Can you remember who was who though! On the Winchester
G W Lloyd 1951 to 1959 Also on Edinburgh 1960 I think this was Logger!
N M Lloyd 1960 only
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Can you remember who was who though! On the Winchester
G W Lloyd 1951 to 1959 Also on Edinburgh 1960 I think this was Logger!
N M Lloyd 1960 only
Best Captain of all was Capt Farrow on the old Dunnottar Castle a real Gentleman and very very fair!
He did the last Voyage on her ,when I was there as well!
Cheers
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Well Vern.
Have the much thumbed ,relevant Book ,at my Side.
Though Some of the Signatures ,are now a bit faded.
I re-iterate.
The Dates ,I gave,are accurate.Those three Trips, are each signed by Logger Lloyd .
Whether it's A G.w. as to me looks more like a .J. The last letter d . in his surname,has a ,distinctive sweeping Line, continuing from ,and going back over the top of the full signature.
Looking further back ,I find,My first three Castle boat trips were as A.B, Capetown Castle. Capt Deller .They being 22nd. Oct. 1952 . to Finalising ,27 March 1953. Forward then to 4 December 1954 My next three ,Trips with U.C-L was
Winchester Castle. Q.M. 14 Sept.1955. Finalising , 4 Feb. 1956.
Forward then, to 4. December1958.to 16 Jan. 1959. {Must have taken a break,home , then)as my next Signing I note ,was 13th Mar. '59. As rejoined as A.B. No.7. Hatchman's job.
Remember now ,My last Watch ,Q.M. was still there. Good Guy! Bristolian ,always in for a laugh!
Apparently ,the Crew Cook had Stabbed the Butcher,Shortly before leaving Durban,He's Standing By on the Bridge ,prior to sailing. The Drama had been unfolding For'd. .By Now the Cook was In the charge of the Master 's At Arms. On The Wing , As the wounded Butcher was being swung ashore, He'd died . it was indicated to the Bridge. Logger Shouts. Quote "What did I tell you! The Man's a Bloody Murderer! Shackle him to the Rails, Master -at Arms"
Three Trips. into ,
1959.
Problem solved!
I left the Ship ,as stated. 8 May 1959 '
You( Left Southampton on the 2ist. ) As usual , Like a Bus Service . Would have been
4.p.m. a Thursday .
"ll pop in with a bottle of Singleton Whiskey. My first thought was never heard of that one before I realised he was referring to. etc.
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Hi ! John .and Vic.
Day before yesterday,had rang , about 2p.m and ordered three bottles .
Two were outside on the verandah, early yesterday, with an explanatory note.
Service !
Brought them .in .Before Opening the Computer and reading your (Quoted} relevance .John.
And here's me thinking , all the time over past couple years .was just a local thing, Between a few "In the Know".
Just been out and retrieved the third bottle. and Change. as per the explanatory Note.
Hadn't been making much use of the Service. for ages. As ,in the Casino, all,is available ,24 hrs. day, "Gratis "
Downside ,Thing there is,my capacity 's reduced. Win some,Lose some!
But I do find ,from a Medicinal point of view. So is my dependence on the B'P. tablet. reduced Strange! A little Bit of what you fancy does one good .they say.
#15... That's a new one to me Vic, doubt whether Patrick would know either, as I live in Singleton and he lives in the next door village of Golden Bay, I assumed he was making a joke. If he turns up with a bottle as stated will let you know, although the last time he was true to his word was about 3 years ago when he drank all my whiskey. Cheers JWS
Vern, I think one of them was on the Stirling but not sure of the dates, definite about the Edinburgh as my mate was on there in the galley when he was skipper. Gave them a hard time, not called logger for nothing.
Best I can recall was Granny Smythe and Annie Oakley who as ex R.N. Had a back injury which made him walk a bit to one side but a nice guy. Logged me once for giving a troublesome blood a serve.
We had a saying for him.
Annie the humpty backed, jumped up, never come down, black enameled warrior.
I guess I must qualify as a "Half Crown Pom"....I worked my passage to Oz,2&half months Liverpool to Sydney @ a shilling a month,bludgers still haven't paid me :mad:
Jack. My dad did the same thing on the SS Benalla in 1924. Not sure if he got paid either. I really don't care that much, he met my mother on the ship and gave me the incentive to go to sea. That was worth much more than the piece of silver.
Richard