Green Seas over the Deck
Diary of the Voyage of the British Full-Rigged Ship William Mitchell (1,885 Net Tons) between Melbourne, Australia, and Callao, Peru, January 30, 1927, to April 12, 1927
by
Book Details
About the Book
Arthur Huntington (A.H.) Black was raised in Manchester and educated at Manchester Grammar School. His father disapproved of his ambition to go to sea and found him an apprenticeship with a truly old-fashioned ship: a full-rigged sailing ship on a route from Liverpool to Australia and then to Peru and back to Britain. Black was indentured to Captain Wilkie in July of 1925 for three years and nine months to learn to be a seaman, under sail. Green Seas over the Deck recounts the extraordinary world of a cadet on a sailing ship crossing the Southern Ocean, the wildest ocean in the world, recorded in detail for his mother in this diary. Transcribed by Cynthia Black, A.H.’s daughter-in-law, this account begins in January of 1927 on a voyage that lasted fifty-nine days. It offers insight into the fascinating world on the water in the voice of a twenty-year-old man who loved the sea.
About the Author
Arthur H. Black continued training as an officer in merchant navy cargo steamships. He received his certificate as a master of foreign going steamships in 1937, and was the navigating officer in cargo ships throughout World War Two. Cynthia Black is his son’s wife who found the manuscript and decided to publish it. She also writes historical romances