Ship's cat

Atlantic Conference August 1941: Churchill restrains 'Blackie' the cat, the mascot of HMS Prince of Wales, from joining the USS McDougal, an American destroyer, while the ship's company stand to attention during the playing of the National Anthem
Winston Churchill restrains Blackie, the ship's cat of HMS Prince of Wales, from boarding USS McDougal during a 1941 ceremonial visit
Ship's cat on HMAS Encounter during World War I
Captain A. J. Hailey with his cat on the RMS Empress of Canada (1922), 1920s

The ship's cat has been a common feature on many trading, exploration, and naval ships dating to ancient times. Cats have been carried on ships for many reasons, most importantly to catch mice and rats. These vermin aboard a ship can cause damage to ropes, woodwork, and more recently, electrical wiring. Also, rodents threaten ships' stores, devour crews' foodstuff, and could cause economic damage to ships' cargo such as grain. They are also a source of disease, which is dangerous for ships that are at sea for long periods of time. Rat fleas are carriers of plague, and rats on ships were believed to be a main spreader of the Black Death.

Cats naturally attack and kill rodents,[1] and their natural ability to adapt to new surroundings made them suitable for service on a ship. In addition, they offer companionship and a sense of home, security and camaraderie to sailors away from home.

Early history

The domestication of cats is believed to date back to around 9,000 years ago on farms in the Near East. The Ancient Egyptians took cats on board Nile boats to catch birds in the thickets along the riverbanks.[2][3] A 2017 mitochondrial DNA study suggests that cats spread from ancient Egypt along maritime trade routes a few thousand years after first being domesticated.[4] Preliminary results of a genetic study published in September 2016 concluded that cats were carried on trading ships to control rodents, and that practice was adopted by traders from many nations, including Vikings in northern Germany around the 8th to 11th centuries.[5] The Norwegian Forest cat is a natural breed believed to have been developed from Viking ships' cats. Sailing ships spread the domestic cat throughout much of the rest of the world during the Age of Discovery in the 15th through 18th centuries.[6]

Cats and superstition

Sometimes worshipped as deities, cats have long had a reputation as magical animals and numerous myths and superstitions sprang up amongst the unusually superstitious seafaring community.[7] They were considered to be intelligent and lucky animals, and a high level of care was devoted to keeping them happy. Some sailors believed that polydactyl cats were better at catching pests, possibly connected with the suggestion that extra digits give a polydactyl cat better balance, important when at sea. In some places polydactyl cats became known as "ship's cats".

Cats were believed to have miraculous powers that could protect ships from dangerous weather. Sometimes, fishermen's wives would keep black cats at home too, in the hope that they would be able to use their influence to protect their husbands at sea. It was believed to be lucky if a cat approached a sailor on deck, but unlucky if it only came halfway, and then retreated. Another popular belief was that cats could start storms through magic stored in their tails. If a ship's cat fell or was thrown overboard, it was thought that it would summon a terrible storm to sink the ship and that if the ship was able to survive, it would be cursed with nine years of bad luck. Other beliefs included, if a cat licked its fur against the grain, it meant a hail storm was coming; if it sneezed it meant rain; and if it was frisky it meant wind.

Some of these beliefs are rooted in reality. Cats are able to detect slight changes in the weather, as a result of their very sensitive inner ears, which also allow them to land upright when falling. Low atmospheric pressure, a common precursor of stormy weather, often makes cats nervous and restless.[8]

Notable examples

The prevalence of cats on ships has led to them being reported on by a number of noted seafarers. The outbreak of the Second World War, with the spread of mass communication and the active nature of the world's navies, also led to a number of ship's cats becoming celebrities in their own right.[9]

Blackie

Blackie was HMS Prince of Wales's ship's cat. During the Second World War, he achieved worldwide fame after Prince of Wales carried Prime Minister Winston Churchill across the Atlantic to NS Argentia, Newfoundland, in August 1941, where he secretly met with the United States President Franklin D. Roosevelt for several days in a secure anchorage. This meeting resulted in the declaration of the Atlantic Charter, but as Churchill prepared to step off Prince of Wales, Blackie approached. Churchill stooped to bid farewell to Blackie, and the moment was photographed and reported in the world media. In honour of the success of the visit, Blackie was renamed Churchill.[10] Blackie survived the sinking of Prince of Wales by the Imperial Japanese Navy Air Service later that year, and was taken to Singapore with the survivors. He could not be found when Singapore was evacuated the following year and his fate is unknown.[11]

