C Daldy' - Accident repair estimate Page 2 © NZNMM - AHB file 715 DAL Conversion 26-Feb-75 |
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