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Thread: What motivated you all to join the Merchant Navy.

  1. #11
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    Default Re: What motivated you all to join the Merchant Navy.

    Quote Originally Posted by Mike Hall View Post
    Me,it was suggested i join the Air Force to cover my national service,i had other ideas.
    I applied for the Merchant Navy.Had a medical at Gravesend then got the Vindi course.
    My first ship the Tyrone,my step dad took me too London docks in the family car (HE WAS A LONG DISTANCE LORRY DRIVER).
    We left London and sailed for Cornerbrook,six days into the voyage i had my sixteenth Birthday.
    like us all i have lasting memories.MIKE.
    ah! Cornerbrook, 10-1 women to men ratio when I was there, magic, and very friendly they were too.

  2. #12
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    Default Re: What motivated you all to join the Merchant Navy.

    Quote Originally Posted by Ivan Cloherty View Post
    As Tony says an excellent summary.

    However it was more like 10 years at sea than five for some, As could get called up at anytime between 18 and 26 years of age, and if you did serve in the MN at those ages whilst NS was still active you went on the reserve list until you were 36 years old if you came ashore at 27 years of age, and the majority of us went to sea at 16 years old, engineers it was usually 20/22 years old because of serving time ashore, as engineering apprentices were not de rigour until about 1960, then they started at 18.

    My own love affair with the MN started during the war, as my father had been away for nearly two years and in that time we had been bombed out three times, for some inexplicable reason the crew were not allowed ashore or leave and had to anchor in the River Humber due to nature of the cargo, my mother had apparently got in touch with the MOWT and somehow got a sympathetic ear and got us permission to visit the ship and the Pilot Boat took us down to Spurn Point, all I remember was seeing this big grey and black castle floating in the water (I was 5 or 6 at the time) with armed guards on the gangway and my older sister and myself being kept entertained whilst mother and father apparently got re-acquainted, resulting in a younger brother who alas died in childbirth later. From that day forward I was smitten and although after the third bombing living in the Yorkshire Dales I never ever forget that huge castle and the smell of the sea, and when we got a house in Hull when I was 12.5 years old, I was on my first trawler at the age of 13 bound for the Arctic Circle. Thank you Adolf and the Luftwaffe .for giving me a taste for travel.
    Ivan, Very impressed you must have been a tough little b****r at 12and a half I was on the Aberdeen pool and there was no oil related stuff on the go in the early 60s so it was mostly coasters ect but there was a very large fleet of deep sea trawlers, these boys were hard and tough so god knows what it was like in your day so to use a todays term ( HUGE RESPECT)

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  4. #13
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    Default Re: What motivated you all to join the Merchant Navy.

    Quote Originally Posted by George Gunn View Post
    Ivan, Very impressed you must have been a tough little b****r at 12and a half I was on the Aberdeen pool and there was no oil related stuff on the go in the early 60s so it was mostly coasters ect but there was a very large fleet of deep sea trawlers, these boys were hard and tough so god knows what it was like in your day so to use a todays term ( HUGE RESPECT)
    George I don't know about being a tough little bu##er, but I don't think it did me any harm, and that age you don't even think about it, the trawlers carried a crew of 20 -26 in those days, all tough, but deep down kindly souls, they made sure you pulled your weight and didn't shy away from any task allotted but made sure you were safe. I was never afraid of hard work or long hours, I think being brought up during the war and experiencing Adolf's dislike of our house in three different cities brings out the survival instincts in anyone kind of instills a certain wish to survive where ever you are, there never was time for a childhood.

    At 13 we were not allowed to be on the payroll,(you had to be 15) but were on the Articles and had to have a guardian/parents signature on an insurance document signed across a stamp of the realm. The harder you worked the more tips you got from the crew when they got their payoff, but the best was when they said 'you can sail with us at anytime lad' I was always 'the lad' never Ivan, they were very generous souls and I was always instructed to be 'at the office' when they got their catch money, I wasn't alone waiting as wives and mothers would also be waiting to ensure that all the catch-money didn't end up in the pub..

    There were numerous lads of my age in Hull and Grimsby who sailed on distant water trawlers so I was not unusual as there were over 400 trawlers sailing out of Hull in those days. My second trawler St.Benedict was built in 1936 and even had hot water coming out of the taps, plus toilets in the accommodation, unlike the Swanland where they were on deck, not ideal in the Arctic Circle, but what the hell, they were huge adventures.

    Cheers.

    Anyway now in my late eighties I am still dancing nearly every Saturday night, rock and roll, merangai, rumba so guess it didn't do me any harm.

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  6. #14
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    Default Re: What motivated you all to join the Merchant Navy.

    Ivan, I see the fishing industry is not so good.
    Your most wonderful PM has granted extra fishing rights to EU.
    Is that correct?
    Happy daze John in Oz.

    Life is too short to blend in.

    John Strange R737787
    World Traveller

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