Sunday, November 25, 2018

"Riggin Bill Comic Strips"


Riggin Bill was a character popularized as a caricature in a promotional comic book published by Remington Morse Publication during World War II! He embodied your typical stereotype of what was endearingly termed a GOB back in those days.  A GOB was the name given to your typical American Sailor in the 1940s.’  I hope you enjoy some of these select picks of the infamous Riggin Bill!!!































Friday, November 23, 2018

"What's An LMD"




An old WWII Sailor spotted a Navy Captain on the street. He saluted and bellowed,

“LST 395!”

… Which was the designation and number of the ship he served on during World War II.

The captain returned his salute and responded,

“LMD 67!”

“What’s an LMD?”

… The old Sailor asked …

“Large mahogany desk …”


Thursday, November 22, 2018

" HAPPY THANKSGIVING "




World War Two Thanksgiving Menu … Even when things were tough, they knew how to keep the boys in blue proud and ready to fight …  HAPPY THANKSGIVING SHIPMATES!!!

Saturday, November 17, 2018

“When We Drank To The Foam”


“What shall we do with a drunken sailor?” Still an Oldie but a Goodie! For the Good ol’ Canoe Club, it was business-as-usual to look the other way. Now, the days of the drunken debauchery and a girl in every port are here no more … a thing of the past.

Since the dawn of the Alcohol Deglamorization Program and a Wally Cleaver picture perfect Boy Scout in every uniform, being the ‘Drunken Sailor’ has fallen out of parlance. The work hard so we can play hard mentality has gone to the wayside for a more politically correct version of a Squidly Diddly Squared Away Shipmate.

Jimmy Buffet put it best … “I’m a Pirate Two-Hundred Years Too Late!” The marvels of crackerjack shore leave most regarded by shitfaced, brawling and womanizing sailors chasing barmaids and shore whores dates back to the days of iron men and wooden ships, even after the good ol’ U.S. Navy banned alcohol on ships!

Back in those days, the U.S. Navy functioned on the British rum ration system, which stipulated that all sailors would receive a frankly enormous quantity of hard liquor per day, served from an ornate oak tub emblazoned with the words “The Queen, God Bless Her.”

Since the turn of the Century U.S. ban of drinking aboard ships, excessive drunkenness on shore leave was still unconstrained as reparation to keep new recruits coming after all the hard work underway came to an end. I suppose the ol’ Canoe Club figured that monitoring behavior on shore during liberty resulted in fewer recruits signing the dotted line. In liberty ports the world over, crackerjacks lit up the town like the ‘Fourth of July!’ When they left the ship it was a sailors’ right to do his best to drink the town dry in flotsam and monger the women accordingly.

Liberty is as short as a day in those foreign exotic ports, so it’s best to make it as perfect and memorable as one could make it … hence the making of great “No-Shitter Sea Stories!” It was typical to do what we pleased in every tavern, bar, lounge, soi, and nightclub with swagger and fervor. “Like a caged animal let out into the wild, we spent money like drunken sailors, and as drunken sailors … mostly on liquor and whores, maybe some gambling and all because we were just that … Drunken Sailors!!!

Favorite ports like Subic, Pattaya, Puerto Rico, Rhota Spain, Naples Italy and Greece made an industry of satisfying the consumption of decadent sea fairs and their indulgence of excess and desires. But it wasn’t always fun and games as we found in places like France and Japan where some of the locals had no appreciation of our senses for debauchery! Crackerjack Sailors were often found in the confines of the local Constable cited for anything from soliciting prostitutes to starting beer brawls and pissing in alley ways.  Ours is renown the world over as our rag hat collective sometimes got us in a bit of trouble in our fever pitched alcohol induced enthusiasm.   

The aggressiveness of sailors has persisted over the years in spite of more than a few incidents from across the pond worldwide. In Japan a twelve-year-old schoolgirl was raped and Japanese locals began to riot calling for the removal of our bases altogether. The same happened in other ports like the Philippines, Spain and France as demonstrations often intensified. In the day and age of Political Correctness and the lack of a good old Cold War Enemy, it became increasingly clear the Navy was concerned with the threat to international relations.

Suddenly there was an irreversible shift in the Navy’s thinking. The Ol’ Canoe Club suddenly changed its drunken and iniquitous ways. It became a professional consortium of Choir Boys and Prudent Young Ladies with iron clad chastity! The Big Brass was no longer willing to turn a blind eye to the unruliness, and worse for wear days of old. “The Alcohol Deglamorization Program” came into effect impacting all Naval Personnel while expecting more responsible behavior in its alliance with other worldly nations.  The stakes had been readjusted, and the boys in brass were not kidding around. With that, the shore leave culture of a drunken sailor with a girl in every port was poised to go down the hatch of history.

But the vestiges of that history and culture are forever written in our annals as a testament to the work hard play hard sailors of the past. The term “binge drinking” comes from the task of binging on a naval ship, or rinsing the empty liquor cask with water. Cargo was loaded onto ships through an opening on the ship deck known as a hatch, as the liquor, too, goes “down the hatch.” And never forget that we are the only service to reference alcohol in our fight song as we “Drink to the Foam” on our last night ashore! So I sound off on this little hitch with a hardy “Anchors Aweigh my boys … Anchors Aweigh!” It was fun while it lasted!!!




