Issue XXI
Contents
I
The Face of the Enemy
II The Making of a Seaman
by Kim Reeman
III Jack Still Had
A Word For It
IV
Relentless Pursuit
V Kent/Reeman Website
VI The Richard Bolitho
Figurine
VII
Richard Bolitho - A Life
I
The Face of the Enemy
During the last decades of the eighteenth century, and at the beginning
of the next, the art of ship carving and embellishment had reached its
peak, and had begun its decline. It was blamed on a lack of skilled
craftsmen, but with every dockyard fully employed after many years of war
that seems unlikely. Then, as now, economy would be closer to the
truth.
A ship was often judged by the carved decoration
around her stern and poop, the ‘gingerbread’ as it was nicknamed.
Often very elaborate and adorned with noble figures and creatures of the
deep, it fell to the ship’s captain to maintain its appearance out of his
own pocket, an expensive investment which had to be constantly replenished.
A would-be volunteer would sometimes gauge his own
chances just by looking at it. The bright gold paint was never cheap;
it implied that the ship’s captain was wealthy and more to the point that
he was successful in battle, when prize money was the outcome. The
‘gilt on the gingerbread’ was well named. It was also a guide to
any parent or guardian who might be thinking of ‘volunteering’ his boy
for the uncertainties and hazards of the King’s navy.
Prize money was always a cause for dispute and resentment.
During the nation’s darkest days, when the fleet rose in mutiny at The
Nore and Spithead and a French invasion seemed imminent, the sentiment
of the lower deck was often voiced: “Let death be shared like prize money
- the lion’s share to the officers!” Perhaps another reason for the
Admiralty’s change of heart regarding lavish carving.
But one outstanding embellishment remained, even
up to the end of the sailing era and sometimes beyond, the ship’s figurehead.
Carvers became well known because of their work, and could be found around
all the dockyards where ships of war were built, Portsmouth, Chatham, Plymouth
and Sheerness, and many more where a keel could be laid, and a hull formed
from a wooden skeleton to become what has been described as man’s most
beautiful creation. A carver may have spared little thought for a
ship’s carpenter and his crew who were expected to maintain his creation
through every kind of storm, the fury of a sea fight, or the greatest enemy
of all, rot.
We sometimes forget that after a ship was built and
launched there were many places throughout her hull which never again saw
the light of day until she was broken up. Ships were required to
be at sea, away from any kind of dockyard for months at a time. Like
the old seventy-four two-decker Superb, one of Nelson’s ships.
Four years at sea, with never a week in port. They even wrote a ballad
about her.
Some figureheads were huge and complicated, with
several carved figures, even prancing horses in support of the main carving.
HMS Victory, berthed at Portsmouth, stirring and eye-catching in
her Trafalgar livery, had such a figurehead when she was built in 1765.
It was some twenty-four feet high and eighteen feet broad, representing
Britannia, Victory and the four winds backed up by a British lion,
and surmounted by a deeply unflattering bust of George III. Again,
rot had its way, and the figurehead had to be removed and replaced in 1802
by a less elaborate version consisting of the royal arms supported on either
side by cherubs: the figurehead which broke the French line at Trafalgar
three years later, when Victory was already forty years old, or
‘young’ as they say in the navy.
Warriors and heroes of Greek and Roman mythology.
Kings and princes, Shakespearean characters, all grew at the carver’s hands.
They gave a ship personality, offered hope and pride to her people, identified
her to friend and foe alike. And when the smoke of battle parted,
it was usually the figurehead which appeared first, driving in to engage
at close action, the face of the enemy.
Today when we see the preserved and splendid figureheads
at Chatham and Portsmouth, or in the National Maritime Museum at Greenwich,
remember them as they must have been in their glory.
And those crafted for merchant vessels deserve no
less attention, their subjects less majestic or warlike, but just as meaningful,
an owner’s wife or daughter perhaps. A fisherman, or a carved tin
miner from an old brig on the Cornish trade routes. Fashioned with
skill and patience and, I think, with love. An unsurpassed collection
of these can be found at the Valhalla Maritime Museum at Tresco in the
Isles of Scilly. Many vessels came to grief amongst those islands,
from small drifters to the proud ships of Admiral Sir Cloudesley Shovell’s
squadron, which foundered in a storm off the Scillies with the loss of
nearly two thousand lives.
The new age of iron and steam closed the order book
for the ship’s carver. But his work lives on.
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II
The Making of a Seaman by Kim Reeman
Douglas, you gained invaluable practical experience as a seaman before
you were even a commissioned officer.
Yes. I was straight out of school. The thing you have to remember
is that Ganges doesn’t even exist any more, and at that time the only place
like it was St. Vincent.
