Dictionary Definition
mariner n : a man who serves as a sailor [syn:
seaman, tar, Jack-tar, Jack, old salt,
seafarer, gob, sea dog]
User Contributed Dictionary
see Mariner
English
Etymology
From etyl xno mariner, marinier, from etyl fro marinier, maronnier, from post-classical etyl la marinarius, from marinus.Pronunciation
- a UK /ˈmaɹɪnə/
Noun
- A sailor.
Verb
mariner- To marinate
Conjugation
Extensive Definition
A sailor or mariner is a person who navigates
water-borne vessels or
assists in their operation, maintenance, or service. The term can
apply to professional mariners, military personnel, and
recreational sailors as well as a plethora of other uses.
Etymologically, the name preserves the memory of the time when
ships were commonly powered by sails, but applies to the personnel
of all vessels, whatever their mode of locomotion.
Professional mariners hold a variety of
professions and ranks which are fairly standard, with the exception
of slight naming differences around the world. Common categories by
department include the Deck
department, the Engineering
department, and the Steward's
department. Mariners can also be categorized by status as a
senior licensed
mariners or unlicensed mariners.
A number of professional mariners have left the
industry and lead noteworthy lives in the naval services or on the
shore. For example, Traian
Băsescu, started his career as a third mate in
1976 and is now the President of Romania. Arthur
Phillip joined the Merchant Navy in 1751 and 37 years later
founded Sydney,
Australia. Merchant mariner Douglass
North went from seaman to navigator to win the 1993 Nobel Prize
in Economics.
Professional mariners
Seafarers hold a variety of professions and ranks, each of which carry unique responsibilities which are integral to the successful operation of an ocean-going vessel. A ship's crew can generally be divided into four main categories: the deck department, the engineering department, the steward's department, and other.Engineering department
details Engineering department A ship's engineering department consists of the members of a ship's crew that operates and maintains the propulsion and other systems onboard the vessel. Marine engineering staff also deal with the "hotel" facilities onboard, notably the sewage, lighting, air conditioning and water systems. Engineering staff manage bulk fuel transfers and require training in firefighting and first aid. Additional duties include maintaining the ship's boats and performing other nautical tasks. Engineers play a key role in cargo loading/discharging gear and safety systems, though the specific cargo discharge function remains the responsibility of deck officers and deck workers.A common engineering crew for a ship includes:
- (1) Chief Engineer
- (1) Second Engineer / First Assistant Engineer
- (1) Third Engineer / Second Assistant Engineer
- (1-2) Fourth Engineer / Third Assistant Engineer
- (0-2) Fifth Engineer / Junior Engineer
- (1-3) Oiler (unlicensed qualified rating)
- (0-3) Greaser/s (unlicensed qualified rating)
- (1-5) Entry-level rating (such as Wiper (occupation), Utilityman, etc)
American ships also carry a
Qualified Member of the Engine Department. Other possible
positions include Motorman, Machinist,
Electrician,
Refrigeration Engineer, and Tankerman.
Steward's department
A typical Steward's department for a cargo ship is a Chief Steward, a Chief Cook, and a Steward's Assistant. All three positions are typically filled by unlicensed personnel.The chief steward directs, instructs, and assigns
personnel performing such functions as preparing and serving meals;
cleaning and maintaining officers' quarters and steward department
areas; and receiving, issuing, and inventorying stores.
The chief steward also plans menus; compiles
supply, overtime, and cost control records. The steward may
requisition or purchase stores and equipment. Galley roles may
include baking.
A chief steward's duties may overlap with those
of the Steward's
Assistant, the Chief Cook,
and other Steward's Department crewmembers.
A person has to have a
Merchant Mariner's Document issued by the
United States Coast Guard in the
United States Merchant Marine in order to serve as a chief
steward. All chief cooks who sail internationally are similarly
documented by their respective countries because of international
conventions and agreements.
Other departments
Various types of staff officer positions may exist on board a ship, including Junior Assistant Purser, Senior Assistant Purser, Purser, Chief Purser, Medical Doctor, Professional Nurse, Marine Physician Assistant, and Hospital Corpsman. These jobs are considered administrative positions and are therefore regulated by Certificates of Registry issued by the United States Coast Guard. Pilots are also merchant marine officers and are licensed by the Coast Guard.Working conditions
Mariners spend extended periods at sea. Most deep-sea mariners are hired for one or more voyages that last for several months. There is no job security after that. The length of time between voyages varies by job availability and personal preference.The rate of unionization for these workers in the
United States is about 36 percent, much higher than the average for
all occupations. Consequently, merchant marine officers and seamen,
both veterans and beginners, are hired for voyages through union
hiring halls or directly by shipping companies. Hiring halls fill
jobs by the length of time the person has been registered at the
hall and by their union seniority. Hiring halls typically are found
in major seaports.
