Second Shetland Truck System Report Part 347
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14,775. Did you never see it attempted?-I did one year, but that was before they understood exactly how it was to be done. They had made out our account of wages so that the amount of their account was taken off; but as soon as we came to the s.h.i.+pping Office, the s.h.i.+pping master told the agent that it was not to be done in that way. He altered our accounts of wages so that the money was all given to us, and then we went back to the agent's shop and paid him.
14,776. Was that in 1867 or 1868?-I don't remember which it was. I think it was in 1867.
14,777. Has any deduction of that sort been made since?-Never from me.
14,778. Do you always go straight down from the Custom House to the agent's office and settle your account with him?-I generally do so, if I think the agent is in his office; but if he is settling with some others besides, and has to wait with them at the Custom House, I may wait until the next day and then go along and settle it.
14,779. Do you generally go down from the Custom House in company with the agent or the clerk who has been paying you?- Generally I do. I think it is as well to pay my debt as long as I am able, rather than to spend the money, and perhaps not be able to pay afterwards.
14,780. Have you any difficulty in getting an engagement in a good s.h.i.+p?-I have never had any difficulty in getting an engagement from any of the agents I applied to, either from Hay & Co. or Mr Leask or Mr Tait. If I told them I wished to go in such a s.h.i.+p, they generally gave me a chance, if I was pleased with the wages; and if the wages were low and I would not go, I generally got an engagement in some other s.h.i.+p.
14,781. Did you ever get your outfit or supplies from some other agent than the one you engaged with?-No. I never did that, because I found I could have no advantage by it. I have found the system better here than ever I did in the south, because here, if I got my first month's advance, I could get a half-pay ticket along with it; but in the south when I s.h.i.+pped, I got a month's advance, but very seldom a half-pay ticket. In some places I have paid 2s.
in the pound, and sometimes 3s. in the pound, for cas.h.i.+ng my note; while here the agents don't charge any money for cas.h.i.+ng an advance note at all. In Glasgow I have paid 2s., and in the Sailors'
Home I have paid 1s. 6d. for that, but here I pay nothing to the agents; at least I have never done it.
14,782. When you take an advance note, do you generally cash it?-Yes, here I do.
14,783. Are you not content to take it out in advances of goods?- If I require it I take it; and if not, I do not. They never asked me to take it in that way. I have come into the office, and I said I wanted my advance note cashed. It is not supposed to be paid until after the s.h.i.+p leaves, but generally the practice with us has been to come down as soon as soon as we have finished signing and ask to get it cashed. Perhaps there is not enough money in the office at the time, and they will give us 1, and say that we will get the rest afterwards. However, I may be willing to take it until I can get it all, and I came back again and get it all.
14,784. When you come down to settle you account at the office, are you usually asked if you want any more goods?-When you come down to settle you account at the office, are you usually asked if you want any more goods?-I was never asked to go and settle my account and to take more goods; but after the money was laid down before me, and I went into the shop to settle any small account I had, they would say, 'Do you want any clothes, Peter?', and I would say 'No;' and there would be no more about it.
14,785. How do you do about the last payment of oil-money? Is it paid at the Custom House?-Generally it is. It has been paid to me for the last two years; but last year it was not, because I was away when it was due. They asked me if I wished to go to the Custom House with it, and I said I did not; that it was all the same to me if I got the money when I cleared the s.h.i.+p's book.
14,786. Have you sometimes had a large sum to get for a last payment of oil-money?-Yes. One year I got about 5 for it from Mr Leask.
14,787. Do you take payment of that when it becomes due, or is it not paid to you usually until you go to get engaged for the next year's voyage?-I have never waited so long for it as the next year's voyage.
14,788. When you get your second payment of oil-money, is it just put into your hand, even although you have been running an account?-Yes. If I have been running an account they lay down the money to me, and then they tell me what my account is, and pay it.
14,789. Do you continue to run an account with the agent after getting your first payment?-Sometimes I do, but very seldom.
14,790. Do you pay in cash at the time for any supplies you get after you have received your first payment?-Yes; whatever I get I pay for them at the time.
14,791. Do you deal in any particular place for them?-Yes; in R.
& C. Robertson's.
14,792. You don't deal during winter with the agent who had engaged you for the voyage?-When I have got an engagement through a particular agent, I don't think it is right that I should take the money from him and give it to another; and therefore I get what I want for the voyage from the agent that I getting money from.
14,793. But why do you prefer dealing with R. & C. Robertson in the winter time?-Because Mr. Robertson and I were boys at school together; and when I had a house of my own, he supplied me with goods when I wanted them. That was my only reason for preferring him to any one else.
14,794. But notwithstanding that, you prefer to go to the agent for the supplies you want, when you are on your voyage?-Yes. I have tried it both ways. I have tried taking money out, and buying what I wanted with it, but I did not find that it made any difference.
