Saxonia
Fate was kind to me that day, Charlie Repp had given me a good berth on a still new vessel and, as it was?nt sailing for a few days, I would have a few more days leave.
I went to the Locarno to see what things were like in the ?free? world. I had?nt really relaxed or had a good time like a young sailor should. My marriage was finished, no divorce yet,but it was certainly over. I was stuck with paying maintenance and I was?nt exactly flush , but you did?nt have to be loaded to have a good time.
It was quite packed at the Locarno and I was on my lonesome, I had a few dances with some nice girls when I noticed a little lady who looked very trim. She was different from most of the girls in that she was actually wearing an evening dress. She looked like Cleopatra, or rather ,Elizabeth Taylor playing Cleopatra. She was dancing with a young guy who looked like a match for her ,they were laughing and having a good time. When the music ended I went to her table and asked if I could have the next dance ,to my delight she agreed. The young man she was with turned out to be her brother and somewhere on the floor was her cousin with her husband. She asked me to join them at their table and we had a really nice time. They were all from Kirkby and lived not to far from where my Mum lived. When the evening ended I was allowed to walk her home from where the taxi dropped off the rest of the crowd.
That night seemed technicoloured, it was late May and the weather was balmy, I wanted to see her again but afraid that she might not want to. She raised the subject, she and her siblings were in a Motown type group and were doing a gig at Ossie Wades in Walton,did I want to go ? Did I not?. I had never been to Ossies but had heard of it, it was artistes used to go and showcase their talents, the place would be full of club stewards and secretary?s looking to book acts.
It turned out to be a great night, there was a lot of talent on stage ,and some dead beats,but the group she was in were great. I am not going to embarrass her by telling their name, she did?nt know my marital state at that time and I never did anything to hurt her, she was too lovely for that.
So, when I sailed from Liverpool I had a girl who would wait for my return, life was looking up.
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The deck crowd on the Saxonia had done a few trips together and seemed a nice bunch of lads. There was one other Newbie along with me ,a guy called Gerry,he was from Bootle and was a big raw boned feller. He and I were put on the same watch. I can remember a lot of the faces of the rest of the crew but the names are becoming lost in the mists of time. The guy in the next cabin to me was called Norman and the reason I remember his name will become clear later on.
Another of the deck crowd was a guy called Richie Bradshaw, he was a bit younger than me and was a bit of a smart dresser. The first time I saw him was in the Boat House pub and I felt envious of his suit, a tan full drape, looked very smooth.
The boat House was where most of the lads went for their lunchtime sessions ,they served a good pint and you could get a bite to eat there as well.
Little did we but know it but we were seeing the end of the docks as we had known them all our lives. The Dock Road was a non stop parade of heavy goods traffic , a lot of horses were still in use and the carters seemed to line the road from dawn to dusk, all manner of goods going for export and even more coming as imports. The smells and sounds were ineffably Liverpool, tug whistles blowing, the clattering of steam winches ,the rattle of chains and the hissing of the steam lorries from Tates and the timber yards,the clanging of the bells on the dock railway engines and the banter of the dockers. It was a sound that would soon be silenced ,but this is then and that wonderful din sounded throughout the days
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The ?Sax? was as modern as could be, Mcgregor steel hatches and all electric winches , not too many hardships on her for the modern sailor. She had single berth air conditioned accommodation and the food was good too. We would be five days at sea, five days in New York ,five days at sea and then five days in Liverpool. A tidy and well ordered existence, and some lads loved it. I had an open mind about it , I liked tramping, not knowing where you were bound lent something to a voyage, a bit like a lucky dip, this was somewhat different, like a trans Atlantic ferry. We were have a last swift one in the Boat House before we sailed and I noticed a guy on the other side of the bar. He was dressed in very bright colours, like a Yankee sailor. He nodded to a few of our fellers and we got back aboard and made ready for sea.
I remember another Newbie that joined us at that time , a Manx lad ,who was called ,naturally ,Manxie. He more teeth than I had ever seen on a human being ,when he smiled it was like looking at a double decker Hohner mouth organ, and he was unconsciously funny. He had worked on the IOM Ferries and this was his first proper ship and he was excited as a toddler at Christmas. I was as excited as Manxie,although I had been to the States before ,this would be my first time in New York.
I had read ,some years before , the Liverpool comedian Ted Ray?s autobiography. He started out his working life as a waiter with Cunard White Star and he said that New York was Liverpools cultural twin. He opined that a scouser had more in common with his New York counterparts than he did with folk outside of Liverpool . I was soon to learn what he meant. The Cunard Yank! The men who sailed the ocean greyhounds, the men who brought America home to Liverpool and made it what it was then.
