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Coaling ships (MP3)

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Unique ID:19401
Description:Male interviewer talks about coaling ships in the early days.
Creator:Unknown
Date:Unknown
Copyright:Southampton City Council
Partner:SCC Oral History Unit
Partner ID:M0011

Transcription

In the early days, in the First World War and around that time, all the ships were coal burners and all the coal had to be towed round in barges alongside the ships for it...to be put in the bunkers. So they had their own two tugs here, which they also used for their coaling machine, they had two, specially constructed coaling machines which the coal trimmers when they first brought them in called the baby starvers because they did away with a lot of men shovelling out of the barge. What happened was that the coal was grabbed out of the colliers into the coaling machine and then was picked up on a bucket, dredger... system, and put down through shoots direct into the ship's bunkers you see. So there's no shovelling to be done as far as the barges were concerned. When the barges were used of course it was all hand, hand shovels into tanks, what we called tanks, big steel tubs, and up on the crane and tipped into the bunkers that way.

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