14,795. Is there not a sort of understanding among seamen who go upon Greenland voyages that they are to take their supplies from the agent who employs them?-I cannot say for anybody but myself. There may be such an understanding, but I cannot say.
They may perhaps have asked me if I wanted some small things, and they were there for me if I wanted them; but that was in addition to my first month's advance, and they ran their risk of being paid for them.
14,796. But is there not such an understanding among the men, that they are to get their supplies from the agent who employs them?-Yes, that is the general understanding among the men; but the agent does not bind them in any way to take them. They never did that to me; I don't know what they may have done to others.
14,797. Might the men not stand a chance of not having a good engagement next year if they took their custom elsewhere?-That is wherein the agent loses; [Page 373] at least I don't know if they lose, but they run a chance of losing when the men go off to another agent, because they have then to lie out of their money. If they have made advances to the amount of 3 or 4 to a boy who has only 15s. or 16s. a month, and who will only be out three months on the voyage, they cannot get their money from him then; and perhaps they may never get it, because the boy may go upon a south voyage, and then they lose sight of him. There have been cases of that kind which have come within my own knowledge. I was s.h.i.+pwrecked in 1869, and young lad who was along with me told me he owed 10s. to Mr. Tait. We came back to Shetland again, but he went south two months afterwards, and I don't know if Mr. Tait has been paid yet. The boy has not come back to Shetland again, at any rate.
14,798. But that was not the question I was asking you. What I asked was, if you did not take your custom to the merchant who employed you, would you stand a chance of not getting a good engagement next year?-I have never had any difficulty in that way. I have got an engagement through Mr. Leask, and taken 3, 2s. out of his shop for a voyage of six weeks and a few days; and I came back again next year, and got a s.h.i.+p the same as ever. I went in the same s.h.i.+p again.
14,799. Is there anything more you wish to say?-I went out for Mr. Tait last year. He has resigned the business now to his brother-in-law and another, but I have no doubt I shall go back to the shop and get s.h.i.+p from them; or I could get one from Messrs.
Hay the same as ever, if they had any s.h.i.+ps this year.
14,800. Have you ever paid a subscription to the s.h.i.+pwrecked Mariners' Fund?-Yes.
14,801. Have you ever got anything out of it?-Yes, twice; both from Mr. Leask and Mr. Tait.
14,802. Had you much to get?-The first time I had anything to get was after I had been paying in two years, and I got 30s. when I came back.
14,803. What did you lose that year?-I lost different things that I could hardly name.
14,804. Did you get the things replaced?-No.
14,805. Did you get cash for the 30s.?-Yes.
14,806. Was that cash put into your account?-No, I got the money paid down to me.
14,807. Was it paid down in the same way the next time?-Yes.
At that time I got it from Mr. Leask. In fact I got it from him before the money was actually payable, because I was going south.
14,808. When was that?-In 1864. I was wrecked in the 'Emma,'
and I wished to get south; but I had not money enough, and I went to Mr. Leask, and he advanced it to me.
14,809. How much does your outfit generally cost at the beginning of the year?-I could not exactly say. Some years it will be more, and some less. There are some of the men who have people that make things for them, but others have got n.o.body to do that, and therefore they have generally more to get from the agents.
14,810. Do you generally lay out 1 or 2 in that way before you start upon your voyage?-Yes; and sometimes 4 or 5.
14,811. Is that an unusual sum?-Yes.
14,812. Who insures the outfit?-The agent generally insures it for his own advantage, so that if the s.h.i.+p is lost he gets his money.
14,813. But they charge the insurance to you?-Yes, they charge the insurance to us if we tell him to insure it. For a good many years I told the agent to insure for me, but I have not lost any s.h.i.+p.
When I did lose a s.h.i.+p I have not been charged for it; at least if I was, it was not with my knowledge.
Lerwick, January 29, 1872, Daniel Inkster, examined.
14,814. Are you a seaman living in Lerwick?-Yes. I have been here for the last two years. Before then I lived in the North Isles, on the property which is now in Mr. Walker's hands.
14,815. Have you been at the sealing and whaling for a number of years?-Yes. I have been there for the last fifteen years, but not every year. I was at the ling fis.h.i.+ng for about seven years during that time, at Cullivoe, where Mr. Peter Sandison lives.
14,816. Why did you leave Yell?-I was one of Major Cameron's tenants, and I was put away by his factor, Mr. Walker. He offered us leases but of course we knew it was not in our power to take them.
14,817. Why was that?-Because our farms were so small; and when we had to take one-fifth of them for rye-gra.s.s, that made them a great deal less. Then the scattald was taken away from us; but we still had to pay our rent, for all that.
14,818. Were you offered a lease?-Yes; but the lease was all on his side, and there was nothing on our side at all.
Second Shetland Truck System Report Part 347
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Second Shetland Truck System Report Part 347 summary
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