Cruise News & Reviews
Jun 17, 2010
Author: Terry Hutson
Thomas Miller Helps renovate Africa’s oldest ship

Thomas Miller's Chairman, Hugo Wynn-Williams
Thomas Miller celebrates its 125th anniversary by supporting the renovation of Africa's oldest ship
Built in Glasgow in 1898, Chauncy Maples will become a floating clinic serving the health needs of villagers living around the shores of Lake
Malawi.
Believed to be the oldest ship still afloat in Africa, the 38m long motor ship Chauncy Maples is to be renovated as a floating clinic to bring primary
health care to half a million of the world's poorest people living around Lake Malawi. The necessary funds are now being raised by the Oxford-
based Chauncy Maples Malawi Trust with considerable support from Thomas Miller, a London-based specialist insurance company, which has
chosen to make the renovation of Chauncy Maples the focal point of its 125th anniversary celebrations.
The Trust needs to raise up to £2m in order for the planned refit to be completed within a 12 month time frame. Thomas Miller is contributing
£250,000 from its own resources and has already raised a similar amount from its friends, employees and business associates even before the
official launch of its appeal on 17 June. The Government of Malawi is also expected to make a substantial contribution towards the local labour
costs.
Half a million people living along the coastline of Lake Malawi, which is 560km long and 75km at its widest point, have neither access to health
care nor medical protection from malaria, tuberculosis, dysentery and HIV-Aids. Malawians seeking medical attention currently paddle dugout
canoes up to 80km to reach medical aid, risking fatal attacks by hippos and crocodiles.

SS Chauncy Maples as she was in her heyday, on the occasion of the Jubilee Celebrations
Chauncy Maples was built in Glasgow in 1898 for British missionaries working in Central Africa and was named after the 6th Bishop of Nyasaland
who drowned in a storm on Lake Malawi. Shipped to Mozambique in 3,481 small parts plus an 11 ton boiler mounted on wheels, the vessel
components were subsequently moved by river and then overland, local tribesmen carrying and dragging them the final 100 miles to the
lakeside for assembly.
The two year rebuild was well documented and photographed. Since then, Chauncy Maples has served as a gunboat, a trawler and even a
refuge from Arab slave traders. Until recently, she has been administering to the needs of the local population as a bar, a far cry from what is
now envisaged for her future.
According to Thomas Miller director, Mark Holford, the trust is not only seeking financial contributions:
“Several potential donors have already come forward to ask whether they can offer more practical support by way of equipment or services. We
are already in detailed discussions with a major manufacturer of diesel engines who we hope will offer us a new main engine on favourable
terms.”

Chauncy Maples as she appears today at Monkey Bay on the shore of Lake Malawi
Currently Chauncy Maples is fitted with a Crossley diesel engine that itself replaced the former steam plant in 1967. The original steam
machinery is now in a museum in Malawi while the last boiler languishes in shallow water at the side of the lake. Originally Chauncy Maples was
fired using local timber.
Thomas Miller's Chairman, Hugo Wynn-Williams, explained the background to the company's decision to support the Chauncy Maples project:
“In former days, organisations would celebrate major anniversaries with lavish parties and dinners but even before we all felt the full impact of
the current global recession, there was a growing feeling amongst the more forward-thinking companies that it would be more appropriate to
devote time and resources to projects that benefit the community.
“In Thomas Miller's case, we were looking for a project that reflected not only our global reach and our maritime heritage but one that would
appeal too to our UK clients such as members of the legal profession, patent agents, housing associations and pension fund trustees. The
Chauncy Maples project ticked both boxes - and a host more.”

Sketch of how Chauncy Maples will appear as a clinic, drawing is by Naval Africa, Durban
Chauncy Maples is owned by the Government of Malawi and Malawi State and President Ngwasi Dr Bingu Wa Mutharika has announced his full
support for this unique undertaking in the fifth poorest country in the world.
Patrick Zimpita, Director of Planning, Ministry of Health, Malawi, believes that the Chauncy Maples project is important because it fits into the
Government's key objective to ensure access and availability of health services to all Malawians, regardless of income, status or geographical
position:
“The people who live on the lake shores have many socio-economic problems. Cholera is common in the wet season because the shallow wells
become contaminated with sewage. These communities along the lake have no infrastructure and large numbers of people are still severely
challenged for health care.
“Chauncy Maples will go a long way in improving the lives of these people. Rainy season is October to March during which there is a high
prevalence of malaria. Immunisation coverage is very low because it is expensive, or even impossible, for a mother to take her children to the
nearest clinic. It might be only a mile away but with a mountain on one side, and the deep and stormy lake on the other, it's not a simple
journey.
“This is a Golden project. The demand for this service is huge - it will be several decades before roads will reach these sea-locked villages.”
Qualified local marine engineers, supported by a number of apprentices, will renovate Chauncy Maples. With support from international donors,
the floating clinic should be fully operational in one year.
Janie Hampton, the Director of the Chauncy Maples Malawi Trust, is confident of success:
“Sailing between the small village communities scattered around the lake, Chauncy Maples will bring free treatment for common diseases,
dentistry, maternity care, immunisation for babies, family planning and information on safe sex. Presently, Malawi citizens have a life expectancy
of just 36 years; with only one doctor for every 52,000 people, the infant death rate is 111 per 1,000 births - 20 times worse than Europe. We
are certain that the team of nurses that will be living and working aboard Chauncy Maples will reduce mortality rates of both adults and
children.”
Despite their country's acute poverty, Malawians are slowly improving economic conditions by good management of minimal resources. Poor
health is still a millstone to progress. The Chauncy Maples project on Lake Malawi combines health service delivery; preservation of Africa's
marine heritage and training for local apprentices and will be a catalyst for both national pride and tourism.

The then Archdeacon Chauncy Maples, after whom the ship was named, with Revd WP Johnson, a fellow missionary of the Universities
Mission to Central Africa
Footnote
Established in 1885 as the manager of the UK P&I Club www.ukpandi.com, Thomas Miller is
celebrating its 125th anniversary this year. A global leader in the management of transport mutual insurance clubs it provides insurance services
to approximately 50 percent of the world's shipowners as well as many of the world's leading ports, terminals, logistic operators, ship brokers,
ship agents and other types of transport intermediaries. In recent years, it has also extended into non-marine activities and today provides
professional indemnity insurance services to barristers, solicitors, patent agents, housing associations and pension fund trustees.
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