Mrs Lillian Bilocca and her campaign following the 1968 Hull trawler disaster

Courage and Effect - fishing safety

I must listen to this while it’s still available… The Hull triple trawler disaster in which 58 men died led trawlerman’s wife Mrs Lillian Bilocca and her friends to mount a campaign for better safety. ‘Something, they demanded, had to be done before more men died.’

They were successful, not least because they acted quickly and in the full blaze of publicity. The Wikipedia (link above) reports that ‘trawler owners were instructed to implement new safety arrangements based on the outcome of the meeting, with immediate effect’.

See British Pathé’s newsreel film about the tragedy. Brian Lavery, presenter of the BBC radio programme has also written a book about the event and the subsequent campaign.

Of course, this was in the era before the health and safety regime we have today greatly reduced the number of people injured or killed in our more dangerous industries. Still I wonder… A pal tells a story about going to sea a decade later (though not in trawlers) and finding that the lifeboats weren’t seaworthy. I guess inspection and action are as important as writing the rules in the first place.

My thanks to Chris Brady for the tipoff.

PS – We listened to this last night. The work of an ex-national newspaper journalist, it’s a damning indictment of the way the fishing industry worked in years gone by – and of the way the national media treated women, and still does.

Brest Maritime Festival – fancy being part of the English Village?

1280px-Moonbeam_-_Brest_2008-10

The William Fife-designed 1903 sailing yacht Moonbeam pictured during the Brest Maritime Festival a few years ago (Source: Wikimedia Commons, photograph by Ludovic Péron)

Historian, serial exhibition presenter and activist Kipperman Mike Smylie tells me he and Classic Sailor editor Dan Houston are organising an ‘English Village’ for the Brest Maritime Festival, which this year is being held from the 13th to the 19th June.

They’re looking for folks with something maritime to offer to take part – I’d guess boatbuilding skills, sailmaking and ropework, publishing and perhaps many more things I haven’t thought of could all be appropriate. It’s just possible I might make the trips and sing sea songs (like this)…

If you’d like to go and think you fit the bill, email me at gmatkin@gmail.com, and I’ll put you in touch.

Arctic Forum, 1845 hours Wednesday 3rd February, London

Guillaume in the ice

In the ice

Alasdair Flint of Arthur Beale’s has reminded me that there’s an Arctic forum at the church opposite the historic West End chandler’s at 1845 the 3rd February – as I write that is still tomorrow, just about…

Arthur Beale has been supplying several yachts that are about to head to the Arctic, and the forum will be a rare opportunity to fire questions at two skippers who ventured as far as Spitsbergen last year.

Alasdair says they will do a short presentation describing their voyages with a few slides and will then throw it open to the floor for the audience to ask questions. Everyone is welcome – the audience don’t have to be experts, but should be interested in sailing north or adventure in general.

Arthur Beales have hired the church in order to fit everyone in – a large crowd is expected – but there are still spaces left. If anyone would like to attend they should email talks@arthurbeale.co.uk. Admission is free… and the shop itself is at 194 Shaftesbury Ave, London WC2H 8JP.

There will be special discounts on thermal clothing available in the shop – so it might be worth arriving early to take advantage of the offers!