The Navy Fleet Off Panama...

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Circa 1906

In the Old Navy things were very different...

No, we didn't sleep in hammocks but we had a thing that was called a rack. It was made up of an aluminum frame where a piece of canvas with brass grummets was placed all around the edges. From this a sailor when reporting aboard a ship was issued a US Navy blanket, some small stuff (small line the size of the old clothesline we often saw in the Old Canal Zone in our back yard) a very thin mattress, a sleeve to place it in, a pillow, a pillow case and a long round torpedo bag about 12 inches and 5 inches in circumference with snaps, which you located above within reach. This contained all your toilet articles for your daily use; if there was water, douche. These racks were hung on chains and were 3 high. When not in use they were hung up (or as they would say in the Old Navy... Thrice up) or out of the way. You would make your own bed (rack) upon reporting aboard. Your work clothes were hung at the head of your rank on a hook like a meat hook which was blunted so as not to cause harm when you were awaken in the middle of the night with the familiar...Alarm: Dong-dong-dong-General Quarters-General Quarters-All Hands man your battle stations. You did have a small personal lamp for reading while in your rack. But most cases you found a place up against the bulkhead for you rarely got into your rack except to sleep. You did have a locker the size of a shoebox where you placed anything of value. But back in those days a seaman was lucky to make a $100 a month. But you felt rich! Besides if you were paid at sea you would report to the mess decks and sign a ledger where you requested how much money you wanted and the rest you left on the books so to speak. Everything was free; free food, free berthing, lots of free exercises, you could write letters and in most cases you could mail them free, free haircuts, free uniforms, free movies on the mess decks at 2000 every night weather permitting and the list goes on and on... The only time you needed money was for Liberty. Sometimes you were months at sea without hitting a port. So who needs money with everything being free… Go Navy!

Where am I going with this? Well, I recently saw an article in the Navy Times where berthing areas are really being upgraded to look like compartments on a cruise ship.

Of course in my day we didn't have women on the various tin cans I had the pleasure to serve on... in fact the USS Manley DD-940 for many years held the record of the fastest Panama Canal transit of 2 hours and 45 minutes. She was a modern destroyer of the Forest Sherman Class… the last of the big gun destroyers. We even had some a-c in our berthing compartment.

But not having women onboard made it easier for telling sea stories.

Yes, the basic electricity & electronics A School I went through at Great Lakes after Boot Camp was made up of all guys.

I recall in trying to learn some of the components found in electronic gear the instructor gave us the following.

How to Handle a Woman
By Electricity

If she talks too long Interrupter.
If she wants to be an angel Transformer.
If she's picking your pockets Detector.
If she will meet you half-way Receiver.
If she goes up in the air Condenser.
If she wants chocolates Feeder.
If she sings off-key Tuner.
If she's out of town Telegrapher.
If she's a poor cook Discharger.
If she's too fat Reducer.
If she's wrong Rectifier.
If she gossips too much Regulator.
If she becomes upset Reverser.

Today it would probably be not acceptable or as some say not politically correct. But then it was then and now is now.

One final word:

An old Master Chief at the school once told me..."Seaman ________ if you don't remember anything else from this school do remember; 'If you don't mind it doesn't matter.'"

That has served me well over the years...

Footnote: April 30, 1798 - Congress establishes Department of the Navy

Some parting thoughts:

Lord, Thou knowest how busy I shall be this day. If I forget Thee, do not Thou forget me.
---- Old Admiralty prayer

Don’t wait for your ship to come in; Swim out to it...

Here I am at Great Lakes

Escape to Panama

I spend most of my growing up years on Naval Bases and Navy Towns in the old Canal Zone.

My uncle had served in the Coast Guard and in the Navy during WWII. So, for me it was a logical choice to join the US Navy out of Balboa High School. Besides I live on Tamarind Avenue in Cocoli, a Navy Town in my day, and just a few houses up from me lived a Navy Recruiter.

So, in my last year at BHS we talked and a year later I enlisted at Rodman Naval Station and went on to Camp Moffet, Great Lakes Naval Recruit Training Center (Boot Camp). I am glad I did.

