Stoker Tom Pictor

Tom Pictor was the eldest of John and Emma Pictor’s seven children. He was baptised at St. Mark’s Church on September 1, 1878 and grew up in the Westcott Place/Rushey Platt area where his father worked variously as a timber yard labourer, a railway labourer and a railway watchman.

Tom joined the navy on January 1, 1895 for a period of 12 years. By 1901 22 year old Tom was working as a steamship stoker. His naval records state that his date of birth was July 26, 1876, although his baptismal records and the census returns suggest he might have been two years younger than this. A physical description states Tom was 5ft 5½ ins tall with dark hair and a dark complexion, hazel eyes and tattooed rings on his fingers. In 1907 he joined the Royal Fleet Reserve from which he was discharged on January 8, 1912, declared medically unfit. However, he re-joined the RFR twelve months later.

Tom served on a number of ships including Vivid II, the Stokers and Engine Room Artificers School based at Devonport. The last ship on which Tom served was HMS Teutonic. Built for the White Star Line in Belfast in 1887 and launched in 1889, the Teutonic was one of the first armed merchant cruisers. The Teutonic served as an ocean liner travelling between Liverpool and New York City but reverted back to military use during times of war. During the Boer War, HMS Teutonic served as a troop transport ship and in 1914 it served as a convoy escort and troop transport ship. It was while the ship was berthed in Liverpool dock in December 1915 that Tom’s fatal accident occurred. His records indicate that during 1915 Tom served three periods of detention for being absent without leave.

Drowning Coincidence

Under somewhat similar circumstances two men employed on Government vessels whilst lying in the Canada Dock fell into the water on different dates and died from the effects of immersion. Inquests were held today.

In the first case the deceased man was Tom Pictor (44), a stoker, whose mother resides at Swindon. On Saturday night Pictor, when stepping from the gangway on to the ship slipped backwards and fell into the water and was drowned.

The second case was that concerning Thomas Henry Evans, aged 47, greaser in the Royal Navy, who belonged to Southampton. On the night of the 18th he was going on board his ship when he fell into the Canada Dock. He was rescued, and taken to hospital, where he died on Saturday from pneumonia.

“Death from drowning” was the verdict in each case.

The Liverpool Echo, Monday, December 6, 1915.

Tom Pictor was buried on December 9, 1915 in grave plot B1812, a public grave, which he shares with two others. The burial registers indicate he was 37 years old.

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