Reprinted from past issues of the Seafarers LOG.1947
NEW YORK, Aug. 21 – The fight of the Isthmian Steamship Company, last of the large open shop companies, against the union hiring hall and rotary shipping came to an abrupt end today when the company surrendered to the demands set forth by the negotiating committee of the Seafarers International Union. As soon as this provision was agreed upon, both the SIU and the SUP held special membership meetings in all ports where it was overwhelmingly voted to accept this victory and to release the 31 Isthmian ships which have been tied up.
1962
The waters around Cuba seem to be as crowded with refugees as New York’s Times Square is with tourists. Since the escape route cuts right across busy shipping waters, SIU ships have landed a fair share of the Cubans abandoning the Castro regime. The Seafarers-manned New Yorker (South Atlantic & Caribbean Line) was the latest to perform this humanitarian service when it rescued three more Cubans in August. Meanwhile, the U.S. Navy Oceanographic Office (formerly the Hydrographic Office) has warned that charts for Cuban waters are no longer dependable because they cannot be kept up-to-date due to political conditions in Cuba.
The three men picked up from a small motor boat by the New Yorker expressed warm thanks to the crew for the food, attention and help given them.
1979
SIU boatmen sailing aboard the National Flag (National Marine Service) saved a ship’s pilot and extinguished a fire aboard a burning tugboat on August 30. The Seafarers’ good training and professionalism came to an emergency test when a Peruvian ship in the Mississippi River hit a butane barge that was loading in Good Hope, La. Amidst the chaos that followed, the crew rescued from the water the injured pilot off the ship. The crew then went on to put out the fire on a burning tugboat, the Capt. Norman…. Some eyewitnesses said the fire reached a height of at least 1,500 feet.
1991
The complex embodying the Harry Lundeberg School of Seamanship in Piney Point, Md. has been named the Paul Hall Center for Maritime Training and Education as a result of action taken by the institution’s board of trustees. The dedication of the Paul Hall Center was marked with a simple ceremony on August 20, the anniversary date of the birth of the late president of the SIU.
In describing the naming of the Piney Point center, Herbert Brand, chairman of the Transportation Institute and master of ceremonies for the event, called it “more than a dedication—it is an act of remembrance” for the man who headed the SIU from 1947 until his death in 1980.