During the time I was there I kept meeting Cocolians coming through. We had a Ge-Dunk Hall (something like a day room) where boots would gather after the day's work was completed.

It was usually for an hour just before evening chow. One day I met 3 guys who had live on Sago Avenue in Cocoli. That is how it has been until I retired. CZ Brats seem to pop up in the strangest places.

Once at the YMCA-USO in Istanbul, Turkey I ran into a few other guys from Rodman Naval Station. For me the call of the sea has always been strong... one can not sit in the Canal Zone 24/7/365 and see ships locking through the Panama Canal and not wonder what if I was onboard one of those ships. Then as others have said, “Just do it!” One day I did and enlisted in the US Navy. I can tell you that when you leave your ship on your first liberty in your cracker jacks and strut your stuff up the pier...You can only think, Wow, Life is Good! Yes, that is how it was in my day!

One thing about living in Panama... You are at the crossroads of world commerce and in the heart of the universe. Panama like the IPAT, the tourism agency of Panama is always saying, “Panama is more than just a canal.”

Then you consider what flows through your genes... from the early Canal Digger to the engineers and later to all of those who felt that Panama was the place to be working for Yankee Dollar and drinking rum and coca-cola at the BYC on a hot tropical night.

Yes adventure nurtures our sense of exploration into new avenues. This adventurous spirit is what separates us all from most of the people you meet on the street in these United States.

In my case I was lucky! I have the benefits of both worlds... How? Well, I was born in Panama and grew up in the Canal Zone and until I joined the US Navy I lived in Panama. When I reflect as I often do; I call all my vacation trips to Panama…as an escape to the land of milk and honey. For a while I was going back to Panama almost every other year.

Now, I have sort of hit a dry spell but like in the past I feel an "Escape" building. I can now understand why the red Salmon goes back! Now have I been happy in other places, I have lived around the world and in many states of this wonderful land called the United States?

For me I can say yes. For having married a Panama Girl, Panama is always with me. You know the food, the music and just the feeling. Have I been Happier than when I lived in Panama?

Well, I never try to dwelt on that aspect too long or I would miss the fun and the happiness of the moment and the here and now! Much of what we call happiness is really temporary in the big scheme of things.

When I start feeling a bit out of sorts I put on some Lucho music. I also try to have a cup of cafe Duran as often as I can. For there is nothing except maybe sex that will top a great cup of Cafe Duran.

But again happiness is something that comes from within and it is something you can do a lot about. Some call it attitude. I also add a bit of laughter every day to the sancocho and then let it simmer. Then after a daily siesta you'll awaken refreshed.

When time and funds permit I again escape to Panama. Why? Because it is in the genes and you are a Red Panamanian Salmon who must go back from time to time or go completely out of your mind...

And the sea will grant each man new hope, as sleep brings dreams of home.
----- Christopher Columbus (1451 - 1506)

An old US Navy postcard of the Panama Canal - Circa 1914

A PT Boat on patrol in Panama waters (Circa 1944)

A Ship locking through at night at Miraflores Locks.

The USS Manley DD-940 was my home at sea for a few years. She set a record transit
through the Panama Canal of 3 hours and 10 minutes...

"I can imagine no more rewarding a career. And any man who may be asked in this century what he did to make his life worthwhile, I think can respond with a good deal of pride and satisfaction: 'I served in the United States Navy.'"

LT John Fitzgerald Kennedy, USNR

President John F. Kennedy, 1 August 1963, in Bancroft Hall at the U. S. Naval Academy. (Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: John F. Kennedy, Containing the Public Messages, Speeches, and Statements of the President, January 1 to November 22, 1963 [Washington: Government Printing Office, 1964]

The country of Panama is located just 9 degrees above the Equator. It is a lost paradise of enchantment. Panama is also a place dreams and fabulous memories. You can be part of it all...Come to Panama... it is more than a canal.

Click for Tocumen, Panama Forecast

Liberty Call in Panama... a lost tropical paradise at 9 degrees above the equator… Panama at the cross roads of world commerce in the heart of the universe… Panama more than just a canal… What a place to get away from it all... Just do it... you will be glad you did!!!

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Picture credits: Author, US Navy archives, Naval Historical Society