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Photograph of Bob Cawley

Bob Cawley

Bob belongs to: The Fishermen's Mission

Bob was born in North Shields. He has worked in the Royal Navy, merchant navy and steam trawlers. Bob is retired and spends his time painting.

Bob was interviewed by Kylea Little on 8 November 2005. The interview took place at North Shields Fishermen's Mission and lasted 52 minutes and 23 seconds.

Photograph of Bob Cawley
Photograph of Bob Cawley

The merchant navy and St. Elmo's Fire

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"I joined a cargo tramp ship years and years later and I was well qualified as a seafarer"

I joined a cargo tramp ship years and years later and I was well qualified as a seafarer like by this time and the ship was coming down past the Solomon Islands after leaving Japan and we coming down and heading for Auckland in New Zealand and, no we hadn’t been, we’d been to a place called the Gilbert and Ellis Islands for phosphates which is really, just looks like custard powder- it’s bird’s poo from way back and they have to dig it out with a pickaxe and it comes out- you’re covered in it, it’s in the air and everything from this little island called Meru and we loaded this for the Farmers’ Union in New Zealand.

And on our way down, we got caught in a typhoon and the streaks of lightning that were coming out of the sky as we were coming down, it was raining, you know, sleeting it down but there were little balls of electric light that ran along the ship’s aerials and down the stays. Ships have stays and shrouds, you know, that’s why they say, if you say that, you always say a ship is a ‘she’, it’s because she wears stairs and ends up being tied up to a buoy! So, it’s just a little thing, like, like that, but these balls of light are actually static electricity and when you see those, it’s called St Elmos’s Fire and someone in the ship was going to die, that’s what they say, you know.

And that particular trip, a fellow did die. But he should have never been passed fit for sea because he was in a bad state when he joined the ship so it was a foregone conclusion, so it had nothing to do with St Elmo’s Fire, I don’t think.

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This memory has these themes:
Adventure | Change | Superstitions | Travel | Work

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