Fijian Princess
Posted: Wed Jul 09, 2008 2:58 pm

The Fiji 8c. stamp shows an ex-fishing boat which has obviously become a mail-boat in a small way, the Fijian Princess. This stamp is also a U.P.U. 150th anniversary commemorative issue. The vessel is owned by the Princess Shipping Company, of Suva, and has a very unusual history. Originally owned by the South Pacific Co-operative Fishing Association of Japan, she was then named Fuji Maru No. 8. On December 23, 1964, while on the way to her fishing grounds she ran on to the Valukotu Reef, 60 miles from Suva. The captain of the fishing boat jettisoned all her cargo in an effort to lighten her in readiness for the next high tide, hoping to lift the catcher off the reef. The help did not materialise, and she remained fast. It was not until three months later the Capt Arthur Evans, of Fiji, with his crew in a Fijian cutter, slowly pulled the wrecked vessel off the reef, with much higher water running at that time.
They found that she was not too badly damaged and the engines were only slightly damaged by sea water. They towed the ship back to Suva and within a week the engines were working satisfactorily. The captain decided to convert her into an islands trading ship. This necessitated structural alteration by August 1965, the work was completed. Renamed Fijian Princess after conversion, the vessel now carries a crew of 14. Her tonnage is 99 length 98 ft. SG496