Sandy Kinghorn
Sandy belongs to: Cullercoats RNLI & The Coble and Keelboat Society
Sandy was born in North Shields. At the age of 16 he began his maritime training and went to sea at 18. He is Lifeboat Visits Officer for Cullercoats RNLI and a member of the Coble and Keelboat Society.
Sandy was interviewed by Carl Greenwood on 9 December 2005. The interview took place at Discovery Museum People's Gallery and lasted 46 minutes and 7 seconds.

Training school for the merchant navy
"It was a public school, but it was orientated towards the marine life"
It was a public school, but it was orientated towards the marine life, so we didn’t do Latin, for instance. I had Spanish as a foreign language because there’s a lot of Spanish spoken around the world. We had mathematics and navigation and especially nautical mathematics, astronomy, meteorology, signals, seamanship, fire fighting, boat work- everything you need to know.
Two years there, it was hard, you know, it was pretty tough. You got the rope’s end on your backside for anything you anything that you didn’t do right. For instance, when you first joined you were introduced to your hammock and you had to lash up your hammock every morning, before breakfast. And you had to lash it up with seven turns and then the cadet captain in charge would bend the hammock right over and pull it out and if he could pull out a bit of bedding you got one over the backside for that.
Sandy has 19 memories in the memorynet:
Sandy's memories with a Superstitions theme:
Sandy's other memories:
Training school for the merchant navy
Adjusting to life at sea
Progress through the merchant navy
A day at sea
Taking the family to sea
Ships in bottles
Smells
The RNLI and the Coble and Keelboat Society
The Doxford Song
Continuous Certificate of Discharge
Notebooks and diaries of flights and voyages
Master's certificate
The Panama Canal
Loading cargo in Ghana
Taking the family on ship
Teaching knotting skills
Chooky the Rooster
The Golden Bear
This memory has these themes:
Childhood | Roles and Routines | Traditions | Training

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