11) TRIBUTE TO CAPTAIN
HUGH MULZAC
(The following article
is from the August 1-31, 2009, issue of People's Voice, Canada's
leading communist
newspaper. Articles can be reprinted free if the source is credited.
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By Norman Faria
Many working seamen from the
Caribbean area signed on ships and came to the US when their vessels
docked there. The majority who settled undoubtedly contributed along
with other immigrants in building up that nation. One was Captain Hugh
Mulzac, a merchant marine captain who was born in 1886 in Union Island,
part of St. Vincent and the Grenadines, in the Eastern Caribbean. He
emigrated to Baltimore in 1918.
Mulzac was
an important person in the early US civil rights struggles of "people
of colour" which included Hispanics, Asiatics and native Indian
("Amerindian") peoples. He was the first African-American to obtain a
Master's License, This was the rank of Captain which qualified him to
skipper an ocean-going cargo ship.
More
importantly, he was a leader in obtaining better wages and working
conditions for seamen of all races. Captain Mulzac, who today has a
Vincentian Coast Guard vessel named after him, assisted immeasurably in
opening the doors for a more equitable and just working environment in
the merchant marine service. This was in the early 1940s when the only
jobs at sea for ethnic minorities were cooks and stewards ‑ in contrast
with today when many large US navy and "cargo boats", as islanders
refer to merchant marine vessels, are captained by non‑white officers
and also women.
Captain
Mulzac's early days in the US were frustrating. The US cargo boat (and
liner) was much larger than today. He got a job as a Mate (second in
command) on the aging tramp steamer Yarmouth, belonging to Marcus
Garvey's all-black owned and crewed Black Star Line. That line went on
the rocks in 1922 because of institutional opposition to the firm's
owners, Garvey's United African Improvement Association. Captain Mulzac
went back to cook and steward jobs whenever they came along. It was
hard as he had a wife and four children to support.
At that
time, the seamen had a fairly democratic system where they were hired
through the union halls. The late Guyanese President Dr. Cheddi Jagan
witnessed this when he was studying in the US in the 1940s and praised
it. Captain Mulzac got involved with the National Maritime Union (NMU)
through a Communist Party USA leader in Baltimore , Al Lannon.
There was a
democratic dimension to this trade union which was formed in 1937 in
the hectic labour upsurges of the period by Joseph Curran (1906‑1981)
an early progressive who later took reactionary positions.
Part of this
dimension was its multi‑racial policies. Both black and white seafarers
were apparently treated equally by the labour body. Such a remarkable
progressive outlook for the conjuncture (some of the seamen's and
waterfront workers' unions were led by corrupt Mafia types even before
the 1950s of Marlon Brando's movie On the Waterfront) did not extend to
the hiring practices of most shipping companies. The NMU's
Vice‑President was a black Jamaican seaman named Ferdinand Smith who,
like Captain Mulzac who was probably a member, was sympathetic to the
CP. The party was then very influential, being active in other civil
rights campaigns such as demanding release of nine black young men (The
Scotsboro Boys) accused in 1931 of raping two white women.
It was easy
for Mulzac to support multi-racialism. Not because his grandfather, who
once cultivated cotton on Union island, was white. A sensitive man,
Captain Mulzac undoubtedly observed the injustices and discriminatory
practices against people of colour in the US at the time. There was a
shameful racist incident when the young (aged 21) Mulzac tried to
attend church when his ship called at Wilmington, North Carolina. He
was refused entry because of his colour. His involvement, which he
always defended as his democratic right in the great traditions of the
US, with the "white" CP and the union channeled this hatred of racial
discrimination along a constructive trajectory, working for the unity
of all the races.
While the
work of Captain Mulzac, Smith and other outstanding individuals are
noted, there were, in fairness, other fronts on the civil rights
campaign. The NMU for example supported the meeting between President
Roosevelt and black railway porters union leader A. Philip Randolph,
who demanded a Fair Employment Practices legislation which led to
defence industries (such as the ship building firms) hiring more people
of colour.
In October
1942, as the USA got more involved in the Allied effort to defeat
Hitler's facist regime, Captain Mulzac was given command of the
freighter Booker T. Washington. At first, in keeping with the times
where crew on both naval and cargo boats were segregated, the
authorities wanted to assign only a black crew to the ship. Captain
Mulzac refused to sail with what he called a "Jim Crow " arrangement.
As he wrote in his autobigraphy, A Star to Steer By: "I wanted the most
experienced crew the NMU could supply". For Mulzac, this meant a mixed
race crew.
The Booker
T., carrying vital war supplies such as tanks, aircraft and ammunition
to the European front, made 22 successful round trips across the North
Atlantic. Partly by skill and partly by luck, those on board managed to
avoid being torpedoed by the German submarines. The subs sunk hundreds
of other cargo boats with the loss of many equally courageous and hard
working sailors as those in the navy. The efficient operation of the
ship was a model for others to emulate.
In 1947,
ater the war ended, the ship's owners laid up the vessel. Captain
Mulzac was out of work. Then 61, he tried his hand at painting maritime
scenes and also started a wall painting business. At this time, the
anti‑democratic and anti‑left current in US politics known as
McCarthyism unjustly blacklisted Mulzac along with many others for
their involvement in progressive and democratic causes.
For example,
Mulzac ran as a candidate for President of the New York City borough of
Queens under the American Labor Party ticket. He lost but received a
relatively high 15,500 votes. The New York based party was much like
the social democratic Labour Party in the UK and later the Caribbean
islands, though the left like the CP urged people to support it.
For this and
other perceived indiscretions, he was blacklisted and his Master's
license revoked. He could not get a job when the Korean War broke out,
because he was deemed a "security risk". He fought back and in 1960 a
federal judge restored his license along with others. He was then 74,
but was able to find work as a night mate. He died in New York in 1971.
I had read
Mulzac's fascinating book during the 1980s, kindly given to me by
Vincentian Renwick Rose (now Coordinator of the Windward Islands
Farmers Association) and I in turn gave it away to the office of the
National Union of Seamen (NUS) in Barbados. While I was in New York
last September I tried to get onto any of Mulzac's relatives for an
interview, but time ran away from me and I couldn't reach them.
We must
remember the example of Vincentian‑born Captain Hugh Mulzac. Not only
becuase of his sterling pioneer work in the US civil rights struggles,
but to remind us that immigrants to all countries are good and
beneficial additions especially in the area of integrating among the
receiving people and working with them for a better all round society.
(A former
seaman on the Geest Line, Norman Faria is Guyana's Honorary Consul in
Barbados. Responses to nfaria@caribsurf.com)