• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Naval Historical Society of Australia

Preserving Australia's Naval History

  • Events
  • Account
  • Members Area
  • Volunteer
  • Donate
  • Contact us
  • Show Search
  • 0 items
Hide Search
Menu
  • Home
  • Research
    • Where to start
      • Research – We can help!
      • Self help
      • Naval Service Records
      • Library
      • Related Maritime websites
    • Resources
      • Articles
      • Videos
      • On This Day
      • Podcasts
      • Australian Military Ship Losses
      • RAN events on a  Google Earth Map
      • RAN Vessels – Where are they now?
      • Related Maritime websites
    • Other
      • Newsletters: Call The Hands
      • Occasional Papers and Historical Booklets
      • Books
      • HMAS Shropshire
      • Book reviews
    • Close
  • Naval Heritage Sites
    • World Heritage Listings
      • Cockatoo Island
    • National Heritage Listings
      • HMAS Sydney II and the HSK Kormoran Shipwreck Sites
      • HMVS Cerberus
    • Commonwealth Heritage Listings
      • Garden Island NSW
      • HMAS Watson
      • HMAS Penguin
      • Spectacle Island Explosives Complex NSW
      • Chowder Bay Naval Facilities
      • Beecroft Peninsula NSW
      • Admiralty House, Garden and Fortifications
      • HMAS Cerberus
      • Naval Offices QLD
      • Garden Island WA
      • Royal Australian Naval College ACT
      • Royal Australian Naval Transmitting Station ACT
    • NSW Heritage Listings
      • HMAS Rushcutter
    • Close
  • Naval Art
  • Tours & Cruises
    • Navy in Sydney Harbour Cruise, East
    • Navy in Sydney Harbour Cruise, West
    • Anniversary Cruise: Sydney under Japanese Attack
    • Tour Bookings
    • Close
  • About us
    • About Us
      • What we do
      • Our People
      • Office Bearers
      • Become a volunteer
      • Our Goals and Strategy
    • Organisation
      • Victoria Chapter
      • WA Chapter
      • ACT Chapter
    • Close
  • Membership
  • Shop
  • Become a volunteer
  • Donate
You are here: Home / Article topics / Book reviews / Book Review: The Sydney Sailors’ Home – 150 Years of Caring for Seafarers

Book Review: The Sydney Sailors’ Home – 150 Years of Caring for Seafarers

Book reviewer · Sep 30, 2009 · Print This Page

Author
Book reviewer
Subjects
Book reviews
Tags
None noted.
RAN Ships
None noted.
Publication
September 2009 edition of the Naval Historical Review (all rights reserved)

The Sydney Sailors’ Home-150 Years of Caring for Seafarers
By Jan Bowen.
Hard cover, 96 pages, 275×210 mm. RRP $45.00 plus $12.00 postage and handling (includes GST).
Available through The Australian Mariners’ Welfare Society, phone 02 9605 1344, or by mail to PO Box 818, Ingleburn, NSW, 1890.


Australia’s only links with the rest of the world in the mid-19th century depended entirely on communication by sea. Not surprisingly, therefore, the numerous charities and welfare groups concerned with the wellbeing of seafarers were generously supported by the community.

In 1859, a provisional committee was formed with the object of building a Sailors’ home in Sydney ‘. . .in which seamen, while on shore, could have comfortable accommodation, be brought under moral and religious influence, and be encouraged in sober and thrifty habits.’ In1860, land in George Street North in the Rocks area of Sydney was earmarked for the Sydney Sailors’ Home and construction work commenced in 1863. At that time, around 1000 ships with crews totaling some 20,000 were coming to the port of Sydney each year.

03-09_sailorshomeThe Sydney Sailors’ Home opened its doors in February, 1865. The adjoining Cadman’s Cottage served from 1865 to 1926 as the living quarters for successive generations of Superintendents of the Home, who invariably were former shipmasters.

After operating continuously for 114 years, having survived the impact of two world wars, the Great Depression and occasional periods of low occupancy, the Home was closed in 1979 following compulsory resumption of the property by the Sydney Cove Redevelopment Authority. The  Council  managing  the  Home,  recognizing generational changes then occurring in the shipping industry, along with a declining demand for accommodation of the kind offered by the Sailors’ Home, identified other opportunities to continue serving seafarers.

Jan Bowen’s entertaining story of the Sydney Sailors’ Home, the people who drove its formation, and the sometimes colourful characters who rested there, will be a welcome addition to the maritime history of Sydney. The book also records the many challenges the Sailors’ Home faced and, importantly, how it successfully responded to change over its lifetime. And it tells how the Home recast its role, re-emerging in the early years of the 21st Century as – among other things – a generous provider of ongoing financial assistance to organisations such as the Mission to Seafarers and the Stella Maris Clubs that open their doors to the hundreds of mariners whose work brings them to Australian seaports every year.

Sensitively illustrated with historic and contemporary photographs, this book will be of interest to historians, librarians, seamen’s charities, and indeed anyone interested in shipping, our early architecture and stories of the seamen who have visited our shores.

About the Author

Jan Bowen has written over 30 books, including the Pocket Guide to the Law series, the Macquarie Guide to Australian Law, the Macquarie Guide to Health and Medicine, The Queensland Experience, The Fabulous Fifties and Men Talk. She is also a director of Plain English Communications, a company specializing in producing corporate documents in user friendly language.  She is a passionate music lover and Chair of the Sydney Youth Orchestra.  Jan Bowen lives in Sydney and has three adult sons.

Naval Historical Review, Book reviews, Logistics, Training and Support, Naval Personnel

Primary Sidebar

SUBSCRIBE

Sign up for our monthly e-newsletter.

  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Categories

Latest Podcasts

  • The Fall of Singapore
  • HMAS Armidale
  • Napoleon, the Royal Navy and Me
  • The Case of the Unknown Sailor
  • Night of the midget subs — Sydney under attack

Links to other podcasts

Australian Naval History Podcasts
This podcast series examines Australia’s Naval history, featuring a variety of naval history experts from the Naval Studies Group and elsewhere.
Produced by the Naval Studies Group in conjunction with the Submarine Institute of Australia, the Australian Naval Institute, Naval Historical Society and the RAN Seapower Centre

Life on the Line Podcasts
Life on the Line tracks down Australian war veterans and records their stories.
These recordings can be accessed through Apple iTunes or for Android users, Stitcher.

Video Links

  • Australian War Memorial YouTube channel
  • Royal Australian Navy YouTube Channel
  • Research – We can help!
  • Naval Heritage Sites
  • Explore Naval Art
  • Dockyard Heritage Tour
  • About us
  • Shop
  • Events
  • Members Area
  • Volunteer
  • Donate
  • Contact us

Follow us

  • Facebook
  • YouTube
  • Members Area
  • Privacy Policy

Naval Historical Society of Australia Inc. Copyright © 2025