Capt. Barton chose as the chief radio officer Drummond, a man in his 30's who seemed much older. Drummond was slightly limited intellectually and especially in terms of vision. He would not go out at night because he had no peripheral vision and was afraid of getting disoriented. The second officer, Fitzpatrick, was 26, married, and considerably more agile than Drummond.
We made three trips on the Wood Lake over a period of about 4 months. The first time we went to Liverpool. We carried 100,000 gallons of aviation gasoline and 12 Lightnings on deck. (Jimmy Thomas, my brother in law, flew that plane in the Pacific.)
We stayed only 2 or 3 nights in Liverpool. Tanks never stayed long. In fact I came close to missing the ship because I had taken a train down to London to see the place, thinking (correctly) that it might be my only opportunity. I stayed in London one night and considered staying another, but decided to go on back to Liverpool. It happened that I made just about the last liberty launch back to the ship before she sailed. I've often reflected that my life would have been vastly different had I missed that ship. (About missing ships, more shortly.) We traveled back and forth across the Atlantic in large convoys--of 50 or 100 ships at about 14 knots. Slower convoys made up of Liberty Ships and other slower craft traveled in other convoys. We left Liverpool just in time to escape a German air raid. This was the first of two occasions when I was near combat, but never in combat. I suppose we were near combat a few times during the voyages without necessarily knowing it.
The Merchant Marine suffered higher casualities during the war than any of the military services,one reason that draft deferment was virtually automatic. The German submarines had inflicted heavy losses on Allied shipping in the Atlantic in the previous year, but by the time I got out there the submarine menace had been brought pretty well under control. Actually a tanker had been sunk 30miles out of Mobile shortly before I started, and some of her crew had been reassigned to our ship.
The Merchant Marine suffered higher casualities during the war than any of the military services,one reason that draft deferment was virtually automatic. The German submarines had inflicted heavy losses on Allied shipping in the Atlantic in the previous year, but by the time I got out there the submarine menace had been brought pretty well under control. Actually a tanker had been sunk 30miles out of Mobile shortly before I started, and some of her crew had been reassigned to our ship.
On our trips back and forth across the Atlantic we often got submarine alarms or rather possible submarine alarms. Sonar signals had suggested the possibility, perhaps set off by whales or whatnot, perhaps by submarines. The British corvettes and American destroyer escorts constantly scurried around the convoy checking out these alarms. We had large insulated wet suits to use in case of being sunk. Drummon slept in one of these as I recall. But generally we became quite accustomed to the alarms and paid little attention to them.
Still when I got home, I was napping on the living room sofa when someone rang the doorbell, and Ijumped about two feet. Strange. I had grown accustomed to the alarms, so they didn't bother me. But apparently at home I had let down my guard and released the genie out of the bottle, the residue of fear of which I was unconscious.
Allied merchant ships preserved radio silence throughout the war, so I
never sent a signal until after VE day. Our work consisted of spending
four hours sitting beside the radio and monitoring incoming traffic, then
8 hours off, then 4 on and 8 off as long as the ship remained at sea. The
radio watch was secured in port, making us especially privileged
characters since we had nothing to do unless we were at sea. Another
facet of the privilege about the position was that no one knew anything
about our job. We had no supervision to speak of and lived more
or less in a world of our own. The only person we reported to was the
Captain, and he rarely had time to pay any attention to us. During these
watches I took up smoking to while away the time. I remember that I would
allow myself one cigarette an hour and it would last about ten minutes.
Three cigarettes would get me through a watch.I didn't stop smoking until
some 13 years later.
After some days on the east coast we made a trip over to Casablanca. It
had been liberated a short time before this. We heard terrible stories of
westerners who went down into the medina or Arab quarter and suffered
horrible mutilations. We stayed in the French part of town. We didn't stay
long, but soon returned to New York. A baby flattop was sunk in that area
shortly after we left.
Our third trip took us to Bristol. Once again we stayed only a night or two.
Fitzpatrick, the second radio officer, was something of a lady's man. We had
just cast off our lines and were heading for the sea when he came running
up to the dock. We waved at him, but he had missed the ship. Later we
learned that he had managed to get aboard another tanker belonging to
our company. Of course his pay stopped the minute he missed the ship. He
worked in the galley of the other ship. The convoy got almost to New York
when the other ship got orders to proceed to North Africa. I met him in New
Orleans some years later. It had taken him over a year to get back to the
states. It seemed to me that his whole personality had changed, perhaps
as a result of that sobering experience. He was learning to be a printer, and
now seemed a very serious sort.
We were paid well in the war zone. Base salary was about $150 a month
for me, but there was a hundred percent bonus plus $5 per day in the war
zone, all of which came to about $450 per month. In those days that was
a princely sum, or so it seemed to me at the time. With no living expenses I
saved a considerable sum of money--about $5000 over the course of the
years I went to sea.
