SS John Oxley

SS John Oxley is a former pilot boat and lighthouse and buoy tender. She was built in Scotland in 1927 for the Queensland state government. The vessel was taken into the Royal Australian Navy during the Second World War. Returned to her duties after the war, John Oxley remained active until 1968, when her deteriorating condition made her unusable. The ship was sold in 1970 to the Lady Hopetoun and Port Jackson Marine Steam Museum (now the Sydney Heritage Fleet) for preservation, but due to other projects, work was sidelined until 2004. As of 2011, the ship is still undergoing restoration at Rozelle Bay, Sydney.

Design and construction
Bow, McLachlan and Company of Paisley in Renfrewshire, Scotland built John Oxley in 1927, under yard number 464. She was launched on 20 July 1927, and completed later that year. The vessel is 168 ft long, with a beam of 32 ft, and a draught of 11 ft. Tonnage values are 544 Gross register tonnage, 760 Deadweight tonnage, and 212 Net Register Tonnage Propulsion is provided by two Scotch marine boilers supplying a triple expansion steam engine, which delivers 1,400 IHP to the propeller, for a maximum speed of 14 kn. The vessel had a crew of 15, and in her role as a pilot boat, could carry 14 harbour pilots.

Service career
She was delivered to the Government of Queensland Harbours and Marine Department, whom she served as a pilot boat in Moreton Bay and buoy tender and lighthouse tender along the Queensland coast.

In the Second World War John Oxley was requisitioned for the Royal Australian Navy and a 20mm Oerlikon anti-aircraft gun was mounted on the stern. She was returned to her former duties in 1946, and converted from coal to oil fuel that same year.

John Oxley continued to serve as a pilot tender, lighthouse and buoy tender until 1968 when she was decommissioned. In her later years she had become increasingly decrepit, such that in 1964 the Seamen's Union of Australia's journal called her a "rust heap" with "the worst living conditions of any ship on the entire Australian coast".

Sydney Heritage Fleet
John Oxley was given to the Lady Hopetoun and Port Jackson Marine Steam Museum (now the Sydney Heritage Fleet) in 1970. She saw very little use until 1997, when restoration on another ship, the barque James Craig, was completed. Until then, John Oxley's hull had gradually deteriorated, so she was badly in need of repairs. Because another ship of the Heritage Fleet was currently under restoration, John Oxley was only drydocked for immediate and necessary repairs until 2004, when she was moved to Sydney and drydocked.

John Oxley is being restored in the drydock of the Sydney Heritage Fleet. The ship, during the eighty years on the water, had incurred substantial corrosion and rust. Many components, including a number of plates of the ship's riveted hull, have required complete replication from original plans.