
Badge of the British Merchant
Navy
The
British Merchant Navy, known simply as the
Merchant Navy, is the maritime register of the
United
Kingdom
, and describes the seagoing commercial interests of
UK-registered ships and their crews. Merchant Navy vessels
fly the
Red Ensign, and are regulated by
the
Maritime and
Coastguard Agency .
History
The Merchant Navy has been in existence for a significant period in
British history, owing much of its growth to British imperial
expansion. As an entity in itself it can be dated back to the 17th
century, where an attempt was made to register all seamen as a
source of manpower for the
Royal Navy
during times of conflict. However the registration of merchant
seamen failed, and it was not successfully implemented until
1835.
The
merchant fleet grew over successive years to become the worlds
foremost merchant fleet, benefitting considerably from trade with
British possessions in India
and the
Far East. The lucrative trade in
sugar, spices and
tea (carried by ships such as the Cutty Sark
) helped to solidify this dominance in the 19th
century.
- Main articles: Battle of the Atlantic
and Battle of the
Atlantic .
During the
First and
Second World Wars, the Merchant Service
suffered heavy losses from German
U-boat
attacks. A policy of unrestricted warfare meant that merchant
seamen were also at risk of attack from enemy ships. The tonnage
lost to U-boats during the First World War was around 7,759,090
tons, and around 14,661 merchant seamen lost their lives. In honour
of the sacrifice made by merchant seamen during the First World
War,
King George
V granted the title "Merchant Navy" to the service. The
Prince of Wales was made the Master
of the Merchant Navy.
In the Second World War, German U-boats sank nearly 14.7 million
tons of allied shipping, which amounts to 2,828 ships (around two
thirds of the total allied tonnage lost). The United Kingdom alone
suffered the loss of 11.7 million tons, which is 54% of the total
Merchant Navy fleet at the outbreak of the Second World War. 30,000
merchant seamen were killed aboard convoy vessels during the war,
but along with the Royal Navy, the convoys successfully imported
enough supplies to allow an Allied victory.

The British steamer
Andex
sinking after being torpedoed by a U-boat.
In honour of the sacrifices made during the two World Wars, the
Merchant Navy lays wreaths of remembrance alongside the armed
forces during the annual
Remembrance
Day service on 11 November. Following many years of lobbying to
bring about official recognition of the sacrifices made by merchant
seaman in two world wars and since, Merchant Navy Day became an
official day of remembrance on 3 September 2000.
Despite maintaining its dominant position for considerable time,
the decline of the
British Empire in
the mid-20th century inevitably led to the decline of the merchant
fleet. This is shown in the following table, comparing certain
vessel types in 1957 and 2008:
Merchant Navy: 1957 and 2008
| Ship Type |
1957 |
2008 |
| Passenger vessels |
322 |
37 (including ROROs) |
| General cargo ships |
1,145 |
55 |
| Tankers |
575 |
88 |
| Total |
2042 |
180 |
|
As of 2005, the Merchant Navy consists of 429 ships of or over; a
total of . This amounts to . These vessels can be categorised as
follows:
In addition, UK interests own 446 ships registered in other
countries, and 202 foreign-owned ships are registered in the
UK.
Officers past and present
A person hoping to one day become a
Captain, or
Master, prior to about 1973, had five
choices.
To attend one of the three elite naval
schools from the age of 12, the fixed-base HMS
Conway
and HMS
Worcester or Pangbourne Nautical College
, which would automatically lead to an apprenticeship as a seagoing cadet officer;
apply to one of several training programmes elsewhere, or go to sea
immediately by applying directly to a merchant shipping company at
perhaps the age of 17 (with poor prospects of being accepted
without some nautical school or other similar prior education.)
Then there would be three years (with prior training or four years
without) of seagoing experience aboard ship, in work-clothes and as
mates with the deck crew, under the direction of the bo'sun cleaning bilges,
chipping paint, polishing brass, cement washing freshwater tanks,
and holystoning teak decks, and studying
navigation and seamanship on the bridge in uniform, under the
direction of an officer, before taking exams to become a second mate. With luck, one could become
an "uncertificated" second mate in the last year.
The modern route to becoming a deck or engineer officer comprises a
total of three years of which at least one is spent at sea and the
remainder at a sea college. This training still encompasses all of
the traditional trades such as celestial navigation, ship
stability, general cargo and seamanship, but now includes training
in business, legislation, law, and computerisation for deck
officers and marine engineering principles, workshop technology,
steam propulsion, motor (diesel) propulsion, auxiliaries,
mechanics, thermodynamics, engineering drawing, ship construction,
marine electrics as well as practical workshop training for
engineering officers. Training is now undertaken at Warsash
Maritime Academy, Shetland School of Nautical Studies, South
Tyneside College, Glasgow College of Nautical Studies and Fleetwood
Nautical Campus. As well as earning an OOW (
Officer of the Watch) certificate, they gain
valuable training at sea and an HND or degree in their chosen
discipline. The decrease of officer recruiting in the past,
combined with the huge expansion of trade via shipping is causing a
shortage of officers in the UK, traditionally a major seafaring
nation, and as such a scheme called Sea Sense has been launched to
raise general awareness of the Merchant Navy in the modern day
roles.