We were in Bristol about two weeks before D-day, but on D-day we were in
Houston. I remember being on the main street there on the fateful day and
turning into a big church. Everyone went to church that day, no special
services, just go in, sit down and lift up the troops.
We went from Houston back to New York. It was time to sign on for the
next overseas trip. I had been on the Wood Lake for about four months.
We signed on a voyage at a time. I started to sign over, as we said, but
decided I would go home for a visit. A lucky decision since the ship went
from New York to the South Pacific and was out there for the next two years.
Going home from New York on the train I met a young woman who lived
in Pensacola. Up to that time I had had very little experience with the
opposite sex, but I suppose in my uniform I was a handsome devil. We
were taken with each other and agreed to write. After a couple of letters
in fact I went to Pensacola to see her, but nothing came of it.
I was a member of the Radio Officers' Union of the AF of L. When I got
ready to ship out again, I went down to the union officer and met the union
rep. An old sailor, but a man of some culture, I don't remember his name.
He got me a berth on the Pan York. This was an old tub built about 1900.
We had given it to the Panamians, but due to thewar we took it back. It ran
between New Orleans and ports in Panama and Columbia. It's speed was
about the same as the tankers; it had once been a pretty good ship.
We almost always went first to Panama (the coast there: Christobal, where
we usually docked and where the U.S.military reservation was located. We
sometimes visited the army installations and enjoyed their good and cheap
ice cream. The other town was Colon, the native place. About all we knew
of it was the bars and brothels. In Panama I took up drinking. I was still 18,
and I found that in port I was on the ship by myself; everyone else was over
in Colon drinking. So I went over and joined them. The most common drink
was rum and coke (20 cents). I consumed many a rum and coke over the
next six months; I did most of my drinking when we were in Panama. I
remember a couple of drinking friends. One was a seaman who had
absolutely nothing to say aboard ship. But when he went ashore he usually
lasted a couple of hours, and his shipmates would bring him back all
banged up (from a fight) and just about out of his mind. This man was a
great checker player. I had him up in the radio shack a time or two for a
game. As I say, he never had anything to say, but he knew how to talk
with checkers.
That trip had an eventful end. We passed through a hurricane in the gulf. The double bottom was flooded; a gigantic wave took off the lifeboat just outside of the radio shack. The Captain decided we had better break radio silence and contact the Coast Guard. So the Armed Guard Officer, who had custody of the code books, encoded a message telling them our position,course, speed, and predicament. I had been up all day of course, and I didn't intend to keep working without lawful compensation. So I asked the Captain if he wanted me to work overtime. He said no, so I went to bed.
I actually slept longer than I should have and missed the 3 A.M. BAMS (Broadcasts to Allied Merchant Ships). At 6 I got a coded message asking for further particulars, but by that time we were in the river. At New Orleans some Coast Guard brass came aboard for an inquiry. In the course of the inquiry they called me in and wanted to know where I had been between midnight and 8 A.M. “In my sack" I said. No response. Lucky I was not some kind of poor devil of an armed forces personnel.
After a brief vacation from the Pan York I was assigned to another brand new ship; this was the Sea Dolphin, a C III that had just been built in Pascagoula. These were superior types of cargo ships; they went about the same speed as the tankers.
I had gone to London from Liverpool, and now I figured I had better see Paris while I was in France, so I took a train up the Seine. It was beautiful, but I was completely out of it there. No one spoke English, and no one seemed in the least interested in being of help. That is, until I found a USO. I walked in and met a GI on leave. He showed me Paris, but I don't remember much of what transpired. The next day I went back to Rouen.
We got to Calcutta 28 days out of New York. We had set a record for a freight vessel. I remember the excitement of going up the river to Calcutta. From the deck you could see villages scattered around in all directions with cultivated fields between them. Teeming with people, tremendously exotic.
At Calcutta we saw people whose only home was the street, people dying of cholera, etc. A rich man had opened his home to the Allies; it was like a museum, certainly not the kind of place you would want to live, but with European masterworks of art on the walls, big overstuffed sofas, everything associated with western affluence. We heard that he fed 150 beggars every day. We visited a temple with carvings of sexual intercourse in 50 different positions. We visited the burning ghats(?) where the dead were brought. We saw one corpse being burned; the heat caused the tendons to contract and the poor body started to rise up. The attendant grabbed a stick and beat it back down. The sacred river was right there
with all sorts of dead things in it and people bathing.
Dozens of children followed us around begging. I bought a leather suitcase from a merchant on the sidewalk. He asked $100 for it, but sold it for $10. I could probably have gotten it for less, but I had gotten tired of dickering with him.
I was deeply impressed with the animal grace of some of the blacks; they moved like gazelles. And they were so black. (We don't have many blacks in our country. We have a mixed race which contains some black blood. Black in America is really an ethnic rather than a racial term, although few people realize that.)
