Black Newsman Went to Sea on the Admiral Line

Thomas Fleming standing on sidewalk, wearing a three piece suit and smiling.
Thomas C. Fleming, 22 years old, in 1929.

Photo courtesy of Max Millard

By Stephen Canright, Park Curator, Maritime History

In the summer of 1926, Thomas C. Fleming, later the co-founder and longtime editor of San Francisco’s leading Black newspaper, the Sun-Reporter, worked for a season as a bellhop aboard the steamer Emma Alexander.

The Emma Alexander was a coastal passenger liner, running between Victoria, British Columbia in Canada and San Diego for the Admiral Line. Admiral Line was the last big operator in the coastal passenger trade, a trade that began in the Gold Rush era and carried on until the mid-1930s.

While the deck and engine crews of the Admiral Line ships were entirely white, the stewards department was all black. In this way, work on coastal steamers mirrored some of the few opportunities for African Americans on passenger railroads. Work as a cook, waiter, porter or bellhop offered the only shipboard employment available to African Americans on the West Coast until the Civil Rights revolution of the 1960s and 1970s. Mr. Fleming’s recollections, now available online, offer an intriguing glimpse of this little-remembered piece of our maritime history.

Thomas Fleming was eighteen years old and freshly graduated from Chico High School in 1926, when he arrived in the Bay Area to look for work. After being turned down by the Southern Pacific Railroad, he heard that the Admiral Line was hiring and was immediately shipped aboard the Emma Alexander, leaving that afternoon. The first trip was to Victoria, with stops at Seattle and Tacoma on the return leg. The passage to Victoria took 27 hours and the ship laid over at Seattle for a day on the trip south.

Fleming worked for several months as a bellhop, from six in the morning until late into the evening, for $45 per month. There was no union representation on these ships. Only when the ship was in port did the men get a day off. Most of the work was seeing to the needs of the passengers. With tips, Fleming could make an extra $25 if he moved quickly. He could also make a bit on the side supplying the occasional bottle of Canadian whiskey to passengers on this prohibition-bound American flagged vessel. He reports that the passengers treated the Black stewards and the white crew about equally. All were seen as servants.

After a dispute with the Bell Captain on the Emma Alexander, Fleming made a trip on the smaller Admiral Dewey as a room steward. He was laid off as the summer travel season came to a close. Returning to Oakland, he got a job as a cook with the Southern Pacific Railroad and stayed with that for five years.

Although Thomas Fleming worked only briefly for the Admiral Line, his recollections add to our understanding of life and work aboard these ships.

 
The S. S. Emma Alexander,a 424-foot passenger ship in the Admiral Line fleet.
The S. S. Emma Alexander, a 424-foot passenger ship in the Admiral Line fleet.

NPS J7.22,532

Last updated: October 18, 2024

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