Camouflage

Camouflage was the ship's cat aboard a US Coast Guard LST in the Pacific theater, WWII. He was known for chasing enemy tracer rounds across the deck.[12]

Chibley

Chibley was the ship's cat aboard the tall ship Barque Picton Castle. She was rescued from an animal shelter and circumnavigated the world five times. Picton Castle’s role as a training ship resulted in Chibley being introduced to a large number of visitors and becoming a celebrity in her own right. Chibley died on November 10, 2011, in Lunenburg, Nova Scotia. She had sailed over 180,000 miles at sea.[13]

Convoy

Convoy asleep in a hammock aboard HMS Hermione

Convoy was the ship's cat aboard HMS Hermione. He was so named because of the number of times he accompanied the ship on convoy escort duties. Convoy was listed in the ship's book and provided with a full kit, including a tiny hammock in which he slept. He was killed along with 87 of his crew mates when Hermione was torpedoed and sunk on 16 June 1942 by German submarine U-205.

Emmy

Emmy was the ship's cat on RMS Empress of Ireland. She was an orange tabby cat who never missed a voyage. However, on 28 May 1914, Emmy jumped ship while in port in Quebec City. The crew returned her to the ship, but she left again, leaving her kittens behind. The Empress of Ireland left without her, which was regarded as a terrible omen.[14] Early the next morning Empress of Ireland collided with SS Storstad while steaming through fog at the mouth of the St. Lawrence River and rapidly sank, killing over 1,000 people.

Felix

Felix was the ship's cat aboard Mayflower II when she set sail from Devon, England, to Plymouth, Massachusetts, in 1957 to symbolize the solidarity between the UK and the US following World War II. He was given his own life jacket and once suffered a broken paw after a mishap. The paw was set by the ship's doctor. Photos and stories about Felix appeared in National Geographic, Life, and Yankee magazine after his arrival in the US. The cat and the rest of the crew marched in a New York ticker tape parade and toured the East Coast that summer. He was eventually adopted by the cabin boy's girlfriend, Ann Berry, and settled in Waltham, Massachusetts. The current captain of the Mayflower II wrote a children's book about Felix entitled Felix and his Mayflower II Adventures.[15] The book was published during the celebration of the ship's fiftieth anniversary at Plimoth Plantation.[16]

Halifax

Halifax was the name given to Alvah and Diana Simon's ship's cat who was found in the port of Halifax, on their way to winter at Tay Bay in 1994, on Roger Henry. The cat spent all of the time iced in on the boat with Alvah, when Diana had to leave for family purposes. Alvah's book North To The Night[17] describes his adventure in the ice with Halifax the cat, who ended up losing half an ear to frostbite.

Jenny

Jenny was the name of the ship's cat aboard Titanic and was mentioned in the accounts of several of the crew members who survived the ocean liner's fateful 1912 maiden voyage. She was transferred from Titanic's sister ship Olympic and gave birth in the week before Titanic left Southampton. The galley is where Jenny and her kittens normally lived, cared for by the victualling staff who fed them kitchen scraps.[18] Stewardess Violet Jessop later wrote in her memoir that the cat "laid her family near Jim, the scullion, whose approval she always sought and who always gave her warm devotion."[19][20]

Jenny and her kittens went down with the ship.

