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Always known simply as 'Brad'. When I
joined the "Kenilworth Castle" at Middlesbrough in 1953 Brad was one
of the cadets. (The others were Mick Peters, Ginger Atkinson.
The senior cadet whose name I cannot recall left in London having
failed his eyesight for 2nd mates and was replaced by Pat Woods.)
Brad
joined the Company 1952, South
African he had done his pre-sea training at the General Botha,
Gordon's Bay. Very popular I remember Brad patching his
dungarees, (jeans today!) until they were mostly patch and very
little dungaree. We left the "Kenilworth" after two
voyages and went together to the "Tantallon Castle" so in all Brad
and I must have been together for two years or more.
The
"Kenilworth" was a happy ship, something only really understood by
sailors. For some unknown reason ship's get characters
of their own, some are happy and others, well not! The
master was Captain A.C.M. Black O.B.E., chief mate John D.
Cutcliffe. By our second voyage Brad and I were firm
friends, at Marseilles Brad said "Og, you speak French, how about a
pub crawl?" We set off ashore, soon found ourselves in
the less touristy area of docklands Marseilles (all gone now of
course) soon at the door of our first bar. It had been
agreed that we would have one drink in each bar but never the same
drink! By about the third bar Brad said, "When I was
last here I had a peppermint drink."
"Ah" said
the French expert "you mean Pernod." Well at one stage
we found ourselves at a wedding reception (not sure but I think it
was an Arab one but nevertheless we were made very welcome), I seem
to recall a backyard film show somewhere and finally we entered a
bar full of sailors from the American umteenth fleet.
Marching (I thought confidently but I now have my doubts on that) to
the bar I asked the attractive barmaid for two bottles of Martini.
Somewhere along the line 'one drink' had become 'one bottle' which
had then multiplied to one bottle each.
"Sorry"
she replied, "we only sell it by the glass."
"How many
to a bottle?" I asked.
"12"
"24
martinis please."
And we
worry about the youth of today!!!!
Brad's father worked for the South
African Railways in Durban, Brad took us to his home at Escombe when we were at Durban
and I recall we ate heaps of cookies his mother had baked.
We went
our separate ways after leaving the
"Tantallon", the next time I saw Brad was when he was Junior Fourth
on the "Carnarvon" (Some of you may think I always misspell her
name. This was the spelling the Company gave the ship,
it was said that Sir Vernon Thompson, the chairman who was 'very
careful with money' was too mean to pay for the paint for the
missing 'e'! Similarly you will notice "Capetown" is
also miss-spelt) Never one to follow the herd Bradley
left the Company and we lost touch, I did hear of him on a yacht in
the Bahamas but that was some years later.
We next
met up when I was pilot in Cape Town, Brad called at my home in
Bergvliet to give me his copy of "The Union-Castle Chronicle", he
was never like me sentimental for the past but always looking to the
future.
O.G.K.

Left, Wallace Bradley,
front with fag, Ginger Atkinson, at the back Mick Peters and with
his head back the senior cadet John Crowley.
Robin Hoods Bay, September 1953

"Kenilworth Castle" 1953.
Back left OGK, (Og), Brad, Mike Peters. Sitting Pat Woods,
sitting on deck Ginger Atkinson.
Wallace-Bradley's bio
Home was at
Escombe, Natal. (Escombe now a suburb of Durban but then a
very pleasant small town on what was always referred to as 'the Old
Main Road' meaning the road out to Pietermaritzburg of old colonial
style bungalows.) Father ex RN (WW1) Foreman fitter SAR&H
Durban Boys High
General Botha 1951-52
Kenilworth Castle 1953
Tantallon Castle 1954
Fruit ships
Second Mates
Carnarvon Castle 4th
Athlone Castle 4th
Durban Castle 4th a
Riebeeck Castle 3rd
Passed for Mates – joined Furness
Withy
3rd Mate of an ore
carrier
2nd Mate Lancastrian
Prince (Mediterranean)
Then to 3 ships chartered to Shaw
Savill - Bardic, Mystic, Medic.
During these years Brad spent many
weekends sailing with a friend, they had met whilst skiing. Their
boat was a converted ex Navy cutter (whaler, an open 12 oared boat)
They sailed the route of the Dulsey Bella from Erskin Chandlers ‘The
Riddle of to the Sands’
Brad then skippered a 56ft yacht
‘Sky Wave’ owned by an American, he took it from Southampton to the
Bahamas where it was chartered out with Brad as skipper and his
sister Diana as cook/stewardess. They sailed from the Bahamas and
New England, Martha’s Vineyard and so forth.
Brad then spent three months
touring the USA by Grey Hound Coach on a 90 day ticket he covered
12000 miles! Nights were spent in cheap ‘doss houses’ for about 1$
50 a night.
Deciding to return to South Africa
to see his family, Brad worked his passage back to South Africa
delivering a trawler built in Glasgow.
His next employment was as
mate of the "Reef", one of African Coasters (known to all on the
coast as 'African Chaos') exhausted old steamers. On one voyage off
Cape St. Blaize in a storm the ship, unable to head into the wind
was being blown into a lea bay. To get her out into open water Brad
got the engineer on watch to build up a good head of steam then
using the lot pushed the ship’s head thro wind to work its way out.
The old ship's boilers were in such a state that the steam driven
generator was unable to power radar.
Late ‘60’s Brad then joined yacht
‘Aldeberan’ in Durban whose American owner had sailed single handed
from being built out east. Off Luderitz the batteries ran flat,
the 3rd crewman, a young American who had also joined in Durban
rowed dingy into the port with battery, had it charged and rowed
himself out again. They made Surinam from where Brad flew back to
SA.
Joined Ian Rennies company Rennies
Angola Line, sailed as mate then Master on the "Yolanda".
1968 Brad now took time off to
visit and explore South Africa’s small disused harbours such as Port
Alfred. Typical of Brad, when I asked him had he kept a
of this he laughed ‘goodheavens no’!
1968? Marriage to Vera, time to
settle down.
Brad then sailed with Safmarine
for the first time as 2nd mate of a tanker.
Took flying lessons in Durban, ran
out of money.
2nd mate of "RSA",
South Africa's Antarctic supply ship for two seasons, Capt’s Ken
McNish and Funk (This was when Brad and I met up again, I was then a
Table bay Harbour pilot.
Brad then on Kuswag’s (1 to 6,
pollution boats managed by Safmarine) hopping to get Mates job on
new "Agulhas", the replacement for the old "RSA". (During time of
Ven Pet, Ven Oil collision)
Back to Safmarine
"SA Hexrivier" Mate
"SA Nederberg" Mate
Container ships Mate
"Sirius" Master
"City of Port Louis" last command
(went to Sea of Asof in the Black Sea)
1988 retired

Brad doing what he likes best, messing about with boats.
The 'Astra' being rebuilt 1995.
September 2007

Two old friends, Brad & Og in the Lord Nelson (a pub of course!)
Simon's Town
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