Democratic Sentinel, Volume 15, Number 19, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 22 May 1891 — TRAINING SEAMEN. [ARTICLE+ILLUSTRATION]

TRAINING SEAMEN.

HOW MEN AND BOYS ARE PREPARED FOR SERVICE. Daily Duties or a Naval Scholar—Qualifications lor Entrance Into the Schools of Instruction—Efficiency of the System.

HE efforts of the United States Govern men t in late to provide a navy for the protection of our commerce and the honor of our name have been measurably successful so far, at least, as vessels are concerned, and we are in a fair way to rank among the first of

naval powers. There is one lack, however, which is even now severely felt. Ships alone do not make a navy; skilled seamen are necessary, and while we have enough to provide the nucleus of a formidable naval force, we have not enough to do more than respectably man the vessels now afloat. The necessity for more is plainly apparent, and already the heads of the Naval Department are said to be consulting with refcrenco to this end. In this matter, we may profit by the experience of Great Britain, lor, while this mighty power has the strongest mercantile marine in the world, from which it mav draw recruits for the navy, It has also training schools for seamen, where boys are regularly brought up to do ship duty. The largest of these is in the Greenwich Hospital, perhaps the greatest institution in the world for the benefit of aged and disabled sailors. About 3,000 seamen, who, from one cause or another, are no longer able to follow their vo ation, find shelter and care within the walls of this hallowed institution: but its inclosure also contains a training schoo l , which, from the standpoint of worldly wisdom, is one of the most valuable schools in Great Britain. The Greenwich Training School has two divisions, known as the Upper School and the Lower School. While the general purpose of both are the same, the Upper School has a specific end in view—that of training officers to command the British vessels. Eacli school has about 500 pupils. Those of • the Upper School arc the sons of officers, and arc to receive a training to tit them for officers. They aro nominated to the institution on a principle somewhat similar to that prevalent in this c ountry with regard to our Military Academy. One hundred of theso cadets named by the First Lord of the Admiralty, and the remaining four hundred in turn by various officia's connected with the Admiralty, with the Greenwich Hospital, or with the training school itself. The ' boys are taken at a tender age. They must be between 10 and 11 years, and of sound physique. The scholastic qualifications required are very slight, consisting oniy in an ability to read and write, and a knowledge of arithmetic through the first four rules. The main thing is ■a sound body, it being a maxim with the •officials that, while a strong boy can be made a passable seaman oven if unable to master the higher lines of study, a weakling is neither good on deck or at the desk. A general English training is given, but having an especial reference to the future life of the students. Mathematics is made a specialty; geo'metry and astronomy are taught exhaustively, but more with regard to practical work than to theory. The pupils aro taught, for instanco to take observations with sextants, to work out the results of their observations, and aro instructed in practical and marine surveying. The Lower School has also 500 pupils, who are, however, selected from the sous of seaman and non-commissioned officers, regard being had in choosing boys for this department to the services of the father. Indeed, with regard to th : s selection there is no specific rule, for when a private seaman dies, leaving a number of helpless children, sometimes two or three of the number are appointed to the Lower School. The same physical conditions are required of pupils in this as in the Upper School, but a greater latitude is allowed with regard to age, for while they may be as young as 9 years, tljose of 12 and even upward, if •other Conditions are complied with, are mot refused. All receive alike the (dements of an English education and a special training designed to lit them for life on board ship, and at the age of 15 •they leave the institution to enter upon regular service on board a British man-of-war. No r special qualification, as in the Upper School, is required for admission, and it is said that a great number of the boys taken in are unable on their entrance to read and write, but such pains are taken and such is the method of trailing that the progress made during the few years they remain is said to be quite wonderful. The boys of the Upper School, as already stated, are designed for officers, •and abundant instances have occurred among their number of young men developing uncommon talent. More than •one youth who has not yet attained his majority, lias been sent out from the Upper School to command a whaler, or ■oven a merchant ship, and in most cases the results of such experiments have been entirely satisfactory. The Government offers every year a number of commissions in the navy as prizes for proficiency in the Upper School, and it is

rare indeed that one remains unappropriated through & failure among the contestants to make the required per* of the Lower School, on the ather band, arc designed for private sea-

men, yet there havo been many cases where, through the force of merit, they have risen to posts of honor and distinction. They have the ‘advantage over most seamen in the British navy of a nautical training, it, theory as well as in practice, and this of itself is not to

be despised. The daily lifo in both schools is much alike. At 6 o’clock a great bell rings, when all must instantly rise, and as only fifteen minutes is allowed before parade, the dressing must be done in a hurry. An officer in each ward is in waiting to repicss any tendency toward disorder, and to soe that every boy says

his before leaving the room. Repairing to the play-ground, they form ip companies and march to the lavatory, where each company takes its turn at the tank. While some aro washing, others are brushing, polishing boots, and putting them generally in good ordjer, so that there is no idleness during washing hohr, and as soon as all aro Tc#dy the band strikes up a merry tune

