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Captain Arthur Mathison was a merchant seaman from 1932 to 1977. He
sailed with a number of British shipping companies, but he spent
many years with Bolton Steamship Company of London and R.S.
Dalgliesh Limited of Newcastle upon Tyne. He set sail from many of
the main British ports - London, Glasgow, Hull, Cardiff, Newport,
Newcastle, Middlesborough and Liverpool, plus a number of lesser
locations like Workington, and he has tales from most of them. He
started his career as an able-bodied seaman and desk boy on
steamships, and finished it as master of ocean going motor vessels.
In his own words he describes the hard times endured by pre-war
merchant seaman during the Great Depression, and the subsequent
challenges of the Second World War. He spent many years in the
tramp steamer trade, travelling to all the continents of the world,
including a great deal of time trading between Australia and New
Zealand. In these pages you will find first hand stories of freak
waves, convoys, on-board violence, red light districts, drunken
crew members, near misses, dubious bunkering and much more. The
book is a personal testament to an age of seafaring that has now
vanished.
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