An email from David:
I hope that this letter finds you and the Mrs. well. I’m fine, settling in to the ship nicely, as this ship was built in Europe and not U.S. flagged orignaly, I’ve had to get used to the metric system once more, but that is no problem.
I miss hanging out at the Alehouse tuesday nights with all of you, but I’m sure you all can mangae without me for a while.
Take Care,
Davey Jones
Who is Davey Jones?
There are several Theories
- He was Vanderdecken (‘of the decks’), the captain of the ghost ship the Flying Dutchman.
- There was an actual David Jones, who was a pirate on the Indian Ocean in the 1630s,[6] but most scholars agree that he was not renowned enough to gain such lasting global fame.[7]
- A British pub owner who is referenced in the 1594 song “Jones’s Ale is Newe.” He may be the same pub owner who supposedly threw drunken sailors into his ale locker and then dumped them onto any passing ship.[7]
- He could also be Duffer Jones, a notoriously myopic sailor who often found himself over-board.[8]
- Welsh sailors who would call upon Saint David for protection in times of mortal danger, though this is unlikely as the Welsh have always used the saint’s Welsh name Dewi. Although “Dewi” spoken with a heavy Welsh accent may sound very close to “Davy”[7]
- Some also think it is simply another name for Satan.[7]
- The name may have come from Deva (Hindu), Taffy (derogatory term for Welsh people used in rhymes that depict Welsh people as thieves and liars), or the thief of the evil spirit.[citation needed]
- Davy may also stem from Duppy, a West Indian term for a malevolent ghost.
- There is also the “Jonah” theory, Jonah became the “evil angel” of all sailors, as the biblical story of Jonah involved his shipmates realizing Jonah was being punished for his disobedience to God and casting him over-board. Naturally, sailors of previous centuries would identify more with the beset-upon ship-mates of Jonah than with the unfortunate man himself. It is therefore a possibility that “Davy Jones” grew from the root “Devil Jonah” – the devil of the seas. Upon death, a wicked sailor’s body supposedly went to Davy Jones’ locker (a chest, as lockers were back then), but a pious sailor’s soul went to Fiddler’s Green.
Wherever he came from, Davey is now a contributor at The-AVE.us … writing from his voyages in the US Merchant Marine.