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sad old git | 02:38 Thu 14th Jan 2010 | Phrases & Sayings
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Hi I am reading an excellent novel about life on board destroyers protecting merchant convoys to Russia during the second world war.One paragraph remarks about conditions in the wardroom in bad weather ; " the fiddles are put on the dining table, the tablecloth is dampened to stop crockery sliding about and the "charlie noble is not lit".I think I know about the fiddles and the damp cloth but the "charlie noble" has me stuck, can anyone enlighten me? I am ex MN myself so you RN guys don't be too hard on me.
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It's the galley (the kitchen)
more spefic I think it has something to do with the smoke stack. "Charlie Noble. The galley (ship's kitchen) smoke stack on early ships"
So basically what he is referring to is the fact the galley fire was not lit. read this for a short factual accont of life on a corvette in bad weather http://www.bbc.co.uk/...ies/66/a1115966.shtml
Rick Jolly's "Jackspeak" says that a Charley Noble was "An H-shaped galley stove-pipe seen in very much older warships, usually bound in brass and kept highly polished". He gives no derivation, though, so I'll keep looking.
Hey, sad old git, it seems that it's your MN expression, not the RN's. Another source tells me that it's named after a Merchant Navy captain who always saw that the stove pipe was kept highly polished.

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