The Mission: a pub in Hull with a surprising past

Catherine Phipps reports from Hull:

It’s five o’clock on a Friday afternoon and I’m heading to the pub… but there’s something special about this one.

I’ve been in the archives at the Hull History Centre all week, looking at the Missions to Seamen archives. Where better to go at the end of my first week than The Mission, a nearby pub that has been converted from the original Hull Mission to Seamen?

A blue plaque on the wall outside tells all the patrons coming in that Charles H. Wilson paid for the Seamen’s Mission to be built here in 1866. Wilson was a liberal MP who made his fortune from shipping who wanted to help the local community. The mission was here to help any seafarers in particular need, although they didn’t sleep here. Seafarers were sent to spend the night in the Sailor’s Home round the corner on Alfred Gelder street, but came to the Seamen’s Mission for somewhere warm and safe, with a place to worship and a recreation room to entertain themselves. This was right next to the Board of Trade offices and central to the docks, so was often full of sailors coming through and needing help.

The chapel was added on in 1927, and you can still see the beautiful stained glass window. Right underneath this stained glass, today there are four large pool tables, just as there were a hundred years ago. A report that I read from 1934 explained that this used to be “a very compact institute just opposite The Board of Trade offices, with a small but substantially built and beautiful church connected, and entered through the institute,” with “two billiard tables, canteen with light refreshments; offices and lavatories.”[1]

The glass is the same, the pool is the same, and there’s still warm food and bathrooms on offer. So what has changed since this was the Hull Mission to Seamen?

Most importantly, the presence of alcohol. The Seamen’s Missions were strict about temperance, and were firmly anti-alcohol. I opt for an alcohol-free beer in homage. Women were also only allowed if they were direct family members or were one of the female volunteers for the Missions. As a young, unmarried woman, I would not have been welcome in here, particularly because I’m wearing a short skirt that would have cast doubts on my reputation.

Many of the customers here are familiar with the Seamen’s Mission. I spoke to the barmaid at The Mission, Amber. According to her:

“lots of the people who come in like to talk about the history of the pub. They talk about when it used to be a church, and they talk about their memories of the shipping round here.”

She’s right: chatting to a few regulars at the next table, everyone seems to know the pub’s history. John, at the next table, sounds quite proud. He tells me why the road next door is called Dagger Lane:

“if you walked down here in the 1890s, you’d get hit on the head, and sent out on the ships. You’d wake up in South Africa.”

Crimping was a real fear for seamen, and one of the main reasons that the missions were set up. In public houses, men could be plied with alcohol that was often drugged and given huge bills, or “shanghaied” by being put on ships to far away ports against their will.[2] The twice-yearly publication from the Missions to Seamen, The Word on the Water, often warned about how common this practice was in the 19th century.

The Seamen’s Mission hoped to protect seamen from these dangers, so it is wonderful to see that this is still remembered 150 years later.

And if you want to look at the unchanged pool tables, stained glass, and lively conversation so you can imagine what the Seamen’s Mission was like, then The Mission is waiting for you on Dagger Lane.

[1] UDMS/11/1/191, “Report on Seamen’s Welfare Institutions in Hull: appendix to report”, 30th March 1934.

[2] G.J. Milne, People, Place and Power on the Nineteenth-Century Waterfront (Palgrave Macmillan, 2016) 104.

Mariner’s Exhibition sets sail in Hull History Centre.

On May 12th, project research administrator Abi Freeman and I made the journey from Bristol to Hull to install the Mariners Exhibition in its second location.  

The exhibition is the final flagship event for the Mariners project. It will be displayed in three ports at the heart of our research: Bristol, Hull and Liverpool. 

After our successful launch event in the Mount Without, Bristol on 7th May, we were excited to set up in our new location, Hull History Centre. Hull History Centre, located in the aptly named ‘Worship Street’, is an official project partner. The centre is a partnership between Hull City Council and the University of Hull, and amongst its impressive collections is a range of material relating to maritime history as well as religious organisations including the Mission to Seafarers. Hull History Centre archivist Claire Weatherall has been an invaluable part of the Mariners Project Advisory Board, and integral to organising this phase of the exhibition. 

The exhibition is displayed in the generous and well-lit space of the centre’s glass arcade. Hull was experiencing unusually warm weather, and the arcade felt like a green house, with temperatures reading mid-30s as Abi and I unpacked and set up the exhibition panels. While the installation wasn’t easy work, it was all worth it when we saw the exhibition in the new space. The arcade is the first room visitors enter when they arrive at Hull History Centre, and we know that the exhibition will witness lots of footfall, providing opportunity for a range of guests to see it, in a large and accessible space.  

Unpacking boxes and setting up exhibition at Hull History Centre

The next day the Hull launch event took place.  I delivered a talk providing an overview of the exhibition, describing the research and the work of our three commissioned artists. 

In addition to work by three commissioned artists and panels on themes including gender and family, religion, race and ethnicity and the nature of seafaring, this iteration of the exhibition also contains a panel on Hull, providing an overview of the development of the port. It featured a fascinating biography of ‘The Seafaring Surgeon: Dr Hirjee Nowroji Anklesaria’ who worked to save men on Hull’s Gamecock fishing fleet when it was fired on by Russian warships in 1904.   This was kindly provided by Claire from her knowledge of local archival sources. Claire also provided a range of archival items, including lantern slides, which were displayed in an exhibition case relating to ‘Uncovering seafarers’ lives in the photographs of the Mission to Seafarers’.  

 

Lucy Wray delivering talk at Mariners Exhibition Launch at Hull History Centre

The exhibition will be in in Hull until the 26th of June, before its return to Bristol, where it will be displayed in St Stephen’s Church in July.  From June to July, a smaller version of the exhibition will also be displayed in Liverpool Record Office. 

I would like to thank Abi Freeman for all her hard work in the installation in Bristol and Hull, and Claire Weatherall, who has been so generous with her time and expertise.  

 

Mariners Exhibition on display at Hull History Centre
An early visitor viewing Mariners Exhibition on display at Hull History Centre