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Golden rivet

Concept in naval folklore


Summary

Concept in naval folklore

A golden rivet refers to the claim in naval folklore that the final rivet hammered into a ship is a commemorative made of gold. The idea seemingly derived from the commemorative golden spike that was temporarily driven at the completion of the U.S. transcontinental railroad in 1869.

Description

The rivet's location is allegedly different for each ship and undisclosed, known only to the crew. No such rivet can exist, as gold is too malleable a material. If a golden rivet was made, it would be impossible to hammer it in without destroying it in the process.

Use as a prank

Most often the myth is used as a practical joke or fool's errand played on junior sailors, exploiting their naivete and natural curiosity about their new surroundings.

The prank consists of informing a new sailor of the existence of the "golden rivet" and encouraging him to look for it. After scouring the entire ship without success, it eventually dawns on the junior that he has been the butt of a joke. The prank was also commonly employed as a means of homosexual seduction: the recruit accompanied to the bowels of the ship, and invited to bend over to see the mythical rivet better in the dark.

Like many other hazing rituals, the "golden rivet" myth is perpetuated for the amusement of senior crewmembers at the expense of their naive and gullible junior crewmates.

References

References

  1. I Want You For The US Navy, ''Spy'', March 1993, pp47-53
  2. "Golden Rivet {{!".
  3. "Royal Australian Navy Gun Plot - Naval Traditions and Customs".
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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