The Female Shipwright

Aug 02, 2010 14:36


Lacy, M., (2009), The Female Shipwright, National Maritime Museum.

I read Mary Lacy’s biography way back in January and I’ve been meaning to write a review of this unique woman ever since! Mary Lacy was a female shipwright, whose contemporary autobiography written in 1773 was republished in 2008 by the National Maritime Museum. Lacy is an astonishing woman by any standards. In her introduction to the autobiography Margaret Lincoln of the NMM notes:

“In an age when women did not serve in the armed forces or train to become qualified shipwrights or set themselves up as speculative house builders, Lacy did all three.”
And what is even more remarkable is that she did it all independently while passing as a man.

Lacy was born into a poor working class family in Kent in 1740. She grew up as a self confessed wayward child and was put into service by her parents in an attempt to curb her boisterous behaviour. At the age of nineteen, following an unhappy affair with a young man, she appropriated a suit of her father’s clothes, assumed the name William Chandler and ran away from home and service. On arriving penniless and hungry at Chatham Dockyard she accepted an offer to join the crew of the newly built HMS Sandwich, a 90 gun second rate ship of the line. Chandler was taken on as apprentice and servant to the ship's carpenter a volatile man who beats her and appropriates her wages. Lacy however doesn’t hesitate to stand up for herself, taking on one of the Admiral’s boys in a fight. She records that she came off with flying colours and that she and the boy “reconciled to each other as if we had been brothers”. Indeed Lacy’s only concern during this bout appears to have been that the boys wanted her to pull her shirt off before the fight!

Lacy served aboard the Sandwich and later the Royal Sovereign from 1759 - 1764 enduring the extraordinary hardships of life as a rating aboard a man-of war during the Seven Years War. During this time the Sandwich was stationed on blockade duty with Admiral Hawke's fleet at Brest. The ship was returning from blockade duty when the French fleet broke from Brest resulting in the Battle of Quiberon Bay. Lacy writes of the engagement but notes that "our ship had no share in the battle for we were at the time in Plymouth". Following the Quiberon engagement the Sandwich was ordered to the Bay of Biscay where Lacy notes:

"I must here observe, that a person who is a stranger to these great and boisterous seas, must think it impossible for a large ship to ride in them, but I slept many months on the ocean, where I have been tossed up and down at an amazing rate."

Lacy experienced even more boisterous seas during a terrible two day hurricane which hit the English Channel in 1760. The Sandwich survived with seven men downed and a sprung main and foremast. However their sister ship Ramillies foundered with the loss of 675 men and only 25 survivors.

Life at sea soon took its toll on Lacy and by the age of 21 the continual cold and wet brought on inflammatory rheumatism, a recurring condition that hospitalised Lacy several times and eventually put an end to her career as a shipwright.

In 1764 Lacy finally secured an apprenticeship as a shipwright at Chatham dockyard. Her trials were not over however. She appears to have been apprenticed to a series of irresponsible and feckless masters who once again appropriated her wages and refused to provide her with the bare necessities.

"It may with very great truth be said that Mr A's house entertained a very bad set of people. I had not been long with him before he turned me over to another man to pay his debts; and when I worked that out, was again turned over to a third: so that shifted from one to the another I had neither clothes to my back nor shoes or stockings to my feet; notwithstanding which, I was frequently (even in the dead of winter) obliged to go the dock-yard bare-footed."

Lacy's life was not without entertainment however. She had a veritable string of sweethearts during her seven year apprenticeship of whom she writes candidly and unashamedly. She even notes with some pride that:

"As I was frequently walking out with some of them, the men of the yard concluded that I was a very amorous spark when in the company of young women."

And indeed she was! It’s notable that Lacy writes several times of her apprehension that her bed fellows, i.e. the other boys she shares her rooms with, will discover her sex however this never appears to be a concern with her sweethearts. Which inevitably leads one to conclude that either these are very chaste courtships or that she and her sweethearts were happy with this discovery and didn’t give a monkey's!

Lacy finally achieved her certificate as shipwright after seven years apprenticeship in 1770 enabling her to earn an independent wage. In 1771 however Portsmouth dockyard was ravaged by a terrible fire, as a result of which the shipwrights had to work "double tides". The long hours and hard labour aggravated Lacy's rheumatism to the point that she could no longer work and she was forced to seek retirement as a Superannuated Shipwright.

It seems inconceivable that a woman could serve undetected on the close confines of a man of war for such a long period, however the Royal Navy was desperate for able bodied men at the time whether willing to serve or no, so few questions would have been asked. In a chapter on Mary Lacy, Suzanne Stark, author of Female Tars: Women aboard ship in the Age of Sail, also notes that living in such close confines ratings were accustomed to turn a blind eye on all kinds of goings on. When Lacy's sex is eventually revealed by a female "false friend" her male colleagues are unperturbed and continue to treat her as the shipwright they know. It is also notable that when rheumatism finally made it impossible for Lacy to continue working at the dockyard she applied to the Admiralty for a pension under her own name. The application was granted and Lacy was paid a substantial pension of £20 per annum.

Lacy’s biography concludes with her marriage to one “Mr Slade” however historians have cast doubt on this event. Stark suggests that the marriage is a fiction to make Lacy appear more respectable to contemporary readers. Lincoln has found no record of Lacy’s alleged marriage however she has traced:

“Mary Slade of King Street, Deptford, who we can take to have been Mary Lacy, moved into a new double fronted house in Deptford with Elizabeth Slade in 1777. This house was at the centre of a terrace which she built herself. The terrace survives in part at Nos 104 -108 and 116-118 Deptford High Street…It seems likely that she used her pension of £20 p.a. as security for a mortgage…She lived for another twenty years…after her death “Mary Slade” was described as a “spinster and shopkeeper. It seems probable that Lacy took Elizabeth Slade’s surname to pass as her sister.”

A remarkable end for a remarkable woman.

Lacy wrote and published her biography at the age of 33 and her account of her life is inspirational, candid and refreshing. While she shows contrition for her youthful waywardness and acknowledges that she would have spared herself a life of hardship had she listened to her parents, she is unapologetic about the life she lived and path she chose.

Further information

Stark, S. J., (1996), Female Tars: women aboard ship in the age of sail, Constable.
Podcast by Margaret Lincoln of the National Maritime Museum celebrating the republication of Lacy’s biography: The Story of Mary Lacy.
joyful_molly's Real "kick-ass" women: II. Mary Lacy (1740 - 1795), female shipwright

Cross posted to anything_aos.

naval, homosexuality, history, reviews, age of sail, gender

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