Xantho was built in 1848 as a
paddle steamer by
William Denny & Brothers. The vessel was used by the
Anstruther and Leith Steamship Company for crossings of the
Firth of Forth between
Leith and
Aberdour. In 1860, she was sold and relocated to
Scarborough, North Yorkshire. In July 1864,
Xantho was sold again, and her register transferred to
Wick, from where she was permitted to take excursions to sea. In early 1871,
Xantho was sold to metal merchant Robert Stewart of
Glasgow, who replaced the paddle engines with a second-hand
Crimean War-era two-cylinder, non-condensing
trunk engine built (or assembled) in 1861 by
John Penn. Stewart reshaped the vessel's stern and fitted a propeller to convert it from a paddle-steamer to a screw-steamer. The Crimean War-type gunboat engine and those built to the same design in the ensuing years were the first high-pressure, high-revolution, mass-produced engines made for use at sea. The type also used
Whitworth's Standard Thread throughout, allowing for interchangeability of parts. The refurbished,
schooner-rigged Xantho was offered for sale in October 1871 and was purchased by
Charles Edward Broadhurst, a
Manchester-born entrepreneur involved in colonial ventures in northwest Australia.
Xantho was brought to Western Australia via the
Suez Canal and the
Straits Settlements for use by Broadhurst as a transport and mother vessel for
pearling operations. Using the engine to enable her to sail into difficult harbours and against wind and tide
Xantho was also effectively operated as a
tramp steamer, taking whatever cargoes and passengers she could. In that role she became Western Australia's first locally owned coastal steamship.
Xantho subsequently made two round trips between
Fremantle, Batavia (now
Jakarta),
Geraldton and Broadhurst's pearling camps at
Port Hedland and Banningarra (on
Pardoo Station).
Xantho also transported a number of north-west
Aboriginal men from the Aboriginal prison at
Rottnest Island back to their home near
Cossack and
Roebourne. In November 1872, whilst travelling down from the pearling grounds to Fremantle
Xantho shipped a cargo of lead ore from
Port Gregory, an outlet for the Geraldine Mine on the nearby
Murchison River. Overloaded, her hull badly corroded and her deck planking opened by the tropical sun,
Xantho began to take on water on the way down the coast. After returning to Port Gregory she struck a sandbar and sank. ==Rediscovery and engine restoration==