The Captain's Log: From Conway and Clan Line to Trinity House

The Captain's Log: From Conway and Clan Line to Trinity House

by Alan Riach (Afterword), Glen Murray (Introduction), Alan Riach (Afterword), James Alexander Riach (Author), Glen Murray (Introduction)

Synopsis

James Alexander Riach was born in Dingwall, in the north of Scotland, in 1928 and grew up in the Western Isles, in Tobermory, Mull, and in Stornoway, on Lewis. He left to train as a marine cadet on HMS Conway, North Wales, from 1944-45, then went to sea as an officer with the Clan Line in the Merchant Navy. In 1961 he joined the Trinity House Pilots and worked in the pilotage service, taking ships out from the Terrace Pier at Gravesend and down the London River into the Channel and sometimes over to Europe. This is an account of his early life and training, a collection of his stories and reminiscences, from fifty years of seafaring and piloting experience. It includes the background to the Trinity House Pilots, from their inception in 1514 to their disbanding in 1988. He piloted supertankers, including the 214,085-ton Ardshiel in 1977 and the 233,931-ton World Premier in 1978, the HMS Onslaught submarine and many other vessels of various shapes and sizes. Occasionally James took one-off voyages as a pilot or navigator, most memorably on the tall sailing ship the Winston Churchill in 1981, on the Aztec Lady in a yacht race to La Coruna in 1990 and the Decca Surveyor in the North Sea oil fields in 1974. The Introduction is by the yacht-skipper and editor of Scottish Sea Stories, Glen Murray. The Afterword by Alan Riach, Professor of Scottish Literature at Glasgow University, includes a number of poems inspired by his father's stories.

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More Information

Format: Illustrated
Pages: 208
Edition: Illustrated
Publisher: The Grimsay Press
Published: 17 Aug 2013

ISBN 10: 1845301390
ISBN 13: 9781845301392

Media Reviews
[In 1944] HMS Conway was a fee-paying public school which practised naval discipline. [The author's] two years on the ship appear to be the most influential years of his life. It also makes up perhaps the book's most powerful reading. .... After HMS Conway, Captain Riach went to the Merchant Navy and started working immediately for the Scottish Clan Line as cadet [before applying for] the Pilotage Service. [He] provides a history of pilotage from the 12th Century and reveals how it became an organised and regulated profession in England soon after Stephen Langton, the Archbishop of Canterbury, founded a semi-religious Guild of Mariners between 1207 and 1228. [Riach's] story of the organisation of the pilot's work makes intriguing reading. ... The concept of freedom arises as the most interesting overall theme from the text and is in constant dialogue with another main concept, namely the discipline.... Riach is also a talented writer and manages to capture those awesome moments of happiness and wonder of going to sea just after WWII. Sari Maenpaa, Forum Marinum in The International Journal of Maritime History, August 2018.