Kiddo

M. Vaniman and Kiddo

Kiddo seemed to have stowed away on the airship America, when she left from Atlantic City, New Jersey, in an attempt to cross the Atlantic Ocean in 1910. Kiddo was upset at first by the experience, but settled in and evidently, was better at predicting bad weather than the barometer. The airship's engines failed, and the small crew and Kiddo abandoned the America for lifeboats when they sighted the Royal Mail steamship Trent, near Bermuda. Kiddo then was retired from being a ship's cat and was taken care of by Edith Wellman Ainsworth, the daughter of the American journalist, explorer, and aviator, Walter Wellman, who made the daring attempt.[21]

Mrs Chippy

Mrs Chippy, a tiger-striped male tabby ship's cat

Mrs Chippy (actually a male) was the ship's cat aboard Endurance, the ship used by Sir Ernest Shackleton for his Imperial Trans-Antarctic Expedition. When the ship was lost, having become trapped and eventually crushed in pack ice, Shackleton ordered the sled dogs and Mrs Chippy shot, as Shackleton had decided that the animals could not be kept during the arduous journey ahead.

Nansen

Nansen was the ship's cat on Belgica, which was used for the Belgian Antarctic Expedition. He was brought on board by cabin boy Johan Koren, and was named after Fridtjof Nansen. He died on 22 June 1898,[22] and was buried in the Antarctic.[23]

Peebles

Lieutenant Commander R H Palmer OBE, RNVR plays with Peebles, the ship's cat, who leaps through his clasped arms on board HMS Western Isles at Tobermory, Mull

Peebles was the ship's cat aboard HMS Western Isles. Another cat who became a favourite of the ship's crew, he was known to be particularly intelligent and would shake the hands of strangers when they entered the wardroom.

Pooli

Pooli in uniform on July 4, 1959, her 15th birthday

Pooli served aboard a United States attack transport during the Second World War. [24] She was awarded with three service ribbons and four battle stars.[25]

Rinda

Rinda was the ship's cat on the Norwegian cargo ship SS Rinda, which was torpedoed and sunk during World War II. When the surviving crew realized that their beloved ship's cat was not on board the lifeboat, they rowed around in the night until they finally heard a pitiful "miauu" in the distance. "We rowed as hard as we could and laughed and cried when we lifted the sopping wet furball aboard". The cat became the ship's cat aboard the rescue ship, the British armed naval trawler HMT Pict, and was given the name Rinda after the previous ship.[26]

Simon

Simon was the ship's cat of HMS Amethyst during the Yangtze Incident in 1949, and was wounded in the bombardment of the ship which killed 25 of Amethyst’s crew, including the commanding officer. He soon recovered and resumed killing rats and keeping up the crew's morale. He was appointed to the rank of 'Able Seacat' Simon and became a celebrity after the ship escaped the Yangtze and returned to Britain. He later succumbed to an infection and died shortly after. Tributes poured in and his obituary appeared in The Times. He was posthumously awarded the Dickin Medal, the only cat ever to earn the award, and was buried with full naval honours.

Tarawa

Tarawa was a kitten rescued from a pillbox during the Battle of Tarawa by the United States Coast Guard. She was a mascot aboard an LST, but did not get along with the LST's other mascot, a dog named Kodiak, and jumped ship ashore.[12]

Tiddles

Tiddles at his station aboard HMS Victorious. Despite a long tradition, there are no longer ships' cats aboard Royal Navy vessels

Tiddles was the ship's cat on a number of Royal Navy aircraft carriers. He was born aboard HMS Argus, and later joined HMS Victorious. He was often seen at his favourite station, on the aft capstan, where he would play with the bell-rope. He eventually travelled over 30,000 miles (48,000 km) during his time in service.

Trim

Trim was the ship's cat on a number of the ships under the command of Matthew Flinders during voyages to circumnavigate and map the coastline of Australia during 1801–1803. He became a favourite of the crew and was the first cat to circumnavigate Australia. He remained with Flinders until death. He has been the subject of a number of works of literature, and statues have been placed in his honour, including one that sits on a window sill at the State Library of New South Wales in Sydney.

