After smashing her bow in a collision with
Long Nose Point Wharf in August 1970, she was taken out of service. Needing a lot of work, she was sold in August 1971 to an
Adelaide syndicate who sailed her to Port Adelaide. Over fifteen months, and for $130,000, she was re-purposed to a showboat with her aft wheelhouse being removed. She was provided with a timber dance floor on the bottom deck and a galley upstairs where the aft wheelhouse had been. Air conditioning was added to the engine room, which was painted white. The engine was painted bright yellow with chrome and copper fittings with soft white pile carpet on the floor. She served in this role there until being replaced by a purpose-built vessel in 1985, and
Lady Chelmsford was sold again to Bill Leahy for use as a cursing restaurant in
Melbourne. On 6 December 2002,
Lady Chelmsford was involved in a collision with the moored cabin cruiser
Rob Roy, resulting in minor damage to both ships but no injuries. In 2005, she was out of survey, taken out of service and sold. In 2007, she was sold again to her first Melbourne owners and returned to a static dining experience. In February 2008,
Lady Chelmsford sank at her moorings in Melbourne having almost sunk in early 2007. Due to her fragile structural integrity and salvaging cost, she was broken up on site in June 2011.
Lady Scott was sold in 1969 and used as a cruise boat. A 1972 fire destroyed her superstructure and she was re-built as the
John Cadman cruising restaurant. She was sold to new owners, renamed
Harbour Queen, and in 2014 sank and was broken.
Lady Ferguson was towed to
Hobart with
Kosciusko in 1975 to assist following
the collapse of the Tasman Bridge, however, she was found to be in too poor condition and was scrapped.
Lady Denman was pulled from ferry service in 1979 following the introduction that year of the new
Lady Street. She is now on permanent land display at
Huskisson on the New South Wales south coast.
Lady Edeline was the longest serving as a Sydney ferry being decommissioned in 1984 with the remaining wooden
K-class ferries following the ''Karrabee's
sinking earlier that year. She was laid up on the Parramatta River and sank into the mud in 1988. Of the five, only Lady Denman'' is still extant. == See also ==