At sea, on larger vessels mariners usually stand
watch for 4 hours and are off for 8 hours, 7 days a week.
Mariners work in all weather conditions. Working
in damp and cold conditions often is inevitable, although ships try
to avoid severe storms while at sea. It is uncommon for modern
vessels to suffer disasters such as fire, explosion, or a sinking.
Yet workers face the possibility of having to abandon ship on short
notice if it collides with other vessels or runs aground. Mariners
also risk injury or death from falling overboard and from hazards
associated with working with machinery, heavy loads, and dangerous
cargo. However, modern safety management procedures, advanced
emergency communications, and effective international rescue
systems place modern mariners in a much safer position.
Most newer vessels are air conditioned,
soundproofed from noisy machinery, and equipped with comfortable
living quarters. These amenities have helped ease the sometimes
difficult circumstances of long periods away from home. Also,
modern communications, especially email, link modern mariners to
their families. Nevertheless, some mariners dislike the long
periods away from home and the confinement aboard ship. They
consequently leave the profession.
Life at sea
Professional mariners live on the margins of society, with much of their life spent beyond the reach of land. They face cramped, stark, noisy, and sometimes dangerous conditions at sea. Yet men and women still go to sea. For some, the attraction is a life unencumbered with the restraints of life ashore. Sea-going adventure and a chance to see the world also appeal to many seafarers. Whatever the calling, those who live and work at sea invariably confront social isolation.Findings by the Seafarer's International Research
Center indicate a leading cause of mariners leaving the industry is
"almost invariably because they want to be with their families."
U.S. merchant ships typically do not allow family members to
accompany seafarers on voyages. Industry experts increasingly
recognize isolation, stress, and fatigue as occupational hazards.
Advocacy groups such as International Labor Organization, a United
Nations agency, and the Nautical Institute seek improved
international standards for mariners.
One’s service aboard ships typically extends for
months at a time, followed by protracted shore leave. However, some
seamen secure jobs on ships they like and stay aboard for years. In
rare cases, veteran mariners choose never to go ashore when in
port.
Further, the quick turnaround of many modern
ships, spending only a matter of hours in port, limits a seafarer's
free-time ashore. Moreover, some seafarers entering U.S. ports from
a watch list of 25 countries deemed high-risk face restrictions on
shore leave due to security concerns in a post 9/11 environment.
However, shore leave restrictions while in U.S. ports impact
American seamen as well. For example, the
International Organization of Masters, Mates & Pilots notes
a trend of U.S. shipping terminal operators restricting seamen from
traveling from the ship to the terminal gate. Further, in cases
where transit is allowed, special "security fees" are at times
assessed. Such restrictions on shore leave coupled with reduced
time in port by many ships translate into longer periods at sea.
Mariners report that extended periods at sea living and working
with shipmates who for the most part are strangers takes getting
used to. At the same time, there is an opportunity to meet people
from a wide range of ethnic and cultural backgrounds. Recreational
opportunities have improved aboard some U.S. ships, which may
feature gyms and day rooms for watching movies, swapping sea
stories, and other activities. And in some cases, especially
tankers, it is made possible for a mariner to be accompanied by
members of his family. However, a mariner’s off duty time at sea is
largely a solitary affair, pursuing hobbies, reading, writing
letters, and sleeping.
Notable mariners
see List of notable mariners Merchant seamen have gone on to make their mark on the world in a number of interesting ways. Traian Băsescu, who started his career as a third mate in 1976 is now the President of Romania. Arthur Phillip joined the Merchant Navy in 1751 and 37 years later founded the city of Sydney, Australia. Merchant mariner Douglass North went from seaman to navigator to winner of the 1993 Nobel Prize in Economics. Jimmy Carter went on to become the 39th President of the United States after service in the US Navy.Members of the British Merchant Navy have won the
Distinguished
Service Cross, and have had careers taking them from 'Deck Boy
Peter' to Air Marshal Sir
Beresford Peter Torrington Horsley KCB, CBE, LVO, AFC. Canadian
merchant seamen have won the Victoria
Cross and the
Medal of Honor. American merchant seamen have won the Medal of
Honor in the Korean
War and Vietnam
War, and one went on to become the "Father of
the American Navy." One doesn't have to look far to find
merchant seamen who became war heroes in Scotland,
France, New
Zealand, Peru,
or Denmark.
Since World War II, a number of merchant seamen
have become notorious criminals. American William
Colepaugh was convicted as a Nazi spy in World War II and
Fritz
Sauckel was convicted as a Nazi war criminal. Briton Duncan
Scott-Ford was hanged for treachery in World War II. George
Hennard was an American mass murderer who claimed 24 victims on
a rampage at Luby's Cafeteria in Killeen,
Texas. And Perry
Smith's own murderous rampage was made famous in Truman
Capote's non-fiction novel In Cold
Blood.
