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CAPTAIN HAROLD DELLER,
Cadet with Prince Line, in
1915 when serving on the ‘Saxon Prince’ sunk by German raider
‘Moewe’ and spent remainder of war as POW. Joined Union-Castle in
1919. First command in 1940 and last ‘Pendennis Castle’. Retired
1962, died c.1980.
I
remember Harold Deller a good passenger ship master I cannot say he
was well liked by his officers who saw him as rather an aloof,
distant person.
A purserette who I
know well once told me the story of how they would when meeting the
2nd mate who happened to be Sir William
Codrington Bart., drop a curtsy and call him 'your lordship', jus to
infuriate Harold. Another officer to earn his anger was
my very good friend Rodney Lofts. He was 1st Mate of the
"Pretoria" when he was notified that he had been promoted to Captain
in the R.N.R. This was a singular honour as it was very unusual for
an R.N.R. officer to get such promotion before he was a master in
the Merchant Service. Poor Harold, he could never quite accept
what he saw as a personal slight by their Lordships!
I recall we used to somewhat irreverently parody
the Lord’s prayer, ‘Our Father which art in heaven, Harold be thy
name’. But there is always the other
side of the coin, one that junior officers rarely see or think about
until they themselves become senior. We were to pass the ‘Edinburgh Castle’ on the
equator (a highlight of the passengers voyage) the usual routine was
to pass about 1700 hrs on the afternoon 4-8 watch. The
actual meeting was always conjectural, no sat navs then, we thought
ourselves to be spot on navigators if we new our position to within
a couple of miles. Multiply that error by two and you
can see that it was very easy for the two ships to pass harmlessly
out of sight of each other! Deller had as normal come to the
bridge half an hour or so before the expected meeting, he
stood in the wheelhouse in his own little world, I think he must
have been thinking about his home in Romsey and maybe his
retirement. To nobody in particular but to us on the bridge in general
he said, “I dread retirement, my wife has her own life at home, she
is on this committee and that, I know nobody.”
This very sad
remark has stayed with me all my life as it sums up the master of a
passenger liner, on board he is number one, as we used to say,
God. But at home – he is just someone who every now and
then appears
and upsets the normal daily routine, the wife dreading the day he
retires!
(O.G. Keen, 4th mate, Pretoria Castle)
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