What was HMS Ganges and who went there?
Primarily it was a training establishment for boy seamen, the seamanship
branch, although during World War II there were other ratings (the signals
branch) under training as well. It overlooked Harwich Harbour, at
Shotley, and the North Sea, of course. Some of the boys who were
there were from naval families but mostly they were not, and we had to
learn all the rudiments of seamanship from scratch. You either loved
it or you hated it. Everything was at the double. My old seamanship
instructor said to me, “Here you don’t run, you don’t walk, YOU FLIES!”
We learned discipline, tradition and ceremonial,
which moulded the incoming volunteers into divisions, which were subdivided
into classes. You learned where to stand, how to salute, whom to
salute, how to address an officer, how to behave, ranks and badges, and
after about a month of that you got down to the really hard stuff of seamanship,
gunnery and signals. Everything was done en masse and yet it taught
you self-reliance and independence.
What about seamanship?
It was taught using magnificent models to begin with. As a young
boy I’d always enjoyed going to toy shops and seeing expensive models at
work, so I was absolutely knocked over by these things. For example,
they would have the model of a cruiser’s forecastle in the classroom, and
everything worked, anchor cables, everything. I thought it was wonderful.
When they gave the order for hoisting anchor you’d see where it went...
I was right there, living it. Then there was basic seamanship, wire
and rope splicing, bends and hitches, until you could do it in the dark
(had to) right down to the mysteries of slinging a hammock and climbing
into one. Boat handling was the next thing - you went out in naval
pulling boats, cutters and whalers, and what made it quite splendid to
us was that it was in the middle of the busiest harbour in the middle of
a war, and you were surrounded by escort vessels from coastal convoys,
coming and going all the time, and MTBs, sometimes coming back shot up,
sometimes with people laid out on deck, covered up.
Is that when you fell in love with MTBs?
Yes. Because everybody in them seemed very young and very dashing
and totally independent. They weren’t, but you got the impression
they were running the war on their own. They’d go out at odd times
and come in at odd times and you’d see that their torpedo tubes were empty,
and you’d wonder what they’d been doing.
Being allowed to go to Harwich was the big thing.
You weren’t allowed if you were classed as a backward swimmer, which I
was, because I couldn’t swim two lengths of the baths in a duck suit, but
I got around that by asking a friend of mine to do it twice, once on his
own, and once when they called, “Name?” He said, “Reeman,” and went
in. Nobody knew us very well then, so we got away with it. So we
were allowed in the liberty boat, a motor fishing vessel, which was picking
up sailors going on leave - you’d all tumble out together, real jolly Jack
Tars (although they knew you weren’t). All the ships, all the Jacks...you’d
say anything to pass and get over there, lie, cheat, anything. So
I did. It was all very exciting. We also got paid two shillings a
day, plus a war bonus of one shilling. I thought it was wonderful;
it was more than I’d ever got!
What about that mast?
Dominated the place, off a ship-of-the-line, about a hundred and twenty-five
feet high. Everybody had to climb it, up and out, and it moved, too,
in the wind, even though it was fixed to the ground, with yards and the
ensign flying. There was a safety net if you fell off, but as it
was only a couple of feet off the ground it wouldn’t have saved you.
A terrifying experience for one who dislikes heights.
Yes, and as a class leader I had to go first and check the others through
and look down from the main top.
You went out on convoys.
We were taken out in the local escorts, small, very new destroyers,
Hunt Class. We were detailed off to go but it wasn’t in the training
schedule.
How long were you at Ganges?
About six months, I think. Then I went to a naval division at
Chatham and from there to my first ship, HMS Windsor.
At this time you were a C.W. candidate but to all intents a seaman.
The V & Ws were terribly crowded.
Only because the equipment they carried had outgrown the ships!
Every new piece of equipment needed people to manage it, like Asdic, so
they all had to be on board, a hundred and thirty-four people aboard an
old destroyer meant to carry many less. There were five sinks for
seamen, no shower, no bath; chiefs and petty officers had four handbasins;
officers had showers, and the captain had a bath - luxury! I was
always standing behind somebody doing something at a basin. You really
did learn to wash standing on a pocket handkerchief. They were immensely
crowded but very, very happy ships - not even enough room to sling your
hammock. I only ever slung mine aboard Windsor once and that
was in harbour, and half the ship’s company were on leave. But I
was embraced by the comradeship of the lower deck, and the brutal humour,
something I’ve never forgotten. It was an invaluable insight into
that side of life, which has never left me. The way the sailors put
up with the awful things they had to see and do, and coped with it all.
Windsor was your first taste of action.
