The Souvenir Edition, 1st Sailing to Australia, published on board the USAT General Stuart Heintzelman on 26 November 1947, contains an article headed, 'From Bremerhaven to Indian Ocean'. Several diaries from the voyage exist still and have been translated, but the Souvenir article is the first overview of the voyage.
Even though published only two days before disembarkation in Australia, it contains no account of the stop in the port of Colombo. It seems, then, to have been written before 18 November — or else edited for reasons of space. It is reproduced in whole here, but with some typos and stencil blurs corrected.
'From Bremerhaven to Indian Ocean' heading, missing the initial 'F', from the copy of 'Souvenir Edition' in the Reinhold-Valter Põder collection, Estonian Archives in Australia |
At the beginning of the voyage one or two of the Australia-bound passengers
seemed inclined to ignore this truth, but a few hours in the
Bay of Biscay forcibly demonstrated how easily can be disturbed the pursuance
of a habit which is, so to say, a foundation of everyday life — the
appeasement of a healthy appetite. The ship, initially bearing much semblance
to a floating restaurant where each guest is primarily preoccupied
with good food, soon assumed the appearance of an infirmary. Suddenly,
everybody seemed to have lost interest in guessing the menu for the next
meal; delicacies (such) as fried bacon, unctuous potato salad, succulent apricots
and smooth icecream ceased to be the main subject of all conversation.
Instead - moans were to be heard emanating from double-tier bunks, ash-coloured visions staggered along passage-ways, awe-inspiring medicine
boxes, bottles and pills passed from hand to hand, accompanied by instructions
whispered in a faint, infirm voice: swallow the tablet..., take a
teaspoonful of this..., chew the lemon..., hold your breath and turn
your eyes toward the ceiling, lie down and adjust your breathing to the
rhythm of the waves, lie stomach downwards and try to reach the floor with
the toes of your right foot...
After this period of weakness, lasting about one and a half days,
resisted by only a few super-men, the sea has received its tithe and the
pride of the land-lubbers had suffered a fall. Passing the Rock of Gibraltar,
our ship had on board 843 subdued, reliable subjects of Neptune,
resigned to yield to any whim of the sea-god. His majesty appreciated
our sufferings and conversion, graciously permitting the warm sun to play
over the blue, quiet waters. Before long, the passengers of General
Heintzelman witnessed a second metamorphosis — the ship was seemingly
transformed into a rest home and a beach. Heavy overcoats, turned-up
collars, mufflers, caps pulled down over the eyes — all disappeared,
giving place to rolled up sleeves, shorts and colourful ladies‘ beach
suits.
We thrived under the caresses of the warm Mediterranean sun, the
same sun that lends splendour to Nice, Monaco, San Remo, Capri, Sicily, and
the fabulous coast of Africa. Consequently, among the swarms of idlers
basking in the sun you could observe studious explorers equipped with
opera glasses, pointing out notable places; behold the palms of Oran! the
southern coast of Sardinia! the Cape of Tunis! the rocks of Pantellaria!
Prompted by curiosity in such unheard and exotic names, the laymen gazed
with bewildered eyes at the blue, sparkling horizon, vainly endeavouring
to catch a glimpse of a shadow of these famous places.
Our further course continued under the sign of the sun, blue waves
and radiant weather, the passengers impatiently counting the miles remaining
to be covered to reach Port Said. Egypt...: pyramids, sphinxes,
Tutankhamuns, palms, camels, bedouins, tuaregs... Flowing robes and
burnouses on the torrid desert sands, fascinating Scheherazades in cool,
shady oases greet passing ships piloted by swarthy captains...Much of this
unfortunately escaped our sight, the ship anchoring late in the evening
in the harbour of cholera-infested Port Said.
A traders' boat has been hauled onto the deck, somewhere along the Suez Canal. The only woman in the photo is Galina Vasins (later Karciauskas). Can you identify any of the men? |
And now we are once more on the wide stretches of a blue sea. The days pass, one very much like any other, sunny and bright. Mealtimes with their inevitable queues, clatter of metal plates, and thronging in the mess hall, have become milestones in the course of each day. English lessons, choir rehearsals, basking in the sun and the mild wind fill the other parts of the day and in the evening we suddenly realise that one more day has passed. Even if sometimes time seems to stand still, we can always be assured that each day our reliable engines are bringing us 4OO miles nearer to our destination, where a new life and new responsibilities await us.
We shall arrive there refreshed, tanned, and imbued with
renewed self-reliance in our strength, impaired by the years of despair and misery in Germany.
We should like to take advantage of this opportunity to express
our feeling of indebtedness to "General Stuart Heintzelman" for its paramount
part in our new adventure.
This essay was signed off simply, -d-. Knowing his later career as founder of the Latvian-Australian newspaper, Austrālijas Latvietis, and book author, the co-editor of the Souvenir, Emils Delins, is the most likely suspect.
Sources:
'CulturalHeritageOnline: Island of Pantelleria', https://www.culturalheritageonline.com/location-2949_Isola-di-Pantelleria.php, accessed 2 October 2021.
Põder, RV, E Dēlinš, and R Maziliauskas, 1947. Souvenir Edition, 1st Sailing to Australia, published at sea aboard the USAT General Stuart Heintzelman, 26 November 1947.