1957 (Federal troops escorting the Little Rock Nine) |
The
Pawcatuck's homeport was in Norfolk, Virginia. Small town hick from
the northeast that I was, I had never had any contact with other than
white people before joining the Navy. My first contact with Blacks, Asians and Hispanics was at the Great Lakes Naval Training Center.
This was 1959, before the sit ins, civil rights marches and urban
riots of the 1960s. By this time the momentum toward civil rights for Blacks was well underway after the Brown vs. Board of Education
decision in 1954; Rosa Parks and the Montgomery Bus Boycott, 1955-56;
Little Rock, Arkansas school integration, 1957.
But, in 1959 there were still remnants
of the old Jim Crow Laws in the South where I saw, for the first
time, blatant racism depicted in “white” and “colored” signs
in rest rooms, waiting rooms, restaurants, etc. I was growing up in
more ways and more quickly than I had ever anticipated back in the
old all white home town.
Norfolk was affectionately, or, more accurately, sarcastically, called Nofuck, Virginia. The nickname
referred to the attitude of decent girls who shunned sailors as a
general rule and B-girls in the bar strips outside the bases who led
us on for overpriced drinks and disappeared when the chips were down.
There was another side to the sex scene in Nofuck that I was naïvely
unaware of when I first arrived and soon fell into a trap, that is,
trapped in a moving car with a huge merchant marine man trying to feel
me up while driving.
Lots of sailors, yours truly included,
kept “civvies”, civilian clothes off base in lockers at the YMCA
in town. We would leave the base in uniform as required, change to
civvies to go on liberty, and change back to go back to the base.
There was a bus stop just outside the Y. I had changed back into my
uniform, one day, and was waiting for a bus when this car pulls up
and a big macho looking and smiling man leans out the window and
offers me a ride to the base. So, I thought, hey, a ride, sure, why not, and jumped in.
We drove along exchanging the usual
what's your name and where're you from introductions. Suddenly, there
is this hand tentatively brushing my knee, which I moved to the side.
But, the hand returned more insistently on the knee and traveling up
my thigh. I pointedly removed the hand this time and I realized the
man was rather drunk. Meanwhile, we were still on the road to the
base and traveling too fast to do anything but tell this insistent
gentleman with his hand back on my thigh that I wasn't interested and
to let me out of the car. He refused and became more insistent both
verbally and with his hands, and I became more angry, unceremoniously
throwing his hand off me and demanding that he keep his goddamned hand to himself and stop and let me out of
this fucking car. No soap.
Now I realized that he had no
intention of taking me to the base and figured he would turn off the
main road at some point and drag me to a remote area and probably
beat and rape if not kill me—he was big enough. I was scared. My
heart was pounding like a jackhammer and the adrenalin was singing. I managed to
keep my wits and decided to watch for my chance and hope that he
would have to stop for a traffic light or at least slow down enough
for me to jump out of the car when he inevitably, I was sure, would
turn onto a road that didn't lead to the base.
Soon enough, that's exactly what
happened. He slowed down to turn without stopping but slow enough for
me to take what I calculated was my most likely one and only chance to get away. When I opened the
passenger door he tried to grab and stop me but I managed to jump
out losing my white hat in the car in the process. To my relief the
car kept on going. When I stopped rolling I checked for physical
damage. I wasn't seriously injured, just a few cuts and bruises
mostly on my hands and knees and tears in my clothes, but I was
considerably shaken. I sat down on the curb and pulled myself
together. When I had calmed down enough, I started thumbing a ride
back to the base. Before too long another sailor picked me up and
asked me why I was “out of uniform”.
I laughed and said: “I'm lucky
that's all I'm out of!”, and told him the story.
To be continued...
4 comments:
the cat with 9 lives…geez.
Out of uniform, because you didn't have your hat?
I should tell you about hitchhiking up and down Commonwealth Avenue as a naive college student and the guy who was told to massage himself because he had fallen off a ladder.
We are lucky to have lived through our youth, aren't we?
-R
Lucky or quick witted, I dunno which, but it sure as hell wasn't dull. And that makes all the difference!
Yeah, you should, but I don't get the connection between "massage himself" and "fallen off a ladder". My curiosity is aroused (no pun intended. ;-)
Oh, I forgot. Any missing item in a military uniform is considered "out of uniform"--like being hatless.
the connection is stupidity....or naivete at the time. "Dr. told me to massage it until I got to the office"...oh dear.
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