Pusser's Folklore
The rum and its daily issue had its own litany around which colorful
terms and ritual evolved over the more than 300 years that rum was
issued in the navy. Some are noted below.
And the name Pusser's? Nothing more than a corruption of the name
purser after the officer on board ship who was responsible for the daily
issue of rum. Thus the name Pusser's Rum.
Black Tot Day - July 31st, 1970, when the last
"tot was drawn in the fleet around the globe; a rather touchy subject
with the old and bold!" Black Tot Day was officially the last day that
Pusser's Rum was issued on board ships in the Royal Navy. To read more
Black Tot Day poetry, Click Here.
Grog - This most traditional of all rum drinks is a
rich part of the early history of Pusser's Rum. There was an Admiral by
the name of Vernon who was the hero of the Battle of Porto Bello and
the Commander-in-Chief, West Indies Station, the prime area for Spanish
trade in the Caribbean. He had selected Porto Bello for attack because
he learned that a large assignment of gold and silver had been sent
there from Panama. The remarkable sequel, which followed the town’s
capture, was Vernon’s decision that all public money found was to be
divided fairly as prize money among those British crews which took part
in the engagement. This was a brave step, in defiance of the
regulations, but general delight at home in England over the victory
caused it to be overlooked. No act could have done more to win the
sailors' hearts that on most occasions received nothing. The men had
affectionately nicknamed Vernon Old Grog on account of the old grogram
cloak (a rough hewn fabric of mohair and silk) that he often wore when
the weather was bad.
In Vernon’s time, the men received one-half pint of rum a day which
they drank neat, that is without water. Thus there was a lot of
drunkenness and disobedience on board for which many of the men were
brutally disciplined. He was much concerned with what he called, “the
swinish vice of drunkenness”. He believed that if the rum was diluted
with water that its effects on the senses would be reduced – even though
the men were to receive the same amount of rum. Thus Admiral Vernon
issued his infamous Order to Captains No. 349 on August 21, 1740.
(Pictured at right) His order refers to the "unanimous opinion of
both Captains and Surgeons that the pernicious custom of the seaman
drinking their allowance of rum in drams, and often at once, is attended
with many fatal effects to their morals as well as their health ...
besides the ill consequences of stupifying [sic] their rational
qualities ... You are hereby required and directed ... that the
respective daily allowance ... be every day mixed with the proportion of
a quart of water to a half pint of rum, to be mixed in a scuttled butt
kept for that purpose, and to be done upon the deck, and in the presence
of the Lieutenant of the Watch who is to take particular care to see
that the men are not defrauded in having their full allowance of rum...
and let those that are good husbanders receive extra lime juice and
sugar that it be made more palatable to them."
The men were incensed that he should have ordered that their rum be
diluted, and named it contemptuously grog from the name they
had given him. Thus real grog is Pusser’s Rum with water, limejuice and
brown cane sugar. Unwittingly, Vernon had created the world's first
cocktail - grog!
( Click Here For Recipe.)
The Grog Tub - Sailors had a way of embellishing
their surroundings during their long stints at sea. The scuttled butt in
Vernon’s orders was a simple cask with a lid. Soon after he issued his
orders, the entire British Fleet adopted his procedures for watering the
rum. Eventually, the scuttled butt gave way to the Grog Tub, an oak
cask banded with polished brass or copper hoops and covered with a fancy
lid. On the side of the cask were the brass letters THE KING GOD BLESS
HIM, the daily toast at noon when the rum or grog were issued. The grog
tub was naturally the daily gathering place. While the men stood in line
for their grog, rumors were exchanged so that in time the word scuttlebutt
became synonymous with the word gossip.
Gulpers / Sippers / Sandy Bottoms - At sea, rum was
a kind of currency, just like money. To offer a shipmate a portion of
one's tot, no matter how small, was deemed to be the apotheosis of
generosity. The men purchased articles from one another using rum as the
currency; they played cards and other games of chance for it for it,
and it was used to repay favors. Rum had a value, and like money, it
came in different denominations defined by how much one might take or be
given from another's tot. A wet was just enough on the lips to cover
them thoroughly with rum. A sipper, a gentlemanly sip when offered; a