I rented a sailboat in the bay at Beira. Mozambique was a province of Portugal. Of course it became independent like all the rest of the European colonies. Kenya and Tanyanika each became something
else, and some of those graceful blacks became bloodthirsty maus-maus. Zanzibar was a bazaar, a meeting place of Asia and Africa;we westerners a microscopic minority. The ports in South Africa were middle class, clean, more like us than anywhere else I visited in my travels. Gen Jan Smuts was in charge, a liberal. Apartheid settled upon the country suddenly and drastically a few years later.
The South African girls were very receptive. I remember one party with about 4 couples that lasted most of the night. Everyone had a lot of brandy. We all expected to go home with the girls, but by the time came we were too inebriated to pursue them any further. Such is life. I was young and innocent and my time..not yet.
It must have been the next trip that the fog incident occurred. With the war over convoys no longer sailed, it was every ship for itself. And the Atlantic was about as clogged with shipping as it has ever been, before or since. A mad rush to bring home the GI's and all their paraphernalia. Hordes of ships in the main shipping lane between the United States and the United Kingdom.
We encountered a pea soup fog. And we knew the sea was crowded with monstrous steamers going back and forth. With the cessation of hostilities
it became appropriate to use radio communications. Every four hours I would send out our position, course, speed. And we were copying all the
similar messages we heard. I would gauge their position with my limited navigational ability. The ones that seemed closest I would take up to
the bridge. The Captain always thanked me, but didn't seem too concerned.
Then I got one that really looked close: dead ahead and heading straight toward us. I took it up there, and he was interested. He gave me a
message to send back to the other ship. I readily made contact and sent my message; we were changing course in order to avoid them. He
acknowledged. We soon heard the ship's fog horn in the distance over on the port side. Exciting. I must have been 20 at that time.
After those trips to Africa I was ready for another break. After a few days at home, I got another assignment--to a tanker over at Houston.
I had to fly to Houston and report to the agents there. I got myself on the plane, and then realized I had left my operator's license. No license, no operator, a quandary. I managed to get Dad and explained my problem. He agreed to send it on airmail, special delivery. I got over there, called the agent and told him my problem and got a room in a hotel. The next day it came in the mail. The ship had started down the Houston ship channel; it could go that far without an operator. When I got to the office, they put me in a car to Galveston to pick up the ship. The man who drove me to Galveston had been a colonel in the Air Force. But the labor market was flooded with such as him at that time, and the best job he could get was as a glorified office boy. The vicissitudes of life are strange. We drove to Galveston, they put me on a launch, and we met the ship coming down to
Galveston. Ready to go.
I don't think I went anywhere on that ship, a tanker named Draper's Meadows, except to the boneyard at Norfolk. There it and hundreds of
others like it were put in mothballs for some possible future use. I suppose by now they have graduated to scrap metal. Anyway a month or so
later I was back in New Orleans.
It must have been about this time that I took Priscilla Palotta to the ball game. I was between trips, had plenty of money, but unfortunately none
in my pocket. We got to the ball park, I reached into my wallet, and nothing there. Embarrassing. She didn't have any money, so we drove home to
where Mother and Dad were playing rook with the Mandlebaums and borrowed money for the ball game.
Priscilla was the daughter of an Italian Methodist preacher who also worked as a deputy sheriff. His church, Redeemer, I think it was called, was on Esplanada Ave. on the downtown side. She was a really beautiful girl, but we never got well acquainted; that ball game was the only time I
ever spent with her as I recall.
All these sea trips happened so long ago that I'm not even sure about the sequence of the various ships I sailed on. I only know that I have the
first one and the last one right. The last one appears in the 'third day'.
Between 1942 and 1946 or somewhere thereabouts Dad was pastor at St. Marks. This was the first time he had ever stayed anywhere for as much as three years. I know he was glad to get back in town. With the war new job opportunities came to each of them. Mother got a job working at the Army Port of Embarkation, which is downtown, below Nichols School, on the Industrial Canal between St. Claude and the river. She must have done well. I believe she became secretary of one of the highest ranking officers, perhaps the chief engineer.
Meanwhile Dad got a job teaching science at Fortier High School. That was uptown somewhere near Tulane. He used to say that he just tried to
keep a couple of pages ahead of the class. I imagine he faked it a good bit of the time. Anyway with the church income it all meant a much nicer economic situation than the Clayton family had ever enjoyed. The three of us had four jobs, all fairly well paying. Mother did very little cooking in those days; we went to Holsum Cafeteria or Morrisons just about every night. We had our own waiter at Holsums. Morrisons was a more imposing place, and we only went there occasionally. I developed a taste for their food which I continue to enjoy after all these years.
Imperceptibly I moved out of my teens.
Radio Shack on Victory Ship on display at Tampa.
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