Although it was May the Atlantic was still fairly choppy and the northerly winds had a distinct chill to them, the saving grace of the Sax was that she had been especially built for the worst that the northern ocean could throw at her and she stood up to the worst of weathers. She was an all aft ship and we never had to forward to the foc?sle head for lookout ,we did our lookout on the monkey island above the bridge; if you had the right weatherproofs and a good sou?wester you could be quite snug up there. I never asked anyone about this when I was at sea but when the wind was blowing and the ship was rolling ,I could hear music. The sound of the sea crushing beneath our bows ,mingled with the breeze humming through the taut halyards and the rise and fall of the engine noise as we crested wave after wave built up a symphony that was glorious to hear. On one such a night I was lost amidst the marine orchestration when the Captain called up on the voice pipe, ?Daley ,fetch the apprentices ,there is an eclipse of the moon? It was way after midnight and I had to raise them from their slumbers ,but it was worth it. I had never seen a lunar eclipse before and on this cloudless night it was mighty. The sea was like black ruffled satin and the moon was pale argent, within minutes a black disk crept across its surface leaving perfect blackness ;the earths shadow blacked out the moon.
Soon we would be the other side of the ?pond? and would be getting our first view of New York. They were still working on the Verrazano Straits Bridge ,which connects Brooklyn to Staten Island, this was nearing completion and the span was finished. The road ,a 16 lane highway , was being laid as we sailed beneath it. The acoustics were amazing ,we could hear the construction workers talking hundreds of feet above us, the sound echoing down to us. The regular lads swapped insults with the workers as we passed beneath and some of them told us how the bridge builders would some times empty their bowels over them as they passed beneath. Welcome to America!
Rounding Staten Island and heading up the Hudson River affords an unforgettable vista; the tips of the mountainous skyscrapers provide a backdrop to the Statue of Liberty which grows in size as we near the harbour, the sun shining in the eastern sky starts to burnish the man made mountains, making them ablaze as their windows reflect old Sol.
First timers like me stand agape at the sheer majesty, Manxie shouted ? Fack me, it?s like Liverpool? I suppose if you?re from Port Erin it could look like that. Slowly we cruised down to Pier 51, seeing more liners in that short time span than I had ever seen in my life before, the Queens , the United States, Hamburg Amerika , Norwegian ,French and Swedish liners,a whole pageant of ships that provided the everyday backdrop to that wonderful town
On the radio we could hear the Beatles and other Merseyside groups being played non stop. This was the town of Murray the K,the self styled fifth Beatle ,and their music ,the music of Merseyside,was being celebrated in a way that never was in England. The Searchers were in New York at that time and the city was going crazy for them, scouse accents were in and to be long haired and a scouser was a ticket to a good time. But we had a lot of work to do first. It was Sunday when we arrived and all we had to was tie up and get the derricks up for the morning, after that the day was ours. When I got cleaned up it was lunch time and I stared longingly through the porthole, New York. I had seen her so many times in the cinema and on t.v. and here I was. Trouble was ,no one was going ashore! Most of the single lads had New York girlfriends and they would be coming aboard to see their boyfriends. I did?nt want to venture ashore alone and so I stayed in my cabin after lunch and read my book.
It was mid afternoon when some of the girlfriends started arriving on board and, as the bulkheads(walls ) were not soundproof I could hear the conversations taking place in the cabins on either side of mine. My bunk was bolted through the bulkhead to the bunk in the next cabin ,Norman?s cabin. I can hear more than I want to coming through the partition and with being physically attached through the bolts, I could feel the action too. I was having a bit of a bumpy ride and Norman seemed to have good staying power. There were assorted groans and sighs and then I heard ?Do it some more Norman? This was embarrassing. ?Come on Norman, I want some more? Gulp!, I?d been like a monk for weeks???
?Norman ,if you don?t f*ck me again I?m goin? next door to ?ave it off the other feller!?
?Don?t do it Norman? I cried out mentally. Within seconds my bunk started to move in rhythm with theirs. I got up and had another cold shower. All you could hear in the alleyway was the muffled sound of lovemaking. **** night for me this was turning out to be.
Suddenly my door flew open and the cook stood there, he looked to the side at someone I could?nt see and said ?Here you ladies, this fellers free? and he ushered in two lovely young ladies. They were Nannies ,both from Scotland ,and had come ,like a lot of young women to be with a young British lad and maybe get some British food too. It was?nt too long before I hooked with a young blonde one, no ties , just company and maybe a bit of a cuddle too. New York was looking better already. Tomorrow I would go ashore ,but we were?nt finished with Sunday yet
About 4.00 in the afternoon all hell seemed to let loose in the galley ,I was in the messroom making a cup of tea ,I?d seen the girls off and arranged to call them next day .There was no one about so I went out on to the poop to sip my cuppa and look at New York; screams and the clatter of pots and pans erupted and then the second cook came zooming out the galley pursued by a knife wielding chef. He was roaring bloodcurdling threats and he chased the second at least twice around the deck. Some shore workers left off what they were doing to watch the spectacle and the policeman on the gangway looked on with some amusement. This was life and death but was side splittingly funny. Someone shouted to the cook to ask what was for tea and he stopped in hjs tracks and said ?F*ck me? and ran off to the kitchen.
He must have left something on the stove . They worked under a lot of pressure ,and some times they blew!!
Later that evening I went across to the Market Diner to have a couple of beers before getting my head down and I saw the brightly dressed guy I had seen in the Boat House. I had?nt seen him on the way across????I had just learned about the stowaway racket. Some lads ran an alternative passenger scheme to New York,this guy was one of their customers.
The pictures show the Saxonia and me with my family,Mum sisters Bette and Chris plus my niece and nephew and the neighbours daughter. This was taken while I was on leave from the Sax.
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