Sunday, November 11, 2018

" Old Sailors Poem "




OLD SAILORS SIT AND CHEW THE FAT
IN POORLY LITE BARS SITTING IN THE BACK

THE LIVES THEY LIVED AS THOSE DAYS DON'T LAST
AND ALL THE GOOD TIMES REMEMBERED FROM THE PAST
WITH THOUGHTS OF BELL BOTTOM BLUES
AND THOSE LITTLE WHITE HATS
AS THEY SINGLE UP LINES
BOTH FORE AND AFT

THEY RECALL LONG WATCHES LATE AT NIGHT
WHILE THE STARS AND MOON
WHICH SHINED DOWN SO BRIGHT
FAR OUT AT SEA,
IN THAT SUMMER BREEZE
THE THOUGHTS THEY HAD
WHEN THEIR LIVES WERE FREE

THEY KNEW SO WELL
THEIR HEARTS WOULD SWELL
WHEN OLD GLORY FLUTTERED HARD
DURING THAT STORMY GALE
HOW THE SALT SPRAY WOULD STING
WHILE THE LOOKOUT DID STAY,
ON THE STARBORAD BRIDGEWING
BOTH NIGHT AND DAY

THEY TALKED OF THE CHOW
THE NIGHT BAKER WOULD MAKE
FOR GUYS ON MID WATCH NOT GIVEN A BREAK
AND THE SHRILL OF THE BOS UN'S PIPE,
THROUGHOUT THE LONG DAY
CALLING FOR THE MUSTER AND MEALS
AND THE END OF A DAY

THEY REMEMBER THEIR SHIPMATES
WITH THE STORIES THEY TOLD
OF SAILORS THAT WERE CRAZY OR BOLD,
AND THE FRIENDSHIPS THAT WOULD HOLD,

THEY SPEAK OF THE NIGHTS
ON MANY A FOREIGN SHORE.
IN PIG ALLEY AND THE GUT
PLACES THEY REFUSED TO IGNORE
OF THE BEER AND WHISKEY
THE WOMAN THEY SEEN
TELLING JOKES AND SEA STORIES
LATE AT NIGHT WHEN AT SEA

THEIR SAILING DAYS ARE GONE
WHILE THEY SIT AND THINK BACK
NEVER AGAIN WILL THEY CROSS,
THAT BROW OR QUARTERDECK
BUT THEY HAVE NO REGRETS,
BECAUSE IT ISN'T QUITE OVER
AS SUNLIGHT FADES IN EARLY OCTOBER

AS THEIR NUMBERS GROW LESS
WITH EACH PASSING DAY
AS THE FINAL MUSTER BEGINS,
THERE'S NOTHING MORE TO SAY,
ALL HAVE PAID THEIR DUES,
AND THEY'LL SAIL AGAIN SOON

AS I'VE HEARD THEM SAY
WHILE PACKING THEIR SEABAGS
JUST THE NIGHT BEFORE
THEY GET UNDERWAY
THEY'LL SAY IT WITH A GRIN
THAT THEIR SHIP HAS COME IN
AND THE GOOD LORD NEEDS A CREW
OF A FEW SEASONED WELL HARDENED MEN

Friday, November 9, 2018

"Retired Admiral"





The Navy Admiral retired and hired his trusty Ship’s Servicman of over twenty-five years to come with him. The Admiral told the Serviceman that even though he would now work for him personally, his duties would be exactly the same as they were in the Navy. On the first morning of the Admiral's retirement the Serviceman came into the Admiral's cabin and woke him. Then the Serviceman slapped the Admiral's sleeping wife on the ass …

"Okay, honey, it's back onshore for you!"


Sunday, November 4, 2018

"Navy Dental"



They sent the seaman recruits in to have their teeth checked. Grandpa remembers one Seaman had quite a few cavities and bad gums. The service dentist asked him if he had been doing anything to improve his dental health.

"My civilian dentist told me to use dental floss. I have been chewing it for a year, but I guess it hasn't done me any good!"

… replied the Seaman.


Saturday, November 3, 2018

"Another Little Navy Ditty I Picked Up"



The coffee in the Navy,
They say is mighty fine,
It's good for cuts and bruises
And tastes like iodine.


I don't want no more of navy life,
Gee, ma, I want to go
But they won't let me go
Gee, ma, I want to go home


The biscuits in the navy,
They say are mighty fine,
One fell off a table 
And killed a pal of mine.


I don't want no more of navy life,
Gee, ma, I want to go home.


The clothes that they give us,
They say are mighty fine, 
Me and my best buddy, 
Can both fit into mine. 
I don't want no more of navy life,


Gee, ma, I want to go home.

They treat us all like monkeys
And make us stand in line,


I don't want no more of navy life,
Gee, ma, I want to go home.