Everyone called him "Dusty",
but his real name was Odin. Now, that's a name to inspire shock and
awe, the name of God in Old Norse sagas. As bosun (boatswain), Dusty
reported to the first mate (chief officer), the lord of decks, cargo,
passengers, fuel and ballast.
A working foreman, the bosun ran the deck gang of able seamen (AB) and
"ordinaries", chipping, grinding, priming and painting. Ship
maintenance never stops. Dusty was Norwegian as were most of the deck
crew. So were the watch standers on the bridge. They came from
Brooklyn, then home to a large Norwegian American community, and home
port (Brooklyn Army Terminal) of the good ship Michelson.
Deck guys and off watch seamen from the bridge used to hang out in the
bosun's cabin speaking Norwegian. If you walked by on Sundays you could
hear what sounded like Norwegian prayer meetings in progress.
An entrepreneurial guy, Dusty/Odin ran the ship's store (a/k/a slop
chest). This was sort of duty free shop, located in a caged area inside
number four hold. Cigarettes, razor blades, clothing, candy all all
sorts of stuff was available when he opened for business. No booze. You
had to bring your own, while forbidden, it was tolerated. A
dollar would get you a carton of "sea stores" cigarettes in an air
tight foil wrapper. Smoking was really cheap back then!
Besides being proprietor of the ship's store, Dusty operated
the weekly bingo games held in the wardroom. Winners were awarded small
cash prizes and items from the store.
Dusty was clearly focused on
getting ahead. By 1974 he had gone from bosun to licensed deck officer,
as second mate on SS Mobil Arctic, an oil tanker. In ship speak he "came
up through the hawse pipe".
Odin, the Norse god original, was the inspiration for Wotan,
the main character in Wagner's operatic tetrology Der Ring
des Nibelungen. This, in turn, was recycled and rewritten by
a certain British author of a very popular three volume story about
giants, dwarfs and fire. Not to let a good story languish, yet another
British writer tapped all of this, writing several even more popular
books about a kid wizard. Old Odin never got any royalties.