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Clue for Australia's earliest message in a bottle in 100yo newspaper clippings

A bottle sites on the beach with mussels attached to it and a dark purple sky behind.

Messages in a bottle, like this one found in Jervis Bay in 2023, capture the imagination of historians. (Supplied: Scott Gutterson)

Every week for more than 30 years, a small team of historians on the New South Wales south coast has trawled through old newspapers to come up with material for a column about life 100 years ago.

Sometimes the headlines are mundane: upgrades to a butchery to keep flies off the meat or the price of wool increasing.

But every so often there is a nugget of historical gold.

So it was when the team flipped through the Moruya Examiner from January 3, 1925, and saw an article without a headline wedged into the top of page three.

It was a story about a message in a bottle that washed up on Bingie Beach, south of Batemans Bay.

Researcher Julian Armstrong decided the newspaper clipping was a breadcrumb along a trail worth investigating.

A man stands and looks at the camera in front of a book-lined museum.

Julian Armstrong realised there weren't many records of messages in bottles predating this one. (ABC South East NSW: James Tugwell)

"I just thought it might be interesting to do a little bit more research," he said.

What he didn't realise at the time was that he may have stumbled onto evidence of Australia's earliest recorded message in a bottle.

Hunting historical clues

The article included a transcript of the original letter and names of nine Scottish seamen aboard the Loch Rannoch, along with the islands they came from.

An old black and white painting of a tall ship under sail.

A painting of Loch Rannock in full sail, by Allan C. Green in 1868.   (Supplied: State Library of Victoria)

The sailors had drunk out of a bottle bought in Glasgow, before throwing it overboard.

In the note inside, they wrote of their intention of "clearing out to try our luck" when they arrived in Port Phillip Heads the following day.

A typed letter on a sepia paper background.

An artist's impression of the article and note. (ABC News: Sharon Gordon)

The Loch Rannoch arrived in Port Phillip Bay on July 24, 1877.

The bottle was found 48 years later, more than 400 nautical miles north of where it was apparently tossed into the sea.

A sepia map of NSW and Victoria showing a line between Port Phillip near Melbourne and Bingie Beach near Batemans Bay.

The message in a bottle washed up on Bingie Beach, south of Batemans Bay. (ABC News: Sharon Gordon)

If the information included in the clipping is correct, the message in a bottle would be the earliest written to be discovered on Australian shores and the fourth-oldest in the world.

The article contains no information about what happened to the bottle, or who found it.

"No other newspapers seemed to pick it up," Mr Armstrong said.

"I suppose in 1925 a bottle that was 50 years old might not be so exciting.

"But if you found a bottle that was 150 years old it might be a bit more exciting, and you might've kept the bottle."

Mr Armstrong was able to find very little information about the sailors themselves.

"We don't really know what happened to the nine sailors," he said.

"They all had Scottish surnames. If you go back and have a look at the [Scottish] records, unfortunately every second person on those islands has that surname.

"If they did desert the ship, they probably changed their names. So they'd be hard to track down."

A man stands at a desk and points to a book of old newspapers.

An old newspaper clipping led Mr Armstrong on a deep dive into the history of messages in bottles. (ABC South East NSW: James Tugwell)

Mr Armstrong hopes further deep dives into old newspapers will see more information come to light.

"We are hoping that maybe in February or March of 1925, which we haven't got to yet, someone might have written in with more information," he said.

"There could be a gem of information out there yet to come."

Connecting with history

Australian National Maritime Museum head of knowledge Peter Hobbins said only a couple of bottles with messages inside washed up every decade or so, so every discovery was exciting.

Dr Hobbins said the newspaper clipping discovered in Moruya was "amazing".

He said the more mundane the message, the more likely it was real, and that the bottle found at Bingie was likely one of the earliest written.

A man sitting at a table with rubber gloves on. In front of him sit two separate, old pieces of yellowed paper.

Peter Hobbins with a letter in a bottle from 1951 in the museum's collection. (Supplied: Peter Hobbins)

"Up until the 1850s a lot of people on board ships may not have been literate," he said.

"You've got this period from 1850 to 1950s, when aeroplanes became popular, where there were literate people who had pencil and paper on a ship and could write a note and then would want to throw it overboard."

He said the peak era for messages in bottles in Australia was during World War I, when departing soldiers threw messages to loved ones overboard en route to the front.

Dr Hobbins said the messages included in bottles established a relationship with figures from the past.

"Everyone loves a message in a bottle," he said.

"Someone from the past is speaking directly to us today. We find the bottle and it connects us with that person.

"Most of us hope there's going to be a treasure map with a big X on it in the bottle as well.

"It's a lovely maritime tradition and it's the sort of thing people could still do today."