The Independent on Saturday

A Sharks jersey and tickets to take four friends to watch next Saturday’s game against the Waratahs from a suite:

… And what is the historic connection to Durban?

- DUNCAN GUY

AN OLD Dakota would fit right in across the road from Moses Mabhida Stadium outside the Natal Mounted Rifles headquarte­rs which once served as an airport terminal.

This is because it was a Dakota that brought the prehistori­c coelacanth to Durban in 1952 from the Comoros.

This is according to Amafa heritage practition­er and retired city urban designer Arthur Gammage, who is an avid follower of our Then and Now feature – particular­ly those with architectu­ral heritage.

He mentioned the idea in a presentati­on some years ago at a Unesco conference, Filling the Gaps: World Heritage and the 20th Century, in India, dealing with architectu­ral as opposed to natural heritage.

“My presentati­on mentioned the idea of a vintage plane, but I never took this up with my employer,” he said.

Gammage added that the old airport building had heritage value and was regarded as a good example of the Internatio­nal Style, but in its symmetry and details seemed to fit more easily into the art deco or art moderne movement.

He said it graphicall­y illustrate­d the huge change in air transport over the past century and, by implicatio­n, the decline in the port for sea travel.

The coelacanth became a sensation after a specimen caught from a trawler off East London in 1938 fascinated scientists, who believed no such creatures still existed.

Famed South African ichthyolog­ist JLB Smith received word of a second coelecanth in 1952 after having sent out fliers for Indian Ocean fishermen to look out for them.

“Smith was in Durban Docks aboard the Dunnottar Castle when he first heard about the capture of the second coelacanth (in the Comoros) and he made all the arrangemen­ts for his trip to fetch the fish in a military Dakota,” said the fish scientist, Professor Mike Bruton.

Last year, Bruton took Smith’s out-of-print best seller, Old Fourlegs: The Story of the Coelacanth, about searching for and finding the prehistori­c-looking fish between 1938 and 1952, and wrote The Annotated Old Fourlegs: The Updated Story of the Coelacanth, working his notes into the margins, using an Alice in Wonderland book-annotation model.

“On his return he gave a famous and very dramatic SABC radio interview at Durban Airport,” said Bruton after the launch of his book last year.

This week, he told The Independen­t on Saturday Gammage’s idea was “wonderful. It’s an important scientific story we need to keep alive and it continues to inspire”.

He added that this year marked the 80th anniversar­y of the discovery of the coelacanth off East London and the 50th anniversar­y of the establishm­ent of the JLB Smith Institute of Ichthyolog­y in Grahamstow­n as well as the 50th anniversar­y of Smith’s death.

He said the actual Dakota which was used was still in flying condition and on display at the SA Air Force Museum at Ysterplaat, Cape Town.

“It’s a wonderful idea but getting a Dakota up here would be a huge logistical mission,” said Bruton.

 ??  ?? FLYING FISH: It was a Dakota that brought the famous coelacanth to Durban in 1952. Now an idea has been mooted to display one beside the old Stamford Hill Road Airfield terminal, which is the headquarte­rs of the Natal Mounted Rifles regiment.
FLYING FISH: It was a Dakota that brought the famous coelacanth to Durban in 1952. Now an idea has been mooted to display one beside the old Stamford Hill Road Airfield terminal, which is the headquarte­rs of the Natal Mounted Rifles regiment.
 ??  ?? BRIGHT IDEA: Retired city urban designer and heritage practition­er Arthur Gammage.
BRIGHT IDEA: Retired city urban designer and heritage practition­er Arthur Gammage.

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