Boatmen or longshoremen

Wansworth

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Do they still lurk around harbours ready to earn a crust.YeRs ago in Cowes I transported two inebriated Squadran members to their yacht in my dinghy,they hailed me from Groves they neglected to reimburse me !
 
Elf an Safety Mate
Insurance
Blah blah...

But my grand master plan is to round Britain at weekends returning by train etc... I'm told people used to do this a million years ago and left the boat in the 'arbour under the watchful of local boatmen. There may have been a bit of "Mr 2 bob to watch your motor" about it... ...but if such does exist I'd be keen to make them on my list of stopping points when I finally get down to the mission...
 
I think they used to be called railwY harbours and it was common place probably between the wars and before Beeching.

Yes - with tickets that let you travel to one harbour and return from another.

Wont be so easy nowadays thanks to Dr Beeching. But I can cope with the train side. But like the yourself I'm interested in if the Boatmen still lurk in the shadows.
 
Chichester Harbour in the 1960 had bus services fro the various small villages with moorings around the harbour to the nearest town with a railway station but these along with the local shops have disappeared.The modern equivalent is of course the marina .
 
Perhaps the word has a slightly different meaning up here.
In the last village I lived in there were still one or two creel boats, worked more as hobby boats than for a living.
A retired member of the crew, who no longer went out in the boat, used to potter around and help out on shore - mending creels, tidying up ropes and the like. His title was "Longshoreman".
 
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