and all march to b eakfast. After a few minutes of intermission Ihe companies form, without music, and repair to the school-room, where, w.th short intervals for recreation and refreshment, they aro occupied during a large part of the day. In addition to tho usual routine of school work, there aro lectures on mathematics, on practical optics, there are explanations and illustrations of the workings of steam machinery, and especially close study is made of everv phase of geography. No study in th 9 naval school curriculum is more carefully taught or more thoroughly mastered. The earnestness with which the youth who is to spend all his life on the land “bounds” States and countries is a trifle compared with the zeal with which instruction given him. in geography, with this important difference, however, *hat while to the “land lubber” the study of the land is a matter of small consequence, to him who is to sail over the sea a knowledge of its coasts and by-ways is a matter of vital importance. Hence, the geography taught in the training school is the geography of the sea and of the coast, and when a pupil leaves that institution he Is able to describe every headland on any frequented coast on the globe, to tell what harbors there are on any coast line, what rocks aro to be shunned, what sarros and reefs to be avoided, and where light-houses are erected for the safety of seamen. Gunnery, b.oth theoretical and practical, forms a part of the sailor hoy’s training; he is tabgbt not only to load and fire cannon ‘but to study the laws of projectiles, aiid to calculate how far a given amount of powder will throw a ball or a certain size, shape, and weight He is taught military and naval chemistry, she constitution of gunpowder and of other explosives, the manufacture of

torpedoes, boat-making and sailing. More than one-third of the time is given up to manual labor, for a seaman's school is really a manual training school of the most practical kind. In the sailmaking shop lie is taught to sew, to make knots, to splice ropes; in the

blacksmith-shop he learns all that is necessary to render him competent to do such work as may be needed on board a ship; in the carpenter-shop he is taught the uses of various kinds of wood, to do repairing and building, so that a boy tlioroughly instructed in this line will bo ablo not only to build a boat but to show others how boats should be built. In the gymna-ium the incipient sailors are instructed in all sorts of exercises which maybe useful in their future calling; they are taught to ascend and descend masts, head or feet first, while running, leaping, and vaulting are matters of course. The artillery practice is practical, with real guns, both breech and muzzle loaders; the pupils are taught to handle the piece, to aim and to tire; they aro also instructed in the manual of arms and aro drilled regularly with regulation riflos. The cutlass and pistol drill is also practiced, and they are taught to fence with swords, bayonets, and oven handspikes, and thus at. an early age acquire a prolicioncy with all kinds of arms. Swimming is a specialty, and J regular instruction is given the boys, while frequent matches develop more than usual interest in the sport. But the Greenwich schools are not tho only places of training for the navy. There are a number of training ships, in each of which from lOt) to 1,000 boys are instructed in all the duties of naval life. In the training ship the work is of even more practiea enaracter than in the schools, for the daijy life of the seaman is lived over in reality, and, save for tho schooling, there is no distinction between sea lifo and the course of train ing. ' Old vessels, which were once the terror of the French and the Spanish, are set apart for this use. and in them schools are established for such youth as desire to qualify themselves for naval service. They are admitted at almost any age above 12. the authorities, however, .'preferring them from 15 to 16>£.

The applicants are required, with the permission of their parents, to sign an agreement to serve in the navy for ten years after becoming 18 years of age, and are then subject to all the requirements of naval Service. Tho vessel which acts as a training school is kept in order and repaired by the boys them-

solves under the direction of their otH-| cers, and ail kinds of ship work is actul ally done. Tho boys are taught to fursails, to handle guns, to fire salutes, are instructed in the manual of arms, are

taught to wash the decks and do every kind of ship work 1 from calking the seams to ‘•fatting the cable. ” At eight bells, 12 o'clock* all .assemble to a dinner of roast beef, potatoes and pudding, while for supper they have plain bread and treacle. Their education is not neglected, for they must observe certain school hours, but tha practical training is considered to be the main object of their stay on board. The system has been so effective that able-bodied seamen are now seldom enlisted diiectly into the navy, for the training schools have provided all that may be needed. But, to meet all emergencies that may possibly arise, a naval reserve has been formed, into which merchant seamen are admitted. Members of the reserve are paid an annual sum as a retainer to serve on board the Government vessels, and must be in readiness in time of war to enter the service of the British navy. Including the boys, this reserve numbers about 20,000 men, and as the total number borne on the ships’ bcoks is about 57,000, the available naval force of Great Britain is therefore nearly 80,000 men. The naval schools have always been extremely popular, and generally have had more applicants than there was room to accommodate. There is a good reason for the preference shown by seafaring men for the naval service, for, although the wages are smaller than are paid in the commercial marine, in evorj other respect the men are better treated, fed and clothed than on ships devoted to commerce. The system of the reserve and training schools has also done away with the impressment of seamex in time of war, and the press-gang, hunting the sea-coast and abducting men to serve as seamen, has become a thing of the Dast. The discipline of a man-of-war is extremely rigid. No despotism is so severe, but in general the men are justly treated. Seamen, as a rule, prefer for their sons the career they themselves followim, and thus by a system of training England has been able to keep the most formidable navy in the world in a high state of efficiency. —Globe Democrat

BOXING THE COMPASS.

SAIL-MAKING.

PRACTICE IN HANDLING THE GUNS.

ONE OF THE SCHOOLS OF INSTRUCTION.

READY FOR A SWIMMING RACE.