Tramp steamers and freighters are associated with off-the-beaten track, romanticized adventure and intrigue in
pulp stories, children's books, novels, films, and other fictional works. When characters such as spies or resistance fighters are on the run, or lovers are fleeing from an affair gone wrong, tramp steamers are used to slip in or out of a country. The crew of a tramp steamer is often a
picaresque mix of societal outcasts and rogues with colourful (or even illegal-activity-filled) pasts who cannot or who do not want to work elsewhere. Steamers are often depicted as operating in a grey area of legality, both in terms of their lax observance of steamship safety regulations and their plying of
black market trades and smuggling of goods and passengers. Fiction writers depicted tramp steamers as a way that penniless adventurers can explore exotic ports by being taken on as a crew member.
Examples • In the film
The Lost Continent (1968), a dilapidated tramp steamer
Corita is smuggling a dangerous explosive cargo. The Captain ignores a customs launch wanting to inspect his ship as he is smuggling
white phosphorus. Some passengers are trying to escape their past indiscretions or eluding capture (one with stolen
bearer bonds). • In the film
The Long Voyage Home (1940), a British tramp steamer SS
Glencairn goes from the West Indies to Baltimore and then finally to England. The crew is a motley, fun-loving, hard-drinking lot who are smuggling rum. The crew thinks one aloof crew member might be a
German spy because he is so secretive and he has a locked box under his bed. • In the film
The African Queen (1951), a tramp steamer, the
African Queen, is converted into a
torpedo boat to sink a German gunboat. • In the 1937 musical comedy film
Something to Sing About, hoofer Terry Rooney (
James Cagney) takes his bride, singer Rita Wyatt (
Evelyn Daw) on a tramp steamer for their honeymoon. They are the only passengers. Rooney is turning his back on Hollywood, disgusted by his experience working on one picture. The film is a hit, but no one can find him. When the ship returns at last to San Francisco, he discovers that he is Hollywood's newest star. There is a long scene aboard ship where the crew joins in a talent show. • Much of the action in
Across the Pacific, a 1942 spy film set in the three weeks before the
attack on Pearl Harbor, takes place aboard the
Genoa Maru, a fictional Japanese cargo ship. The passengers include: former Captain Rick Leland (
Humphrey Bogart), a disgraced
United States Army Coast Artillery Corps, working as a secret U.S. agent; Canadian Alberta Marlow (
Mary Astor) who claims to be from
Medicine Hat; and Dr. Lorenz (
Sydney Greenstreet) a great admirer of the Japanese. Characters spar over the dinner table and lurk in corridors. • The 1952
Robert Heinlein novel
The Rolling Stones concerns a family who buy a used spacecraft and travel the
Solar System, financed partly by trading goods to asteroid miners. The novel was derived from a shorter story titled
Tramp Space Ship. • In the
Star Wars series, the oft-appearing
Millennium Falcon is a tramp starship, as it is a freighter with no fixed route. • In
Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981), Nazis intercept the
Ark of the Covenant as it is being transported from
Cairo to
London aboard a tramp steamer
Bantu Wind. • In
Lurulu, a 2004 sci-fi adventure, a crew of pilgrims and adventure seekers voyage to exotic planets on a tramp space freighter. ==References==