και τον Αλέξανδρο Μπιλλίνη: «Το άρθρο μου
στο «Εθνικό Κήρυκα» που αφορά την Ναυτική Σχολή της Ύδρας. Ένα εθνικό θησαυρό
που έχει προσφέρει τόσα πολλά στην Ελλάδα και στην ελληνική ναυτιλία. Από το
1749 λειτουργεί αυτό το σχολείο. Οι απόφοιτοι έπαιξαν σημαντικό ρολό στην
άνθηση του εμπορικού ναυτικού και στις ναυμαχίες των Ελλήνων σε κάθε πόλεμο.
Ένα μεγάλο ευχαριστώ στέλνω στους Υδραίους συμπατριώτες που βοήθησαν με το
άρθρο».
The
midpoint of the 1700s in the Aegean was a tumultuous time. The Greeks had been
under foreign rule for several hundred years, since the Fall of the Byzantine
Empire, and had lived as unwilling subjects of either the Ottoman or Venetian
Empires. These two conquerors battled over the fate of the Greek islands and
the Peloponnesus.
The
Venetians had been pushed out of the Aegean for good by the Ottomans just a few
decades before, in 1715, when they lost the Peloponnesus and several Aegean
islands they held, including a murky sovereignty over the Saronic Islands of
Aegina, Poros, Hydra, and Spetses. Venetian shipping declined in the area, and
the Greeks, heretofore more likely sailors than shipowners, rushed in to fill
the gap.
Aside
from skilled pilots, the Greeks were increasingly skilled at navigating the
rougher seas of international politics and economics. Both the Ottoman and
Venetian Empires were old and decrepit, and the green shoots of The
Enlightenment were finding their way back to the Greeks, often enough on Greek
ships, or via the many Greeks then established in Venice, or in the up and
coming Austrian Empire, particularly the port of Trieste.
Another
emerging power, the Russians, also were moving south against the Ottomans,
threatening the Turks' position in the Black Sea, for centuries a Turkish lake
but whose littoral inhabitants were all too often Greeks. Further west, the
British were beginning to create the first global naval empire.
Many
Greeks started to take advantage of this emerging situation, and none more than
the inhabitants of a tiny, largely arid rock a few kilometers off the
Peloponnesian coast. Hydra always had a small population of pastoralists or
fishermen, but it lacked the history of its neighbors in the Aegean
Archipelago. Lacking good harbors, its settlements were a couple of villages on
small escarpments, away from the water so as not to attract the many pirates
who tormented the Mediterranean of the time. The island's very isolation
attracted refugees from turmoil elsewhere, most particularly the Peloponnesian
mainland a short sail away, and as the population grew on an island where
arable land is practically non-existent, their only means of agency was the
sea.
The
Hydriots launched their first ship, according to most sources, in 1657, one locally
made and using plaited vines for lanyards, so the story goes. They were,
however, quick studies, and the local mix of politics and economics was
favorable for intrepid pilots. They rapidly increased the size and number of
their ships. In 1749, a local islander, Ioannis Sourmpas, established the
school at what is now the St. Basil's School in the district of Upper Kamini. A
plaque on the building reminds us that the Hydra Nautical Academy is the oldest
such school in the world.
This
was a period when many wealthy Greeks, merchants and shipowners, began
establishing educational institutions for their compatriots in the Ottoman
Empire. This spirit of volunteerism would remain at the Academy. Archives for
the early period are scarce if at all extant, according to both the historian
Antonios Lignos in his three volume History of Hydra and the current Director
of the Hydra Historical archives and museum, Ms. Dina Adamopoulou.
The
instructors were often foreigners, among them Italians and Portuguese, teaching
various navigation arts and foreign languages. As often happens when a Xeno
(foreigner) encounters Hydra, at least two of these instructors from Italy went
native, serving in the Greek War of Independence.
