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Crew agreements can provide valuable information for genealogy research. |
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Crew Agreements: What Are They ?What are 'Crew Agreements' and what information can one find in them ?Crew Agreements are the documents for each merchant ship's voyage, listing :
Where can I obtain copies of Crew Agreements? Examples from the S.S. Castleton's Crew Agreements A List of a Seaman's Effects and Kit Examples from S.S. Castleton's Crew Agreements of 1885 and 1886Agreement and Account of Crew - Foreign-going ShipDescription of the Ship and it's Owners Name: Castleton, Official No. 81774, Port of Registry: Cardiff, Port No. and Date of Register: 15/1879, Registered Tonnage: Gross: 1751, Net: 1149, Horsepower: 200, Registered Managing Owner: M. Cope, Address: Cardiff, No. of Seamen for whom Accommodation is certified: 40. Ship's Master William Henry, 38, Porthcawl, Certificate of Competency No. 92277 Voyage's Port of Commencement "Port at which Voyage commenced : Penarth" [Cardiff] Voyage's Destination Penarth to St. Lucia "and/or any Ports or places within the limits of 75 degrees North and 60 degrees South Latitude the maximum time to be one year trading in any rotation and to end in the United Kingdom." Daily Meal Provisions for Crew These are the actual provisions for the crew for the above trip, dated 12 October 1886. An additional note states: "At the Master's Option - No Spirits Allowed".
I quote: "And the Crew agree to conduct themselves in an orderly, faithful, honest, and sober manner, and to be at all times diligent in their respective duties, and to be obedient to the lawful commands of the said Master, or of any Person who shall lawfully succeed him, and of their Superior Officers, in everything relating to the said Ship and the Stores and Cargo thereof, whether on board, in boats, or on shore : in consideration of which Services to be duly performed, the said Master hereby agrees to pay to the said Crew as Wages the Sums against their Names respectively expressed, and to supply them with Provisions according to the above scale." And: "No Cash shall be advanced abroad or liberty granted other than at the pleasure of the Master." Several possible offences are listed along with their fines, such as: "Drunkenness, First Offence.....Five
Shillings", "[Drunkenness] Second and for each
subsequent Offence.....Ten Shillings", and "Striking or assaulting any person on
board or belonging to the Ship (if not otherwise prosecuted).....Five Shillings".
To give the example of my great great
grandfather, John George Brew: Name: John G Brew [signature] - Age: 36
- Town or County where born: Woolwich - Ship in which he last served: Same
- Date and Place of signing this Agreement: 1886 12 Oct, Penarth - In
what Capacity engaged, and if Master, Mate, or Engineer, No. of Certificate: 12854,
1st Engr. - Time at which he is to be on board: 5.a.m. Thursday 14
Oct / 86 - Amount of Wages per Calendar Month: £16 - Amount of
Monthly Allotment: £10 - Address: 49 Exeter St. Gateshead.
As this particular voyage ended in the foundering of the Castleton in a severe gale and the deaths of the entire crew, there is logically no discharge information, but a voyage from Cardiff on 20 July 1886 to Las Palmas, arriving back in Bristol, via Baltimore, USA, on 1 October 1886 shows the following information: - Lewis Phillips, 41, 20 July 1886, Penarth,
sick. - Sidney Jones, 30, 9 September 1886, Baltimore,
deserted. - Thos. Johns, 25, 20 July 1886, Penarth, never
joined. Most discharges are of the normal kind, that is,
at the end of a voyage, and the column simply states 'Discharged'. However, you
may come across some interesting information regarding, for example, gaoling of
members of the crew for offences, or deaths while at sea or in port: "Mercantile Marine Office Bristol - Oct.
7 1886 - H. Larsen late B.S. died at [unreadable name] Fever Hospital,
on 5th October 1886 from "Typhoid Fever" - E. A. Atwood
Superintendent." In the Crew Agreements from S.S. Nereid, in 1878,
appears this comment against the name of Thomas Patterson, 21, of Newcastle: "25/2/78 Cardiff - Sent to Gaol for 4
Wks for refusing duty"
On arrival in a foreign port, it was necessary
for a British ship to be registered with the Consul. The logs were passed to him
for the duration of the stay and returned for departure. Usually the
endorsements by Consuls on Crew Agreements will state the day of arrival of a
particular ship in port and the date of departure. Here is an example from the
above voyage Cardiff - Las Palmas - Baltimore - Bristol, from the 1 week
stopover in Baltimore: "British Consulate Baltimore Articles deposited September 4th 1886 Do. returned September 11th 1886 I hereby certify that the within named Sidney
Jones has been reported to me as having deserted at this port, taking his
effects and upon inquiry I have found the allegation to be true. I also certify that I have sanctioned the
engagement of Francis C Short upon the within written Agreement which he has
signed in my presence with a full understanding of its terms. For H.M. Consul, W.H. Wilson, Consular Clerk,
September 11th / 86" A Seaman's Kit - A List of Effects·
S.S. San Domingo - Henry
Smith, aged 43, ship's cook, died 5 October 1877. Henry Smith's effects
give us a good idea of what a seaman's kit was made up of. "1 Reefer
Jacket - 1 Large Jacket - 3 Pairs of Trousers - 2 pairs of Dungareys [sic]
- 2 Vests - 2 Singlets - 1 Guernsy [sic] Frock - 3 Shirts - 4 pairs
Stockings - 2 Aprons - 1 Towel - 1 Blanket - 1 Rug - 1 Bed - 1 pair of Braces -
2 Caps - 1 Scarf - 1 pair Slippers - 1 Bag" Contributed by:
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