A Master Mariner’s Tale (The Adventures of a Reluctant Secret Agent)
By Fred Cooper
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Currently unavailable
About this ebook
A maritime action and adventure spy story with a difference based on real people and events of the time.
Richard Raine is the master of the collier brigantine “The William Thrift” that enters Seaham Harbour in April 1881. Richard could never have imagined the adventure that was to unfold when he sailed out of harbour and the part he would play in maintaining the fragile peace that existed in Queen Victoria’s empire.
The main characters in the book:
Captain Richard Raine:
Richard Raine was born in Sandsend, near Whitby, North Yorkshire in 1841. At the age of 14 he was apprenticed on board a sailing ship and learnt his trade as a seaman on the coastal routes along the east coast of England and Scotland eventually obtaining his first mate's and then his master mariner's certificate of competence. He has been master of the collier brigantine "The William Thrift" for the last five years. Deeply conscious of his responsibilities to his crew he works tirelessly to provide a safe and comfortable environment on board his ship in an age where two out of every one hundred mariners are killed each year at sea. Sailing into Seaham Harbour on census day 1881 he describes harbour life and his usual routine in the town before casting off again the next day. He could never have imagined the adventure that was to begin and the international events into which he would become entangled.
First Mate George Marwick:
George is a giant of a man who commands respect from all who meet him. Born in Orkney, Scotland he has sailed in all manner of sailing ships including the trans-Atlantic routes to the Hudson Bay Company on board square-rigged ships. As first mate on board "The William Thrift" he takes the two young crewmen Billy and Tom under his wing and guides them through the hardships and sometimes terrifying events of life at sea.
Lieutenant Commander Jack Alexander Smith:
Jack Smith, the son of a physician, was born in 1849 in London. Exposed to the numerous uniformed naval officers walking through his home town of Greenwich on the River Thames he knew from an early age that he would go to sea. Always excelling at everything he did at school he entered the Royal Navy as a midshipman at the age of 15 and soon began to shine like a beacon. Promoted to second Lieutenant at the age of twenty he learnt how to get the best out of his men under the guiding hand of Captain Herbert Armstrong on board the frigate HMS Galatea. Not content with the mundane duties of a Royal Naval Officer he sought adventure and danger by volunteering for a new service within the Admiralty - the Naval Intelligence Branch.
Kapitan Ernst Sturm:
As senior intelligence officer for the Imperial German Navy he reports directly to General von Caprivi, Head of the Imperial German Fleet. Ernst Sturm is ruthless and devious and carries out his subversive activities with no concern for the welfare or lives of anyone who gets in his way. He has crossed paths before with Lieutenant Commander Jack Smith and has sworn to his fellow intelligence officers to eliminate him one way or another.
Lord Londonderry:
Lord Londonderry, grandson of the 3rd Marquess and founder of Seaham Harbour, portrays the typically flamboyant, fantastically wealthy and over-indulged aristocrat born into a privileged world but what secrets are lurking behind this façade?
Synopsis
Historically accurate in the social and political events of Victorian England this story reveals many twists, turns and surprises. After reading this book the reader will feel as though they had actually been to sea on board a sailing ship.
