Captain Jack Radley and the Heyday of the Fleet
The story of Adventist mission boats in the south seas
By Rose-Marie Radley
Paperback, 400 pages
Signs Publishing, 2018
ISBN: 9781925044805
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Since the earliest days of Adventist mission, reaching the people of the South Pacific has offered unique challenges. Vast oceans, remote islands and hostile populations, limited communications, and the ever-present risks of tropical storms and diseases rendered this a region in which the gospel would only spread with long-term commitment. Generations of expatriate and then local missionaries faithfully took up this challenge—supported by a growing fleet of mission boats of many shapes and sizes.
A self-taught engineer, ship’s captain and navigator, Jack Radley was one of the dominant figures in the development and heyday of the fleet, demonstrating the pioneering spirit that saw the Adventist church established and growing in these island nations, as well as contributing to the medical and economic development of the region. As such, this carefully researched history of Adventist mission boats is also the story of the people who sailed them and the international church they helped build.
Author Rose-Marie Radley experienced much of the history in this book as the daughter of Jack Radley, sailing with him on the Ambon around the South Pacific as a teenager. After training as a nurse, she served in Adventist hospitals in Taiwan and Hong Kong, before taking up the position of Director of Nursing at Sydney Adventist Hospital.
- The Radley Family
- The Beginnings of the Fleet (1890–1913)
- The Arrival of Captain Jones
- The Plight of the Melanesia
- Self-insurance, the Melanesia and ACA Ltd
- John Clifton Radley
- Small Boats and Big Offerings
- Stories of God’s Providence
- Additions in the 1920s
- Captain Jack and Rose Merle Radley
- Stories from the New Hebrides
- The 1930s and the Halvorsens
- A Race with Death
- Back in Australia
- The War Arrives
- Mission Boats Destroyed, Sold and Appropriated
- The Fate of Expatriates in Rabaul
- Some War Stories
- The Melanesia Returns
- A New Fleet
- Second-hand Vessels for Initial Relief
- Some Post-war Stories
- Our Family in Rabaul
- Dad’s Work
- Competing Demands for New Vessels
- A New Halvorsen Fleet
- Insurance Revisited
- New Boats from a New Source
- Rebuilding the Fleet—and the Beginning of its Decline
- Other Post-war Boats
- Dad’s Retirement
- Stocktake and Reallocation
- Focus Turns to Planes
- The Last Additions
- Longevity in Service
- Remembering our Adventist Boats
- Additional Research Sources
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