I was navigator’s yeoman. She was a heavy-weather ship: we went
to Iceland, did convoy duty in the North Sea, went just about everywhere.
Ships on fire, ships sinking, people fished out of the drink. I knew
what I was getting into, but it was drummed into me at Ganges. We
were supposed to bear in mind that about half of us would be killed, but
I never thought it would happen to me.
All these experiences simply served to deepen your love of the navy.
Ganges was steeped in tradition, Sunday divisions, inspections, parades.
Leave was local only, into Shotley. It was a kind of total immersion,
but I’d always had this dream ever since my grandfather took me over the
Victory,
and it has remained with me.
You were seventeen when you left Windsor and went to HMS King
Alfred, and became a midshipman. Would you be the same person,
or the same writer, if you hadn’t had these experiences?
I don’t think so. That same old seamanship instructor said once,
“Wherever you go, the Ganges will stand you in good stead. It’s a
good place to have been, but it’s a bloody awful place to be in!”
Except he didn’t say ‘bloody’. But it remains a kind of touchstone
for any one who knew it - “that bloody mast!” somebody said to me
recently, when I mentioned Ganges, and his face lit up. But we were
all for it. It taught me tolerance, and affection for people, as
well as love and respect for the navy and its traditions.
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III
Jack Still Had a Word For It
Some naval slang of a later period:
Andrew
The Navy. From a Lieutenant Andrew Miller of Nelson’s time who
was in charge of the press gangs in the Portsmouth and Spithead
area. He pressed so many men that it was described as Andrew’s
Navy.
Bottle
A very severe reprimand, ‘bottle of acid’.
Drink up
To take a ‘bottle’ without complaint.
Chief
A Chief Petty Officer. Also a senior engineer.
Buzz
A messdeck rumour, usually unreliable.
Killick
A leading hand. A small anchor worn on sleeve to denote rate, ie.
Killick Stoker, Killick Coxswain.
Jack Dusty A supply assistant
who deals with ship’s stores.
Winger
A very close friend, messdeck term.
Parting Brass Rags The end of a close friendship.
Guns
The gunnery officer.
Horse’s Neck Wardroom tipple, brandy and ginger
ale.
Fix
Obtaining a ship’s position by taking compass bearings of charted
landmarks, ie. lighthouse, beacon, church steeple.
Floater
Drifting mine.
Bunts
Signals rating, ‘bunting tosser’.
The Bloke
The Commander in a big ship.
The Jaunty The
Master-at-Arms. Feared and respected. Also ‘joss man’.
The Crusher Regulating Petty
Officer. Assistant to the Jaunty.
Tin Fish
Torpedo.
Buffer
Chief Boatswain’s Mate.
Snotty
Midshipman.
God Bosun The
Padre. Also ‘Bible-Basher’.
Stone Frigate A shore establishment with
a ship’s name.
Old Man
The Captain. Also known as The Owner.
Sippers
A sip of a messmate’s rum to mark an occasion, or payment for
a good turn. Alas, no longer!
Pilot
The Navigating Officer.
Sparks
Telegraphist rating.
Libertymen Men
on leave.
Sprog
A new entry. One still ‘green’.
Number One Wardroom name for First
Lieutenant.
Jimmy the One Messdeck term for Number One.
Flat Top
Aircraft carrier.
Skimming Dish Fast motor boat.
Fanny
Mess kettle.
Stroppy Jack One who knows it all
and keeps telling every one!
Jankers
Detention quarters, also the ‘can’ or glasshouse.
Tiddley
The peak of naval smartness, in dress or in the appearance of a
ship. Never used to describe drunkenness.
A Bad Show A disaster.
Ping
An echo obtained by Asdic/sonar when detecting a submarine.
Pusser
An individual who ‘goes by the book’, also things relating to the
purser, ie. Pusser’s jam, Pusser’s tobacco, Pusser’s clothing. Per
regulations.
Hooligan
Oerlikon, a small rapid-firing cannon, WWII.
E.R.A.
Engineroom artificer, or Tiffy.
Scran Bag
For personal gear left lying about a messdeck, a sailor’s home,
and making it untidy. Those guilty can redeem their possessions
on payment of a nominal fine.
Roll on my Twelve! Disgust. Fed up.
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IV
RELENTLESS
PURSUIT
It
is December 1815, and Adam Bolitho’s orders are unequivocal. As captain
of His Majesty’s frigate Unrivalled of forty-six guns, he is required
to “repair in the first instance to Freetown, Sierra Leone, and reasonably
assist the senior officer of the patrolling squadron”. But all efforts
of the British anti-slavery patrols to curb a flourishing trade in human
life are hampered by unsuitable ships, and the indifference of a government
more concerned with old enemies made distrustful allies, and the continuing
belligerence of the Dey of Algiers, which threatens to ignite a full-scale
war.