Settings & Locations
This novel is set in Queen Victoria's reign along the wild east coast of England and Scotland. The British merchant fleet is more than 20,000 ships strong and every coastal town has a strong maritime community. On any day more than 100 sailing ships are anchored off Seaham Harbour waiting their turn to en
Fred Cooper
Fred Cooper BSc ACMA CGMA was born in 1950 in Seaham, a small town in County Durham on the North East coast of England. He spent much of his teenage years sitting around coffee bars with his school friends, walking around the harbour and watching the pilot cutter bringing in cargo boats laden with timber and building materials and re-loading with coal bound for counties on the East coast of England. He agrees that anyone born in Seaham has a natural affinity with the sea, the harbour and the harbour area - in fact - the majority of Seaham born folk have ancestors who worked on the numerous sailing ships visiting the port in the Victorian era. In his first published book, "The Hole-In-The-Wall" - a social history study - he explores the lives of mariners transporting coals from the coastal ports of County Durham to coal hungry counties on the east coast of England. If the reader has ancestors who worked on collier sailing ships visiting County Durham in the 19th century they may find them listed here. Each chapter takes the reader on a different journey building their knowledge of the coast; the sea; the sailing ships and the town of Seaham Harbour. His second book is a spy thriller novel full of espionage, action and adventure. "A Master Mariners Tale" brings to the reader an all-round experience of the thrills and perils of sailing a brigantine in Victorian England and was inspired by real events and characters uncovered in the research for his first book. The town of Seaham Harbour provides the stage for this story. It was here that the aristocrat, the Marquess of Londonderry invested £165,000, a small fortune in 1828, to develop a new harbour that was to be the stimulus for the building of a new town. His grandson the 6th Marquess portrayed the typically flamboyant, fantastically wealthy and over-indulged aristocrat born into a privileged world but what secrets were lurking behind this façade? How could the covert activities of this party loving nobleman have any bearing on the security of his nation? Richard Raine is the master of the collier brigantine "The William Thrift" that enters Seaham Harbour in April 1881. Thus begins a tale that takes the reader by the hand and walks them through a time and lifestyle long forgotten. Richard could never have imagined the adventure that was to unfold when he sailed out of harbour and the part he would play in maintaining the fragile peace that existed in Queen Victoria's empire. More than a century after these events took place the real story, "A Master Mariners Tale" is finally uncovered. During his intensive research through old newspapers and books Fred began to realise that an area of his home town's local history had been totally overlooked by historians. Seaham once built ships, not large ships, but fine wooden sailing ships. Determined that this historic issue should be documented he has recently published a definitive history "Shipbuilding at Seaham Harbour". One of the finest buildings in Seaham is the Londonderry Literary Institute. Delving into the archives Fred realised how interesting and important this building was to the social life of the town and in the personal improvement and development of many men and women. This prompted further research and the publication of "A History of the Londonderry Literary Institute". Commanding an imposing site on the corner of North Terrace and Tempest Road stood the Seaham Infirmary. Building of this two storey gothic stone building began in 1844 to care for the needs of the townsfolk and to treat the increasing number of accidents to workers on the railways, docks, new industrial ventures and later the collieries in the district. The full history of this building is documented in "History of the Seaham Infirmary". Social history records the development of the working week from six long working days to the normally accepted five days with bank holidays and annual holiday entitlement. Sport and recreational activities for the working man and woman began to appear as the concept of the "week-end" and holiday time became part of the normal week. Fred's research into how people in Seaham used this new found recreational time is documented in "Sporting Pastimes at Seaham Harbour" Churches are to some people central to their spiritual existence. To some people visiting churches is a hobby. To others, churches are places they wander into whilst on holiday to look around, to sit and meditate in the quiet. Often the visitors book is signed with comments such as beautiful , lovely or fascinating but do people really know anything about the building they have looked around? "A History of the Churches at Seaham" brings together all previously known publications and literature of each church and together with new research it tells the story of all twenty-four, past and present, churches in Seaham. Many people in Seaham know of the existence of the "2nd Durham (Seaham) Artillery Volunteers" but their previously known history can be summarised in two pages. The full history of the 2nd Durham's was researched and written in a 180 page book by Fred Cooper. Fred’s family moved from Seaham Harbour to Seaham Colliery when he was just a boy and he spent much of his childhood living in the pit village and community of Seaham Colliery. The pit yard at the bottom of the street was his playground during the day and at night he fell asleep with the sounds of the busy colliery ringing in his ears. He knew about the tragic 1880 Seaham Colliery Disaster that killed 164 men and boys – everyone did – but during the research for this book he was totally unprepared to learn about the unbearable pain and heartache suffered by the pit community. His book “One Year of Hell” chronicles the grief and hardship of the widows and children of the victims that perished in the horrific explosion. It tells of the miners who refused to work whilst the bodies of their comrades were entombed in the Maudlin seam and who went on strike to uphold that long established principle followed by Durham coalminers. Some miners were sent to Durham jail for intimidation of strike-breakers in the colliery village and some; the “sacrificed men,” were denied re-employment by the coal owner and had no option but to emigrate and make a new life in America. It was exactly one year to the day after the explosion that the last body was recovered from the mine. Descendants of the miners killed in the explosion will learn for the first time of the terror and horrific injuries caused by the fiery blast that ripped through the Hutton and Maudlin seams. This is the story of “One Year of Hell” in the history of Seaham. Meanwhile planning and research for book two of "A Master Mariner's Tale" continues......
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