Tony Suttor, up in Darwin, just reminded me about this one!! (thanks for the lyrics and the data, Tone) - I've not yet found Mike & Lesley singing it online (as well as being singer-songwriters, they're genealogists - and more!)
DON’T SIGN ON THE EMMA
Mike Murray & Lesley Silvester
Stranded in Fremantle I was looking for a berth I’d just been paid off from a Yankee whaler I’d heard the schooner Emma was signing on a crew When I got talking with another sail-or, and he said:
Chorus: “Don’t sign on the Emma, she’s not the ship for you; Don’t sign on the Emma, that’s a warning. She’s had her share of troubles and she’s looking for a crew; She’s sailing from Fremantle in the morning."
He said “I shipped on board the Emma on her first run up the coast The ship took all the sail that we could give her But before a day and night had passed, a sailor we had lost Then we fouled the anchor in the De Grey River.”
“Next we hit the jetty when we docked at Champion Bay The passengers and crew were all a-swearing The Master says ‘The compass wasn’t working right today And we’ll have to try and find a different bearing.’ ” So…
“The next trip was no better when we headed for the North We had a mob of sheep to take to Roebourne Then up at the Abrolhos we stranded on a reef and We had to build a raft to bring the sheep home.” So…
Well, I thought about the sailor as I walked down to the quay And I saw the Emma stranded on the sand spit I watched as she refloated – and then she lost her mast So I decided that the Emma wasn’t my ship. So…
Weeks went by and then the news the Emma had gone down And all the town was talking the next morning And I thought about the words that the sailor said to me: “Don’t sign on the Emma, that’s a warning.” No…
Notes with CD: “The Emma was plagued with misfortune from the start. Brought to Western Australia by the pastoralist and merchant Walter Padbury in 1865, she only managed to complete two voyages up and down the coast of Western Australia, before she was lost on her third voyage, returning from Roebourne to Fremantle. Over a hundred years later her wreck was located on a reef off Coral Bay. During her short but eventful life on the coast, she suffered a host of misfortunes, and quickly gained a reputation as an unlucky ship, to be shunned by sailors.”