gulper, one, but only one, big swallow (usually given as a favor), and
Sandy Bottoms ... a rare privilege (in some cases, a settlement of a
debt) involving drinking the entire contents of another's tot. The
currency of the tot went like this:
3 ‘wets’ (a tiny, tiny sip) equalled 1 sip.
3 sips equalled one gulp.
3 gulps equalled one tot.
Jack / Jack Tar - Jack is a generic name for all
British sailors, derived from Jack Tar in the 18th and 19th centuries.
Sailors in those years used high-grade tar in their clothing and hair
for waterproofing. And the term, "Jack-of-all-trades," described a
sailor who could turn his hand to anything, is widely used today.
Jack Dusty and the Tanky - These two men, under the
"Pusser," were responsible for doling out the daily tot of rum - or
"grog" - to sailors on board ship. Jack Dusty comes from "Jack of the
Dust" who was once the Pusser's steward employed in the bread room
working with flour. In later years, the Jack Dusty was assigned the task
of meticulously maintaining daily book-keeping and inventory record's
for the ship's rum. The Tanky was the Jack Dusty's assistant, whose job
it was to tend the fresh water tanks and to mix the Pusser's Rum with
the correct amount of water for the grog issue. The selection of the
Tanky required discrimination since Tanky could develop into the biggest
"rum rat" of all if he was inclined that way and not someone to be
trusted.
Neat / Dram Rum served without water. Dram is an
older term for a "neat" rum ration, similar to a "neater."
Nelson's Blood - Another name for Pusser's Rum,
and still in use today by old salts - especially in Great Britain's
Royal Navy! At the Battle of Trafalgar on October 21st, 1805, Admiral
Horatio Lord Nelson engaged the combined fleets of Spain and France. His
flagship was HMS VICTORY. Although outnumbered, he sank or captured 17
of the enemy's ships to not a single loss of his own. This victory still
lives as one of the greatest in the annals of naval warfare.
Unfortunately, Nelson was mortally wounded and died knowing that victory
was his. Legend has it that to preserve his body for the long passage
back to England, that it was placed into a large cask of Pusser’s Rum.
Upon arrival, when the cask was opened, his pickled body was removed,
but the jack tars had drilled a small hole at the base of the cask
through which they drained most of the rum, thereby drinking of Nelson’s
Blood. Since then, the term Nelson’s Blood has become
synonymous with Pusser’s Rum, and is still in wide use today.
Pusser / Pusser's Rum Nothing more than a
corruption of the word Purser by the sailors after the officer
responsible for the daily issue of rum - thus the name Pusser's Rum.
Rum names - Rum derives its name from the Latin saccharum
meaning sugar, but it was also known in an early form as "Rumbustion" -
a seventeenth century word believed to have originated in the sugar
cane plantations. Other ancient names for rum include Rumbullion, Kill
Devil, Barbados Waters, Red-eye and "Nelson's Blood" (see above).
Rum Rat - Describes one in the older days of wooden
ships who had a good nose for where extra rum might be aboard a ship,
and who was seeking an extra tot or two.
Scuttled Butt / Rum Tub - In earlier years, the
scuttled butt was an open (scuttled) fresh-water cask (or butt) on ship
decks from which issues of the daily tot of grog were served. (As it
served as a gathering point to exchange daily rumors, the term also
turned into "scuttlebutt" meaning gossip.) The Grog Tub became the
officially designed container from which to issue the daily tot.
Splice the Main Brace! - The great sailing ships
were propelled only by the wind in their sails which were attached to
spars called yards. The lines to trim the sails were called braces and
ran from the ends of the yards to the deck. The main brace was the
largest and heaviest of all the rigging being up to 20" diameter on the
big ships. To splice it was one of the most difficult tasks on board
ship. Sometimes in the heat of battle, the braces were shot away making
the ship unmanageable. To those that "Spliced the Main Brace"!
went a double issue of rum. It became customary to always "Splice
the Main Brace" before battle, always after victory, and to reward a
ship's crew, or sometimes the entire fleet, with the order to "Splice
the Main Brace!" which meant a double issue of rum for a job well. The
ritual was always preceded by hoisting the flag signal to "Splice the
Main Brace!" In recent times, to say to a friend, "Let's 'Splice the
Main Brace'!" is akin to saying "Let 's have a drink!".
Sucking the Monkey - An unlawful prank and a
violation of Admiralty Regulations undertaken by "Jack" in older times
in the West Indies when he would fill empty coconuts ashore with rum and
then bring them back on board ship filled with the illegal rum.
