An edition of Mother Sea (1964)

Mother Sea

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Last edited by MARC Bot
December 14, 2023 | History
An edition of Mother Sea (1964)

Mother Sea

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Part I of the book describes how Elis grew up on Vårdö, became intimately familiar with both the land and sea, and developed an early competence in sailing small boats within the close-knit, and widely-travelled seafaring and farming community. Part II tells how, in 1919, he became a crew member, and learned the ropes, on a three-masted schooner which sailed around the Baltic Sea, and then, at the end of 1924, signed up on the four-masted barque Herzogin Cecilie bound for Australia under the captaincy of his sister’s husband Ruben de Cloux. Chapter 4 conveys his excitement at joining this famous vessel, the severity of a storm they soon encountered, and the harsh nature of life aboard this hard-worked vessel. However, the food had been so bad that he felt he should join a dozen others in deserting ship, despite the family relationship he had with the captain – who discharged him !
After an unchronicled sojourn in Australia, he rejoined the same ship again, at the end of December, 1925, in Port Lincoln. Initially they sailed westwards because they were short-handed with only nineteen men on board, but de Cloux changed his mind after encountering head winds and they eventually rounded Cape Horn. With this diversion, the hull being foul and the cargo originally making the ship down by the head, they ended up making the vessel’s longest European passage to date, of 139 days to Falmouth. It was 150 days before they set foot on land again, at their final destination in Hamburg.
After having the hull cleaned, they set out again for South Australia on September 9th , 1926 with a crew of 29, arriving December 11th. Their return passage was a very fast 88 days to Queenstown where they took orders again for Hamburg. The ship then sailed into the Baltic to load timber for South Africa, but Karlsson left her in Sundsvall, Sweden, to take a holiday and navigation classes in Mariehamn. This secured his next job as Mate aboard a three-masted barquentine trading to England in 1928 and then on Erikson’s Penang as Second Mate for a voyage carrying timber from Sweden to Sydney and returning home in ballast. Next it was a voyage carrying anthracite from Swansea to Luderitz in South West Africa and on to South Australia in ballast to load wheat for London and then back to the Aland Islands. Next came difficult voyage to South Australia and Falmouth for London. After another session at Navigation school in Mariehmn in the winter of 1932-33, Elis earned is master’s ticket, and accepted the job of First Mate aboard Gustav Erikson’s Herzogin Cecilie, sailing under Sven Eriksson. Karlsson describes how, as First Mate, he completed several more voyages to Australia aboard the ship and how she was wrecked on the coast of Devon in April 1936.
The final part of the book describes the further misfortune of him being aboard the steamer Bodia, under captain Ruben de Cloux when she was wrecked near Alesund in Norway later that year.

Publish Date
Language
English
Pages
264

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Edition Availability
Cover of: Mother Sea
Mother Sea
1964, Oxford University Press
Hardback, mottled grey cloth, orange spine with black title block, gilt letters and gilt image of ship's wheel in English

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Book Details


Table of Contents

Foreword.
Acknowledgements.
Introduction.
Part I Beginnings.
Chapter 1. The Islands
Chapter 2. Vardo
Part II The Fo'c'sle.
Chapter 3. On the baltic
Chapter 4. On Deep Water
Part III The Poop.
Chapter 5. Penang
Chapter 6. Herzogin Cecilie
Part IV Epilogue.
Chapter 7. Abandon Ship!
Index.

Edition Notes

Published in
London

Classifications

Library of Congress
G540 .K34 1964

The Physical Object

Format
Hardback, mottled grey cloth, orange spine with black title block, gilt letters and gilt image of ship's wheel
Pagination
264 p.
Number of pages
264
Dimensions
22 x 15 x 2.8 centimeters
Weight
580 grams

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL5904405M
LCCN
64002454
OCLC/WorldCat
486405

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History

Download catalog record: RDF / JSON / OPDS | Wikipedia citation
December 14, 2023 Edited by MARC Bot import existing book
September 29, 2020 Edited by MARC Bot import existing book
December 15, 2012 Edited by Keith Holmes Described what the book is about
December 10, 2012 Edited by Keith Holmes Tags, etc
April 1, 2008 Created by an anonymous user Imported from Scriblio MARC record