By
the time of the Greek War of Independence (1821-1829), the school had been
teaching several generations of Hydriots a variety of foreign languages and
higher arts of navigation and commerce. The Hydriots were not, Lignos notes,
merely hardy and daring seafarers, but rather increasingly enlightened and
skilled technocrats. This thirst for personal and national agency at sea, when
combined with the latest nautical skills and commercial education, proved a
winning combination, which was put at the service of the country during the War
of Independence.
During
this war, the Hydriots' wide network of commercial and political contacts,
earned over a century of increasingly sophisticated merchant shipping, went to
work for the good of the nation. In this sense, the Hydriots resembled American
merchant mariners of the 1770s, who had done well carrying the commerce of the
British Empire and then turned their naval skills over to their nascent country
in the war for national self-determination. However, the United States did not
have a merchant mariners' school until the Pennsylvania Nautical School was
founded—in 1891, over 140 years after the Hydra Academy.
While
Hydra's naval primacy receded after the War of Independence, the nautical
school remained, turning out hundreds of classes through war and peace,
training skilled mariners for Greece's growing merchant fleet, centered on key
Aegean islands such as Chios, Andros, Syros, Kasos, and Cephalonia. Graduates
of Hydra's nautical school were the “Gold Standard” for a fleet with global
horizons, and until 1930 the school operated as a private institution, “Hydra
Shipping Union,” supported by the global Greek shipping community which greatly
esteemed their graduates.
From
1930, the Nautical Academy moved from its original site to the current venue,
in the imposing grey-granite Tsamados Mansion, right above the quay which
welcomes thousands of tourists arriving by boat every year. That same year the
Greek State took over the operation of the academy, which runs it to this day.
The sense of volunteerism continued, for example, Evangelos Tsigkaris donated
his ship Agios Georgios for cadet training in the summer, a point of pride for
his grandson, Captain Evangelos Tsigkaris, also a proud academy graduate.
Hydra
Nautical School graduates distinguished themselves particularly in the carnage
that was the Battle of the Atlantic, during the Second World War, where many
met a watery grave. Nikos Pigadas, in his inimitable book Volunteers in the
Convoys of Death has numerous references to Hydra-trained captains and their
brave leadership in the shooting gallery of the North Atlantic. Far too many
did not return.
The
Greek merchant fleet, the world's ninth largest in 1939, suffered catastrophic
losses of ships and men in World War Two, yet Greece still had plenty of
trained seamen and officers, savvy shipowners, and a merchant/diaspora network
spread across the world. Here, the enlightened self-interest of the United
States played a decisive role; the US government sold off surplus cargo ships,
the Liberty Ships and Victory Ships, to allied countries and nationals and
extremely favorable terms. Greek shipowners by and large went “all in,” and
buoyed by global reconstruction and the growth of international trade, the
Greeks made fortunes, both large and small.
Every
year, the Hydra Nautical Academy turned out graduates eagerly snapped up by the
Greek Merchant fleet, which by 1970 had become the world's largest, a position
it still holds after 50 years. In 1976 the alumni of The Hydra Nautical Academy
established a Captains' Club for graduates, showing a devotion to their
institution and to their profession every bit as deep and “clubbish” as an Ivy
Leaguer in the United States. For further details see www.hydracaptainsclub.
They
have reason to be proud, they belong to a tradition nearing three hundred years
old, a part of the “secret formula” that made Hydra an international trading
center, and Greeks owners of the world's largest merchant fleet. Pride and
grit, combined with intellectual and technical smarts, are winning combinations
in any era. The story of Hydra, which we will—and should—celebrate in the
coming Bicentennial Year is for me as much a story of “how” they did it, as
“what” they did. A key part of how Hydra—and Greek Shipping—became success
stories can be found in the skills and traditions embodied in the nautical
academy.
Honor
is due.
Special
thanks to Captain Evangelos Tsigkaris for his invaluable knowledge of the
Nautical Academy.


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