Mariners are well represented in the visual arts.
French pilot's assistant Paul Gauguin
would later become a leading post-impressionist painter and
pioneered modern art's synthetist style. American seaman Haskell
Wexler later won two Academy
Awards, the latter for a biography of his shipmate Woody
Guthrie. British Merchant Navy member Ken Russell
later directed films such as Tommy, Altered
States, and
The Lair of the White Worm. Merchant seaman Johnny Craig
was already a working comic book artist before he joined up, but
Ernie
Schroeder wouldn't start drawing comics until after returning
home from World War
II.
Merchant sailors have also made a splash in the
world of sport. In football, with
Fred Blackburn in England and the likes of Dan Devine and
Heisman Trophy winner Frank
Sinkwich in the U.S. In track and field, American seamen
Cornelius
Cooper Johnson and Jim Thorpe
both won Olympic medals, though Thorpe didn't get his until 30
years after his death. Seamen Jim Bagby,
Jr. and Charlie
Keller went on to Major League Baseball. Drew
Bundini Brown was Muhammad Ali's assistant trainer and
cornerman, and Joe Gold went on
to make his fortune as the bodybuilding and fitness guru of
Gold's
Gym.
Other sporting notables include Edwin
Stratton the founder of Yoshinkan UK, Dutchman Henk de
Velde known for sailing solo around the world, and Briton
Matthew
Webb who was the first person to swim the English
Channel without the use of artificial aid.
Irish Merchant Navy member Kevin
McClory spent 14 days in a lifeboat and later went on to write
the James Bond movies Never Say Never Again and Thunderball.
Members of the American Beat Movement Allen
Ginsberg, Jack
Kerouac, Bob Kaufman,
and Herbert
Huncke were all Merchant Mariners.
It's perhaps not surprising that the writers of
Moby
Dick, The
American Practical Navigator, and Two
Years Before the Mast were Merchant Mariners. It might be
surprising that the writers of Borat,
A Hard
Day's Night, and Cool Hand
Luke were.
Seamen always complain about leaving their girl
friends ashore, but imagine how James
Dougherty felt, leaving his 17-year-old wife Marilyn Monroe on
the beach. Merchant Navy steward Freddie
Lennon had a surprise when he returned home to find he had a
newborn son. That son would later found the musical group The
Beatles.
A number of U.S. Merchant Mariners from World War
II later played well known television characters. The list includes
Milburn
Drysdale on The Beverly Hillbillies, Archie
Bunker on All in the Family, Columbo on
Columbo, Jim Rockford
on The Rockford Files, Steve McGarret
on Hawaii Five-O, Uncle Jesse
Duke on The Dukes of Hazzard, and Cheyenne
Bodie on Cheyenne.
Other uses
An ancient term, the word "sailor," has come to mean many things. Sailor may refer to:- a person who practices the art of controlling the motion of a sailing ship or sailboat, across a body of water,
- anyone from a recruit to an admiral in a navy,
- a person who goes out sailing, boating or yachting,
- an enlisted member of a military naval force,
- anyone on a boat
- a person who is under sail and not on a vessel with motorised power of any kind in the Royal Navy,
- members of the deck department as opposed to members of other departments in the Merchant Navy
See also
External links
Notes and references
mariner in Bulgarian: Моряк
mariner in German: Seeleute
mariner in Modern Greek (1453-): Ναύτης
mariner in Esperanto: Maristo
mariner in French: Marin
mariner in Indonesian: Pelaut
mariner in Malay (macrolanguage): Kelasi
mariner in Dutch: matroos
mariner in Portuguese: marinheiro
mariner in Russian: Моряк
mariner in Finnish: Merimies
mariner in Swedish: Sjöman
mariner in Thai: กะลาสี
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
adventurer, alpinist, astronaut, bluejacket, camper, climber, comers and goers,
commuter, cosmopolite, cruiser, excursionist, explorer, fare, globe-girdler, globe-trotter,
gob, goer, hajji, jack, jack-tar, jet set,
jet-setter, journeyer,
limey, mountaineer, old salt,
palmer, passenger, passerby, pathfinder, pilgrim, pioneer, rating, rubberneck, rubbernecker, sailor, salt, sea dog, seaman, shellback, sightseer, straphanger, swab, swabbie, tar, tarpaulin, tourer, tourist, trailblazer, trailbreaker, transient, traveler, trekker, tripper, viator, visiting fireman,
voortrekker,
voyager, voyageur, wayfarer,
world-traveler