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Sailor
Tattoos
Samuel
O' Reilly, a famed
tattooist in New
York City, once
stated,
"A Sailor without a
tattoo is like a ship without
grog: not seaworthy."
A few of us in the tattoo business
are fortunate to help carry on
one of the oldest traditions in
our business: tattooing the navies
of the world. From
the earliest Polynesian adventurer
to the modern sailors of today,
these men and women have remained
true patrons of the art, and we
as tattooists owe them a big thanks
of gratitude.
Tattooing has been linked with
the seafaring life of the navy
for centuries. This tradition began
in the 1700s when Captain Cook
discovered the tattooed natives
of the South Pacific. Cook's sailors
were looking for the perfect memento
of their journey into foreign lands,
and a tattoo was the most exotic
souvenir they could bring home.
One
of the great seaman-tattooists
of all times was George
Burchett-Davis who, in
1888 at the tender age
of 16, shipped out on the
H.M.S. Victory. For the
next three years this ship
and the world were his
home. In his book, "Memoirs
of a Tattooist" published
in 1958, he recalled many
of the trials and tribulations
of the Royal Navy before
the turn of the century:
The great majority of
British warships were very
old and many were not seaworthy.
The conditions for the
men were grim. The biggest
single fault was overcrowding.
Of course, the crew slept
in hammocks and comfortable
though these may be, we
had to hang them so closely
together there was hardly
any room to breathe. There
was severe punishment for
offenses. Men were put
in irons and sentenced
to a diet of bread and
water almost every day
aboard many ships.... With
us however, justice, though
rough, was fair.
I had received a nominal
training ashore at Portsmouth.
But it was left to the
old salts to make me into
a sailor. This they did
in the time-honored way
with threats which they
usually carried out. Some
were upright men whom I
grew to respect, others
were brutes. One soon learned
how to keep out of the
way of the tough fellows
and how to make friends
who were strong enough
to side with you, when
the need arose. In short,
it was a training in life
as well as seamanship.
Early in 1889 the Victory set sail
for the Far East stations: Singapore,
Hong Kong, and the Chinese treaty
ports. Below are George Burchett's
memories of Kobe, Japan:
"Over this scene the sun set
in a wonderful glory. I did not
have to wait long to see some of
Japan's art up close. I realized
what had inspired the tattoos I
had admired. As I looked out to
the islands and there delicate
silhouettes I was, in my boyish
way, moved for perhaps the first
time in my life by pure beauty
and I also felt a kind of sadness
which I did not understand. Now,
I think, it simply meant that I
realized that there are some things
in life which will always keep
on the other side of the shop-window.
In my case, I would never be able
to achieve anything so lovely as
the view from the H.M.S. Victory
over Kobe with my own hand."
Burchett captured the repulsion
and attraction of life at sea perfectly
in the above paragraphs. When the
ships were made of wood, these
men were made of iron.
The Royal Navy went on to rule
the seas for many more decades,
with minor irritation from the
French, United States and German
Navies. Today she is still one
of the great sea powers of the
world. The United States Government
issued a recruiting circular in
1909, which stated, "Indecent
or obscene tattooing is cause for
rejection, the applicant should
be given an opportunity to alter
the design, in which event he may,
if otherwise qualified, be accepted."
"In the 1940s this obscure ruling
caused one of the biggest booms
the tattoo trade had known in years.
From far and wide, eligible young
men were flocking to their favorite
needlers with demands for lingerie,
skirts, brassieres, fans, bubbles,
flowers, butterflies, almost anything
that would cover up a bare spot.
"Why?" exclaimed Charlie
Wagner, who was reckoned the Dean
of American Tattooing and who practiced
his art on New York's famed Bowery, "it's
been just like old-home week around
here since Pearl Harbor."

"Can you imagine," he added "how
a store clerk would feel in a town
where everybody's clothes wore
out at the same time? That's how
I've been feeling. For going on
50 years, I've been turning out
tattooed ladies, most of them aked,
and now all I do is cover them
up."
An interesting sidelight to this
new enforcement of naval regulation
showed up in the early 1940s. Charlie
Wagner was up in New York's Magistrate's
Court on a charge of violating
the Sanitary Code. Wagner told
the judge he was doing "essential
war work," tattooing clothes on
naked women. He explained that
lots of fellows who had unabashed
nudes needled into their skin now
want to get into the Navy, which
says that first they must get their
girls dressed up. The Magistrate
let Charlie off with a $10.00 fine
and a warning to clean up his tattoo
parlor on Chatham Square - Charlie
went back to "essential war work."
During the age of sail, the commerce
and defense of a nation depended
upon the great square-rigged warships
and the men who sailed them. Below
are but a few of the popular tattoos
of a seaman's life.
HOLD, on the knuckles of one
hand and FAST, on the other.
This is said to help the seaman
to better hold the riggings.
A PIG, on the top of one
foot and a ROOSTER, on the
other. This is said to protect
the seaman from drowning, because
both of these barnyard animals
cannot swim so they would get the
seaman quickly to shore.
An ANCHOR showed the seaman
had sailed the Atlantic Ocean.
A FULL-RIGGED SHIP showed
the seaman had sailed around Cape
Horn.
A DRAGON showed the seaman
had served on a China station.
A SHELLBACK TURTLE denotes
a seaman who has crossed the equator.
A GOLDEN DRAGON denotes
a seaman who has crossed the International
Date Line.
PORT & STARBOARD ship
lights were tattooed on
the left (port) and right
(starboard) side of the
body.
ROPE, tattooed around
the wrist meant the seaman
was a deckhand.
Miss Eleanor Barnes of the Seaman's
Institute once remarked, "Some
people pour out their colorful
stories to juries. Others relieve
the tension by writing for the
confession magazines. The sailor
enlists the tattooers needle upon
his own body in dull blues, vivid
reds, greens and yellows to record
the story of his loves and hates,
his triumphs, his religion, and
his patriotism." Enuf said!
Tattoo Archive © 2003
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