Art •
Torsten Billman, a Swedish graphic artist, drawer, and mural painter - himself
coal trimmer and stoker on various
merchant ships from 1926 to 1932 - has portrayed the hard work in
coal bunkers and stokeholes. on
Heritage Day Events •
Top Gear's
Jeremy Clarkson acted as stoker on the steam locomotive
No. 60163 Tornado while performing a
Race to the North against
Richard Hammond and
James May. It was an homage to the
historical Race to the North, a rivalry between British steam engines, trains and men of different companies between London and Edinburgh.
Film • The lead character Bill Roberts (
George Bancroft) in
Josef von Sternberg's motion picture
The Docks of New York (1928) is a stoker. • The lead character in
Aleksei Balabanov's 2010 film
The Stoker, Ivan Matveyevich Skryabin, is a stoker.
Literature • The first chapter of
Franz Kafka's novel
Amerika (published posthumously in 1927) is entitled "The Stoker". • Mat Burke, a principal role in
Eugene O'Neill's play
Anna Christie (1921) is a ship's stoker. • Yank, the protagonist of
Eugene O'Neill's play
The Hairy Ape (1922), is a stoker on a ship.
Music • "
Casey Jones", a song by the American rock band the
Grateful Dead, is about a railroad engineer who is on the verge of a train wreck due to his train going too fast, a sleeping switch man, and another train being on the same track and headed for him. The last two lines of the song reference the train's fireman: "Come round the bend, you know it's the end. The fireman screams and the engine just gleams." • "Stoker Dreams" and "Stoker Love" are songs by the Russian
indie group Chimera. • The RMS
Mauretania (1906) is remembered in a song, "The fireman's lament" or "Firing the Mauretania", collected by Redd Sullivan. The song starts "In 19 hundred and 24, I ... got a job on the Mauretania"; but then goes on to say "shovelling coal from morn till night" (not possible in 1924 as she was oil-fired by then). The number of "fires" is said to be 64. Hughie Jones also recorded the song but the last verse of Hughie's version calls upon "all you trimmers" whereas Redd Sullivan's version calls upon "stokers". ==Notes==