Another essential seagoing career was that of the radio officer (or
R/O, but usually "sparks"), often, though not exclusively, employed
and placed by the
Marconi Company or
one of a number of similar radio company employers.
After the inquiry into
the sinking of the RMS
Titanic
, and the
nearby SS Californian which
did not render assistance due to their radio being down for the
night, it was ordered that round-the-clock watch had to be
maintained on all ships over 1600 GT.
Most vessels only carried one radio officer, and during the hours
he was off-duty, an automatic alarm device monitored the distress
frequency. Today, Marconi no longer supplies radio officers to
ships at sea, because they are no longer required, due to the
development of
satellites.
Deck officers are now dual trained as
GMDSS
officers, thereby being able to operate all of the ship's onboard
communication systems and ETOs (
Electro Technical Officer) are
trained to fix and maintain the more complex systems.
Comsat launched their first commercial
satellite in 1976 and by the mid 1980s satellite communication
domes had become a familiar sight at sea. The Global Maritime
Distress and Safety System or GMDSS was introduced and by 1
February 1999, all ships had to be fitted, thus bringing to an end
the position of radio officer. This has led to a new career path,
the recently introduced electro-technical officer (ETO), who is a
trained engineer with qualifications to assist the mechanical
engineer to maintain vital electronic equipment such as
radios and
RADARs. ETOs are
marine engineers given extra training. Although ETOs are relatively
new, many companies are beginning to employ them, (although
mechanical engineers are still employed).
Ship crews are of course made up of others, working under the eyes
of the officers; the deck crew and bo'sun, responsible for general
maintenance, sailing "before the mast", (which, due to exaggerated
pitching motion in bad weather,
is the least comfortable part of the ship). Other duties aboard
ship are performed by the ship's carpenter, the cooks, the
stewards, the
quartermaster who steers
the ship, and the below-decks crew, often referred to as
"greasers". Ocean-going vessels with more than 12 passengers are
required to have a doctor aboard. For ships of the British Merchant
Navy on foreign service, interestingly, it used to be that each of
these departments were peopled with ethnically based workers.
The deck
crew would often be Malay
, the
quartermasters Filipino, the
greasers and stewards Indian, the cooks Indian but from Goa
where, being
Christian, they could prepare Western
style food, and the ship's carpenter ("chippy") would often be
Chinese. The officers would be
British or
Commonwealth,
headed by the captain (or master, but more often referred to as
"the old man"). The
purser was in charge of
the ship's stores. Nowadays, ships have turnaround times of less
than twenty-four hours instead of several days, due to
containerisation, requiring a much smaller crew. The passenger
liners that once transported people now ply the oceans for
pleasure seekers, cargo ships have switched to
containers using efficient
shoreside cranes instead of the ship's
derricks, and tankers have become
monsters.
Sailing on the high seas has a long history, with embedded
traditions largely inherited from the days of sail. Because of the
ever-present concerns of safety for crew and passengers, the layers
of authority are rigid, discipline strict, and
mutiny almost unknown.
Merchant mariners are held in high esteem as a result of their
extraordinary losses in times of war. The ships were often "sitting
ducks" lined up in the sights of enemy combatants.
Notable people
A number of notable Merchant Navy personnel include:
- Joseph Conrad: joined the Merchant
Navy in 1874, rising through the ranks of Second Mate and First
Mate, to Master in 1886. Left in order to write professionally,
becoming one of the twentieth-century's greatest novelists.
- Arthur Phillip:
joined the Merchant Navy in 1751 and 37 years later founded the
city of Sydney,
Australia
.
- Ken Russell: directed films such as
Tommy, Altered States, and The Lair of the White
Worm.
- Samuel Plimsoll: politician who
invented the Plimsoll Line, making
merchant vessels safer for crews to work on.
- Kevin McClory:
an Irishman
who spent fourteen days in a lifeboat and later
went on to write the James Bond movies Never Say Never
Again and Thunderball.
- Alun Owen: later wrote the screenplay
for A Hard Day's Night.
- Freddie Lennon: a Merchant Navy
steward whose son would later found the musical group The Beatles.
- John Prescott: a Merchant Navy
steward who became Deputy Prime
Minister in 1997 under Tony
Blair.
- Fred Blackburn:
England footballer.
- Edwin Stratton: founder of
Yoshinkan UK.
- Air Marshal Sir Peter Horsley:
Deputy Commander in Chief (Strike Command) from 1973 - 1975.
Started work as a deck boy in 1939 aboard the TSS
Cyclops.
- Gareth Hunt: actor, notably in
The New Avengers, and Upstairs, Downstairs
Members of the British Merchant Navy have won the
George Cross and the
Distinguished
Service Cross while serving in the Merchant Navy. Canadian
Philip Bent, ex-British Merchant Navy,
joined the British Army at the outbreak of
World War I, and won the
Victoria Cross.
See also
Notes
- National Archives of the United Kingdom
- Merchant Navy Memorial website
- CIA World Factbook, confirmed 09.08.2008
- CIA World Factbook, confirmed 09.08.2008
References
External links
Historical
Educational and professional