For Adam, also, there is no peace. Lost in
grief and loneliness, his uncle’s death still unavenged, he is uncertain
of all but his identity as a man of war. The sea is his element,
the ship his only home, and a reckless, perhaps doomed attack on an impregnable
stronghold his only hope of settling the bitterest of debts.
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V
Kent/Reeman Website
If you have access to the Internet you may wish to visit the official
Kent/Reeman website, designed, in consultation with us, by George and Amy
Jepson of Tall Ships
Books in Iowa, USA. The website, in sumptuous colour, features jacket
proofs, blurbs, exclusive photographs from the author’s private collection,
a log for readers’ messages, and all the back issues of the Richard Bolitho
newsletter, for which we receive many requests.
You may visit the website at www.bolithomaritimeproductions.com.
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VI
The Richard Bolitho Figurine
Alexander Kent, in association with the Albany Fine China Company, takes
pleasure in presenting this exquisite bone china figurine portraying Captain
Richard Bolitho, the hero of his best-selling novels about the men and
ships of Britain’s eighteenth and nineteenth century navy.
Bolitho wears the uniform of a post-captain, as he
would have appeared while commanding HMS Hyperion, one of the most
popular ships in the series.
Each figurine is one of a numbered edition, hand-crafted
and authentic in every detail - a remarkable recreation not only of a stirring
period, but of an individual.
A limited number of figurines are still available
at the reduced price of £180.00 including VAT, postage, packing and
insurance. Payment by cheque or international money order in sterling
only, to Bolitho Maritime Productions Limited, 10 Eaton Park Road, Cobham,
Surrey, England KT11 2JH.
RETURN
TO TOP
VI
Richard Bolitho - A Life
| 1756 |
born in Falmouth, son of James Bolitho |
| 1768 |
entered the King's service as a midshipman on
Manxman
(80) |
| 1772 |
Midshipman Gorgon (74)
Richard Bolitho - Midshipman
Midshipman Bolitho and the Avenger |
| 1774 |
promoted Lieutenant Destiny (28); Rio
and the Caribbean
Stand Into Danger |
| 1775-77 |
Lieutenant Trojan (80) during the American
Revolution; later appointed prizemaster
In Gallant Company |
| 1778 |
promoted Commander Sparrow (18); Battle
of the
Chesapeake
Sloop of War |
| 1780 |
Birth of Adam, illegitimate son of Hugh Bolitho
and Kerenza Pascoe |
| 1782 |
promoted Captain Phalarope (32); West
Indies; Battle of Saintes
To Glory We Steer |
| 1784 |
Captain Undine (32); India and East Indies
Command a King's Ship |
| 1787 |
Captain Tempest (36); Great South Sea;
Tahiti; suffered serious fever
Passage to Mutiny |
| 1792 |
Captain, the Nore; recruiting
With All Despatch |
| 1793 |
Captain Hyperion (74); Mediterranean;
Bay of Biscay; West Indies
Form Line of Battle!
Enemy in Sight! |
| 1795 |
promoted Flag Captain Euryalus (100);
involved in the Great Mutiny;
Mediterranean; promoted Commodore
The Flag Captain |
| 1798 |
Battle of the Nile
Signal - Close Action! |
| 1800 |
promoted Rear-Admiral; Baltic
The Inshore Squadron |
| 1801 |
Biscay; prisoner of war
A Tradition of Victory |
| 1802 |
promoted Vice-Admiral; West Indies
Success to the Brave |
| 1803 |
Mediterranean
Colours Aloft |
| 1805 |
Battle of Trafalgar
Honour This Day |
| 1806-07 |
Good Hope; second Battle of Cagen
The Only Victor |
| 1808 |
Shipwrecked off Africa
Beyond the Reef |
| 1809-10 |
Mauritius campaign
The Darkening Sea |
| 1812 |
promoted Admiral; second American war
For My Country's Freedom |
| 1814 |
defense of Canada; second American war
Cross of St. George |
| 1815 |
killed in action
Sword of Honour |
Cassettes, complete and unabridged, of Kent and Reeman titles, are available
from Chivers Audio Books, Windsor Bridge Road, Bath BA2 3AX, England.
Abridged cassettes of Second to None and Dust on the
Sea are available from Random House Audio Books, 20 Vauxhall
Bridge Road, London SWlV 2SA, England.
Signed copies of books by Alexander Kent and Douglas Reeman are available
from the official Richard Bolitho stocklist, Hatchards, 187 Piccadilly,
London W1V OLE, England, telephone l.
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