Tot - On ships of Great Britain's Royal Navy from
the mid-1600s and ending in 1970 (on "Black Tot Day") a daily ration of
Pusser's Rum - called a tot - was served to the sailors. The daily issue
of the tot became a cherished ritual and one of the longest, unbroken
traditions in the history of seafaring. In 1740, per "Vernon's Orders,"
this rum ration was mixed with water to dilute it, to which sugar and
lime were added when available to make what became known as "grog".
Traditional Royal Navy Toasts - In the early days,
up until about 1900, the officers also received rum. In the Ward Room of
the Officers Quarters, the daily dinner ritual (at noon) was to toast
the reigning monarch, which was then followed by the toast of the day.
This ritual is still in effect. The toasts are:
Monday: Our ships at sea.
Tuesday: Our men.
Wednesday: Ourselves.
Thursday: A bloody war and quick promotion.
Friday: A willing soul and sea room.
Saturday: Sweethearts and wives, may they never meet.
Sunday: Absent friends and those at sea.
These are to be found on the back of the Pusser's ceramic hip flask.
Why Pusser’s Rum is 95.5 Proof. For the more than 300 years
that the rum was served in Great Britain’s Royal Navy, one could only
appreciate the strength of the spirit issued in those early days before
the hydrometer was invented. We know that it was something close to 95
proof even though it was impossible to establish the proof (or strength)
of naval rum accurately until 1816 when the Sykes’ hydrometer was
invented. For many years prior to this, the ship's purser (or 'pusser'
as he was called) was responsible for testing and issuing the rum at
proof by a rough rule-of-thumb method said to have been invented at the
Royal Arsenal. Pure rum was mixed with a little water to which was
added a few black gunpowder grains, so that when the sun heated the
mixture through a burning glass, the gunpowder just ignited but did no
more. Too weak a mixture failed to ignite, and the purser could be
punished for watering the rum. In 1816 when the Sykes’ hydrometer came
into use, the navy undertook a test to establish the proof at which the
rum should be issued. They mixed 100 samples with gunpowder in the old
way, and then accurately measured the proof of each sample using a
hydrometer. The average was 95.5, which became one of the specifications
of the rum that Pusser's is sold at today.
Charities: Royal Navy Sailor's Fund/'Tot Fund' -
The Royal Navy Sailor's Fund was established by the Admiralty when the
daily issue of Pusser's Rum was stopped in 1970. It was capitalized with
funds that would have been used to purchase a two year's supply of rum
for the navy. When Charles Tobias, the founder and CEO of Pusser's Rum,
acquired the rights to Pusser's from the Admiralty, he volunteered an
ongoing donation to the Tot Fund from the commercial sales of Pusser's
Rum. Aside from the fund's original bequest, this Pusser's Rum
contribution has become the Tot Fund's largest source of income, which
directly benefits the serving jack tars of the Royal Navy for whom the
Tot Fund was established. In addition to the Tot Fund, Pusser's has
supported and supports numerous other naval charities and maritime
connected institutions such as the Star & Garter Home in London, the
Royal Naval Museum at Portsmouth, the United States Naval Memorial
Foundation, the Royal Naval Association, the National Maritime Museum at
Greenwich, and numerous others.
Up Spirits! - The "Up Spirits" call was piped by the
bos'n every day at noon throughout the ship. It was the call to muster
for the daily issue of rum. Today, many of those familiar with this
call, sign their correspondence with the closing salutation "Up Spirits!
followed by their signature.
For more
information...
For more historical information on Pusser's Rum and the era of the
Tot, we suggest you read "Nelson's Blood - the Story of Naval Rum" by
James Pack. Humorous and witty yet scholarly and interesting, this
entertaining book explores the rich history and alliance between
Pusser's Rum and the British Navy. Click
here to find this book.

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"Splice the Main Brace!"

A memorial to Black Tot Day (a wreath around a rum cask) at the Royal
Navy's Submarine Base at Gosport, Hants, England.

An excerpt from Vernon's Orders

The "Tanky", or Grog Tub, on HMS GLORY, circa 1905.

A Jack with a Tot (offering you a Gulper!) over a Grog Tub

"Up Spirits!" The daily issue of grog on board HMS ENDYMION, circa 1905.
The ships were coal fired in those days, thus then men appear to be
"more dirtied" than they would be today. Note the "Jack Dusty" on the
right.

"Nelson's
Blood - the Story of Naval Rum" - by Captain James Pack
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