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The Midwatch
There is always a watch,for the ship is like an infant,
needing continuous care and round- the -clock attention.
So there is always a time when you must wake in the middle of the night,
move blindly to your station and stand your watch;
which is four hours long and an eternity wide
There are, on a ship, just as in a fine pawnshop, all kinds of watches.
There are lookout watches and messenger watches
and anchor watches and fire watches, office watches and signal watches,
engine order telegraph watches and fog whistle watches.
And the most dreaded of all watches is the MID WATCH
... which falls between the happy laughing hours of 0000 to 0400.
It is then that you must leave your oven-warm sack
and grope your way through the cold black night.
It is then you are to say to the watch you are relieving,
"I am ready to relieve you." It is then you pray that God will
forgive you for this shocking lie, because the last thing in the world
you are ready to do
is to relieve this sailor, who miraculously returns from the depths of
depression as soon as he sees you, his savior and redeemer,
his midnight mirage turned to flesh and blood.
This piece was
published in the October 16, 1969 issue of the OK City Times. It was
saved by QM-3 Bill Freeman who used it on his great looking USS Rainier
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This is a picture of Bobby Kennedy
I took on the Little Rock while he was
touring in the summer of 1962.
Hope you can use it. Larry Williamson
I am a Plank Owner of the 1960 Little Rock, and I think you have a very
nice web site for her, Thanks.
I'm attaching a picture of her that I took while going ashore at Gitmo in
the fall of 1960. Thanks again for the web site. Larry
Williamson LWillia800@aol.com
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At Philly Shipyard
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The End
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E-Mail:podunlap@hotmail.com
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