The Skeppsgossa Corps School Ship Hms Najaden for full sails around 1934. The Skeppsgossekår's school ship HMS Najaden for full sails around 1934. Information that accompanied the photograph: "Najaden for full memory, Uddevalla -olsson 4 SKG 11. Genne 5 "46, 1935 - 1938Lennart Persson 5 SKG 40 1935 - 1935? Karl Ossian Persson 2 17/36 - 39gösta Svensson 2 SKG 36 1936 - 39ivan Tolgen (Jonosson) 4 SKG 32 1934 - 37Bertil Öberg 4: 77 years 34 MDKarl- Erik Granquist 4 SKG 41 - 34Gustaf Lindquist 48 SKG - 22 36 - 39gerhard Sundell 5 SKG 120 29-32 "full rig HMS Najaden was built i


The Skeppsgossa Corps School Ship Hms Najaden for full sails around 1934. The Skeppsgossekår's school ship HMS Najaden for full sails around 1934. Information that accompanied the photograph: "Najaden for full memory, Uddevalla -olsson 4 SKG 11. Genne 5 "46, 1935 - 1938Lennart Persson 5 SKG 40 1935 - 1935? Karl Ossian Persson 2 17/36 - 39gösta Svensson 2 SKG 36 1936 - 39ivan Tolgen (Jonosson) 4 SKG 32 1934 - 37Bertil Öberg 4: 77 years 34 MDKarl- Erik Granquist 4 SKG 41 - 34Gustaf Lindquist 48 SKG - 22 36 - 39gerhard Sundell 5 SKG 120 29-32 "full rig HMS Najaden was built in Karlskrona 1897 as an exercise vessel for the fleet. The ship was used for training of shipbuilds every summer until 1938. The crew consisted of consisting of the consisting of the consisting of the consisting of the CONTENDER CONTENDED. 20 commanders and 100 ship boys aged 15-17. The sailments went from the hometown of Karlskrona along the west and east coasts and the Danish islands, but also longer trips to England, Scotland, the Netherlands, Germany and the Baltic. The ship came to straw in 1946 city ​​and is renovated by the Friends of the Association Najaden and is used as a museum. Najaden is today one of the world's smallest full rigs. From 1899 the admission age was 15 years, until 1848 the admission age was as low as 8 years. Basic education was 3 years. As a 18-year-old, one would be man-written, left the ship's booth to become a sailor on the fleet's vessels, contract-bound for six years. Usually sons of War Sjömän became ship boys. The business had a partly philanthropic orientation when they also trained poor and orphans. Memories from the years as a ship's boy are often about a hard education with discipline, discipline and even penalism. Many boys escaped from the corps. In winter, studies and gymnastics were devoted and lived in barracks. At Marstrand, the ship boys lived in winter at Carlsten's fortress. In the summer they lived aboard the lodging ve


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