Unsinkable Sam

Previously named Oscar, he was the ship's cat of the German battleship Bismarck. When she was sunk on 27 May 1941, only 116 out of a crew of over 2,200 survived. Oscar was picked up by the destroyer HMS Cossack (one of the ships responsible for destroying Bismarck). Cossack herself was torpedoed and sunk a few months later, on 24 October, killing 159 of her crew, but Oscar again survived to be rescued, and was taken to Gibraltar. He became the ship's cat of HMS Ark Royal, which was torpedoed and sunk in November that year. Oscar was again rescued, but it was decided at that time to transfer him to a home on land. By now known as Unsinkable Sam because of surviving the three ship sinkings, he was given a new job as mouse-catcher in the Governor General's of Gibraltar office buildings. He eventually returned to the UK and spent the rest of his life at the 'Home for Sailors'. A portrait of him exists in the private collection of the National Maritime Museum in Greenwich.[27]

Today

The Royal Navy banned cats and other pet animals from all ships on the ocean in 1975 on hygiene grounds;[9] however, cats are still common on many private ships.

One notable example is Toolbox (a feral kitten born in a toolbox), the senior ship's cat, official warrant officer and "Captain's Assistant" aboard the modern Kalmar Nyckel. A celebrity in her own right, she is the subject of two books.[28][29] Also, American sailor Robin Lee Graham was the youngest solo sailor to circumnavigate the globe, beginning in 1965. A number of ship's cats were included in the chronicles for the National Geographic Magazine (1968–1970) and detailed in the 1972 book Dove, which was adapted into the 1974 film The Dove.

In fiction

There are at least two books called The Ship's Cat: a 1977 children's book by Richard Adams and Alan Aldridge,[30] and a 2000 novel by Jock Brandis.[31] Matthew Flinders' Cat is a 2002 novel by Bryce Courtenay featuring tales about Trim, the ship's cat that circumnavigated Australia. In Fish Head, a 1954 children's book by Jean Fritz, the eponymous cat unwittingly becomes a ship's cat.[32]

In a central episode in Jan de Hartog's novel The Captain, taking place on board a ship engaged in the dangerous Murmansk Convoys in the Second World War, a young officer is killed in an effort to save the ship's cat and her playful kittens during a Luftwaffe attack on the ship. This profoundly affects the main protagonist, the ship's captain, and is one of the factors leading to his later becoming a conscientious objector.

In science fiction, the role of the ship's cat has been transferred to spaceships. Notable examples include Cordwainer Smith's 1955 short story "The Game of Rat and Dragon"[33] and Andre Norton's 1968 novel The Zero Stone[34] featuring a telepathic mutant feline named Eet.[35] On film, Alien (1979) and the sequel Aliens (1989) feature Jones ("Jonesy") aboard USCSS Nostromo.[36]

