Wednesday, January 02, 2013
FOR FAMILY HISTORIANS
Here's the ship in dry dock for repairs. Now and then, the ship has to go in a floating dry dock to scrape barnacles off the hull and paint the hull with red lead paint to protect it from further attacks by sea worms which bore into the wooden structure. When in dry dock, it's all hands over the side to do the work as quickly as possible so other ships
can use the facility. Even the Captain has to take part in the work in dry dock.
Also, I am posing on our main battery, a three inch fifty it was called. It fired a twelve pound projectile which was 3 inches in diameter---like a big bullet. When we fired that thing the sound was ear splitting. Maybe that's why I have had right ear problems all these
years.
My actual general quarters assignment was sightsetter on this gun. I have written, elsewhere, of my first, and hilarious performance in that role.