This would apply to our old Navy Sailors as the present active duty
types
and more recent veterans
and military retirees would have no clue what
you are referring to.
The Peacoat the writer is referring to went by
the wayside years ago.
Boatsailors and Peacoats
by Bob 'Dex'
Armstrong
You remember them...
Those ton and a half monsters that took the
annual production of
thirty-five sheep to make. Those thick black
rascals with black
plastic buttons the size of poker chips. The
issue coats that drove
shore duty chief petty officers stark raving
nuts if they caught you
with the collar turned up or your gahdam
hands in your pockets.
"Hey, you rubber sock,
get those gahdam hands outta them damn
pockets! Didn't they
issue you black leather gloves?"
So, you took your hands
out of your pockets and risked digital
frostbite rather than
face whatever the Navy had in store for
violators of the 'No
Gahdam Hands In Peacoat Pockets' policy.
There's probably a
special barracks in Hell full of old E-3s caught
hitchiking in sub-zero
weather with hands in peacoat pockets.
As for those leather
gloves, one glove always went missing.
"Son, where in th' hell
are the gloves we issued you?"
We??? I don't remember
this nasty, ugly bastard being at Great
Lakes when the 'jocks
and socks' petty officers were throwing my
initial issue seabag at
me and yelling, "Move it!!"
As for the gloves, once
you inadvertantly leave one glove on a
whorehouse night table
or on the seat of a Grayhound bus, the
remaining glove is only
useful if a tank rolls over the hand that
fit the lost glove.
In the days long ago, a
navy spec. peacoat weighed about the same
as a flat car load of
cinder blocks. When it rained, it absorbed
water until your spine
warped, your shins cracked and your ankles
split. Five minutes
standing in the rain waiting on a bus and you
felt like you were
piggy-backing the statue of liberty.
When a peacoat got wet,
it smelled a lot like sheep dip. It had
that wet wool smell ,
times three. It weighed three and a half tons
and smelled like 'Mary
had a little lamb's' gym shorts.
You know how damn heavy
a late '50s peacoat was? Well, they had
little metal chains sewn
in the back of the collar to hang them up
by. Like diluted navy
coffee, sexual sensitivity instruction,
comfortable
air-conditioned topside security bungalows, patent
leather plastic-looking
shoes and wearing raghats configured to
look like bidet bowls,
the peacoat spec. has been watered down to
the point you could hang
them up with dental floss. In the old
days, peacoat buttons
and grocery cart wheels were interchangeable
parts. The gear issued
by the U.S. Navy was tough as hell,
bluejacket-tested
clothing with the durability of rino hide and
construction equipment
tires.
Peacoats came with wide,
heavy collars. In a cold, hard wind, you
could turn that wide
collar up to cover your neck and it was like
poking your head in a
tank turret.
The things were warm,
but I never t hought they were long enough.
Standing out in the wind
in those 'big-legged britches' (bell
bottoms), the wind
whistled up your cuffs and took away body warmth
like a thief. But, they
were perfect to pull over you for a blanket
when sleeping on a bus
or a bus terminal bench.
Every sailor remembers
stretching out on one of those oak bus
station pews with his
raghat over his face, his head up against his
AWOL bag and covered
with his peacoat. There was always some 'SP'
who had not fully
evolved from apehood, who poked you with his
billy bat and said,
"Hey, YOU!! Get up!
Waddya think yer doin? You wanna sleep, get a
gahdam room!"
Peacoats were lined with
quilted satin or rayon. I never realized
it at the time, but
sleeping on bus seats and station benches would
be the closest I would
ever get to sleeping on satin sheets.
Early in my naval
career, a career-hardened (lifer) first class
gunner's mate told me to
put my ID and liberty card in the inside
pocket o f my peacoat.
"Put the sonuvabitches
in that gahdam inside pocket and pin the
damn thing closed with a
diaper pin. Then, take your heavy folding
money and put it in your
sock. If you do that, learn to never take
your socks off in a
cathouse. Them damn dockside pickpockets pat
'cha down for a lumpy
wallet and they can relieve you of said
wallet so fast you'll
never know you've been snookered.
Only a dumbass idiot
will clam-fold his wallet and tuck it in his
thirteen button
bellbottoms. Every kid above the age of six in
Italy knows how to lift
a wallet an idiot pokes in his pants. Those
little bastards leard to
pick sailor's pockets in kindergarten.
Rolling bluejackets is
the national sport in Italy."
In Washington DC , they
have a wonderful marble and granite plaza
honoring the United
States Navy. Every man or woman who served this
nation in a naval
uniform, owes it to himself or herself to visit
this memorial and take
their families.
It honors all naval
service and any red-blooded American bluejacket
or officer will feel the
gentle warmth of pride his or her service
is honored within this
truly magical place.
The focal point of this
memorial is a bronze statue of a lone
American sailor. No crow
on his sleeve tells you that he is
non-rated. And, there
are further indications that suggest maybe,
once upon a time, the
sculpturer himself may have once been an E-3
raghat.
The lad has his collar
turned up and his hands in his pockets.
I'm sure the Goddess of
the Main Induction nearly wets her panties
laughing at the old,
crusty chiefs standing there with veins
popping out on their
old, wrinkled necks, muttering,
"Look at that idiot
sonuvabitch standing there with his collar up
and his gahdam hands in
his pockets. In my day, I would have ripped
that jerk a new one!"
Ah, the satisfied glow
of E-3 revenge.
Peacoats... One of God's
better inventions.
For more of this good
stuff from "Dex," check out his Web site
"The After Battery"
at
http://www.olgoat.com/substuff/abr.htm For you old salts, and even
the newer ones, its worth the read.
But the newer ones might
have difficulty translating his old
Navy encrusted lingo.
----------------------------------------------------------
YNCM(SS) Charlie "Tom"
L. Tompkins, USN(ret) of NCPOA contributed.
-------------------------------------------------
Contributed,
YNCS Don Harribine,
USN(ret)