See also

References

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  2. "Paintings from the Tomb-chapel of Nebamun". Khan Academy. Retrieved 25 July 2017.
  3. "Simon of HMS Amethyst", Purr’n’fur, UK .
  4. Briggs, Helen (19 June 2017). "How cats conquered the ancient world". BBC News. Retrieved 19 June 2017.
  5. "Cats sailed with Vikings to conquer the world, genetic study reveals". www.sciencealert.com. Science Alert. 23 September 2016. Retrieved 3 October 2016.
  6. Mason, Ian L., ed. (1984). Evolution of domesticated animals. London: Longman. p. 223. ISBN 0-582-46046-8.
  7. Eyers, Jonathan (2011). Don't Shoot the Albatross!: Nautical Myths and Superstitions. A&C Black, London, UK. ISBN 978-1-4081-3131-2.
  8. Freeman, Margot. "How Do Cats React to Barometric Pressure?". The Nest. XO Group Inc. Retrieved 2 October 2017.
  9. 1 2 Famous ships cats and their lives, United Kingdom: Purr’n’fur .
  10. "Cats", Royal Navy (book), UK: R Jerrard .
  11. Fred Glueckstein. "Churchill's Feline Menagerie". The Churchill Centre. Archived from the original on 29 April 2010. Retrieved 19 July 2014.
  12. 1 2 "Mascots", History, US: Coast Guard .
  13. Captain Daniel Moreland (11 November 2011). "Captain's Log". www.picton-castle.com. Archive for the 'Chibley' Category. Retrieved 23 April 2018.
  14. Blatchford, Andy (23 May 2014). "Empress of Ireland, 'Canada's Titanic,' finally getting its due after 100 years". The Globe and Mail. The Canadian Press. Retrieved 7 January 2015.
  15. ISBN 9780979334818
  16. "Felix", The Journey of the Mayflower II, Plimoth .
  17. Simon, Alvah (1998). North to the Night: A Year in the Arctic Ice. Camden, ME: McGraw-Hill [u.a.] ISBN 0-07-058052-9.
  18. Eaton, John P.; Haas, Charles A. (1999). Titanic: A Journey Through Time. foreword by William MacQuitty. Sparkford: Patrick Stephens. p. 234. ISBN 1-85260-575-8.
  19. Pellegrino, Charles (2012). Farewell, Titanic : her final legacy. Hoboken, N.J.: Wiley. p. 29. ISBN 0-470-87387-6.
  20. Violet Jessop (2004). John Maxtone-Graham, ed. Titanic survivor : the newly discovered memoirs of Violet Jessop who survived both the Titanic and Britannic disasters. John Maxtone-Graham (annotated) (1st pbk. ed.). Dobbs-Ferry, NY: Sheridan House. ISBN 1-57409-184-0.
  21. Janus, Allan (October 15, 2005). Animals Aloft: Photographs from the Smithsonian National Air & Space Museum. Bunker Hill Publishing. ISBN 1-59373-048-9. , 128 pp.
  22. Lewis, Val (2002). Ship's Cats in War and Peace. Shepperton: Nauticalia. pp. 59–60. ISBN 0-9530458-1-1.
  23. de Gerlache, Adrien, Belgica Belgian Antarctic Expedition 1897–1899, Cool Antarctica, archived from the original on 9 October 2010, retrieved 5 October 2010
  24. "Changing Times: Los Angeles in Photographs, 1920–1990 (Pooli, cat who served aboard an United States attack transport during World War II celebrates 15th birthday)", The Los Angeles Times (photograph), UCLA, July 4, 1959 .
  25. "Cats in the Sea Services". www.usni.org. U.S. Naval Institute.
  26. "D/S Rinda". War sailors. Retrieved 7 February 2012.
  27. Baker, Georgina Shaw. "Item #PAJ2744: Oscar, Cat From the German Battleship Bismarck - Private Collections of the National Maritime Museum" (Framed drawing in pastel, 785 x 610 mm). Royal Museums Greenwich. London, UK.
  28. Mayers, Barbara (2007). Toolbox: Ship's Cat on the Kalmar Nyckel. Bay Oak Publishers, Limited. ISBN 9780974171395.
  29. Charles E. Ireland, Jr. (2006). Toolbox. Cedar Tree Books.
  30. ISBN 978-0-224-01441-0
  31. ISBN 978-0595129973
  32. Fritz, Jean, "Fish head", Kirkus Reviews .
  33. Smith, Cordwainer (October 1955), "The game of Rat and Dragon", Galaxy Science Fiction, Project Gutenberg
  34. "THE ZERO STONE by Andre Norton". Kirkus Reviews. Kirkus Media. Retrieved 19 April 2018.
  35. "The Zero Stone (#1)". www.goodreads.com. Retrieved 19 April 2018.
  36. Burton, Bonnie (8 December 2016). "Ripley and her cat make 'Aliens' look cuddly". CNET. CBS Interactive. Retrieved 19 April 2018.
  • Lewis, Val (2001). Ships' Cats in War and Peace. Nauticalia. ISBN 978-0-9530458-1-5.
  • Roberts, Patrick. "Simon". Famous Felines. Purr-n-Fur.
  • "Cats: At sea". Wyrdology. Archived from the original on 2008-05-16.
  • "Cats in the sea services". USNI.
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  • "Ship's cats". Moggies. United Kingdom. .
  • "The Ship's Cats that Lapped and Mapped the World". Seafurrers. Australia.
  • Dunwoody, H. H. C. (1883). "Proverbs relating to animals". Signal Service Notes: Weather Proverbs. Washington: Office of the Chief Signal Office. pp. 29–30. — Collection of proverbs relating to cats predicting weather
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