  
Ulladulla & Districts Blessing of the Fleet Festival -
History
The
first Blessing of the Fleet was staged in 1956 when the
Catholic Parish Priest Father Weatherall suggested to the
boat owners and crews that they should follow the old and
revered tradition of blessing the boats.
The fishing industry of Ulladulla is as old as time
itself, with Aboriginals using the harbour as a source of
food. In the early 1900s there are newspaper reports of
local fisherman selling their catch at Milton and fishing
licences being approved. The harbour played an important
role in the development of Ulladulla. The Illawarra and
South Coast Steam navigational company brought weekly
cargo supplies to Ulladulla until the mid 1950s.
Some of the fishermen from early this century include
many aboriginal families. Some of Ulladulla's first
commercial fishermen include: James Barker, George
Mellshimer, Thomas Butler, Thomas Cooley, Augusta
Malafont, Alfred & Henry Moon, William Stephens, and
John Wilson.
The fishing industry continued to grow in the 1930s with
many Italian families moved to Ulladulla from Wollongong
in 1937, bring with them three boats - the Tory, San
Guiseppe and the Nina, establishing Ulladulla as a major
commercial fishing port. The Millard family are now the
owners of the Tory, which is moored in Ulladulla,
harbour. During the 30s and 40s in order to get the catch
to Sydney markets, the local saw mills came to the aid of
the fishermen by provided them with sawdust.
During WW2 the authorities requisition all the Italian
owned fishing vessels, reselling them back after the war.
Italians from Ulladulla during the war were forced to
report to the local police once a week. After the war,
other Italian migrated to Australia settling at Ulladulla
establishing Ulladulla as the largest commercial port in
New South Wales.
It was during the war when Ken McLeod starting
shipbuilding at Ulladulla harbour for the American Navy.
Shipbuilding was not new to the Ulladulla foreshores, as
it was one of our first industries back in 1840s when
shipwrights David Warden and Robert Gee who also owned
land on the foreshores of Ulladulla Harbour started
shipbuilding and were later join by David's younger
brother James Warden. The building of many brigantines
and schooners continued for two decades at Ulladulla,
using local cedar and timbers from the surrounding woods.
The timber transported to the harbour by bullock dray was
also shipped to Sydney for trade. Shipbuilding was an
activity seen at most ports and coastal rivers along the
New South Wales coastline.
McLeod's shipbuilding went into liquidation in 1955, with
its assets being bought by the newly formed Fishermen's
Co-Op. Nineteen trawlers owners had formed the Co-op in
March 1956. They include members of the Greco, Puglisi,
Salafia, Canon, Costa, Lavalle and Dunn families, with
Reg Adams was appointed manager. One of their first tasks
was the building of the timber jetty that was completed
in 1957.
Plant later acquire including refrigeration, slipways,
engineering workshop, ice making facilities, cool rooms
and blast freezing. One of Ulladulla's freshwater springs
was used as the water supply for ice making in the early
years of the Co-op operations.
The 1957 timber jetty was replaced with a concrete jetty
on steel pipes in 1971 - 1978. These allowing providing
better facilities to the ever-growing fishing industry
needs of the time. Joe Greco was appointed manager of the
Fisherman Co-op in 1971, as position he held for over 25
years. By the mid 1970s Ulladulla harbour was one of the
post important ports in the Australian fishing industry
along with Port Lincoln in South Australia.
For
the Blessing fo the Fleet fishermen decorated their boats
for the ceremony and family picnic day and presented a
life-size statue of St Peter the Patron Saint of
fisherman. Due to each province in Italy having its own
Patron Saint, the Ulladulla Italian fishing families
chose St Peter as the Patron Saint so as not to cause any
favouritism.
The ceremony was to ensure that the fisherman would
return to port and have a bountiful catch. From these
early beginnings in 1956 when teenager Josi Greco was
named the first Princess of the Fleet, the festival has
now developed into a significant event for the whole
district.
The Blessing of the Fleet is an old and revered tradition
which has been passed down from generation to generation
originating in Sicily and as ancient as biblical times.
This centuries old Italian rite calls on divine
providence to safeguard ships and crews from the danger
of the seas.
The blessing ceremony was originally held in late
December or early January. In 1958 over 20 trawlers
participated in the blessing followed by an afternoon of
games and parties. The blessing was held yearly until
1960, Father Kenna received the blessing ceremony in 1971
and so the festival has been held at Easter each year
since. Today the ceremony is held on Easter Sunday with
many other activities all Easter weekend long forming the
Ulladulla & Districts Blessing of the Fleet
Festival.
Congratulations to Olivia Greco, winning Princess of the
2009 Ulladulla Blessing of the Fleet Festival. Partnered
by Ben Wealleans and sponsored by Bakers Delight
Ulladulla. Olivia attends Shoalhaven Anglican School at
Milton.
Download
a History of Ulladulla's fishing
industry
(pdf)
Blessing
of the Fleet Festival
Ulladulla and
Districts Blessing of the Fleet Festival co-ordinated by
Milton Ulladulla Rotary Club Inc
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