Hardhat Days: My Re-Education in Seattle's Shipyards
Following weeks of fruitless 1970s job-hunting, new college graduate Mike Nolan was broke and miserable, sleeping on his sister's couch. As a last resort, he signed on as a shipyard laborer, and discovered that the most worthwhile education often happens outside of a classroom. Indeed, when he toppled from the crow's nest of the USS Roark while trying to impress the foreman, only his rote safety training kept him alive.

Desperate to keep his job after joining a primarily African American Ship Scalers Union No. 541, Mike lied about being a sandblaster. In reality, he knew nothing about the trade and deserved to be fired. Instead, his kind-hearted Black coworkers took the white kid under their wing, and the former honor student from a small, not-so-diverse college became "Brother Nols," the only white sandblaster on the crew. His mentors included Eddie, on work release from prison, who sympathized with Mike's situation and showed him the tricks of the trade, and U.S. Olympic rowing coxswain hopeful, Chris, who became his best friend.

Taking pride in his blue-collar life and developing immense respect for his fellow ship scalers, Mike's entertaining accounts shine a light on the gritty, dangerous, yet still often humorous—world of heavy construction. Along the way, he offers insightful reflections on his growing self-awareness and empathy, ties between work and identity, and finally, his evolving perceptions surrounding race and privilege.

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Hardhat Days: My Re-Education in Seattle's Shipyards
Following weeks of fruitless 1970s job-hunting, new college graduate Mike Nolan was broke and miserable, sleeping on his sister's couch. As a last resort, he signed on as a shipyard laborer, and discovered that the most worthwhile education often happens outside of a classroom. Indeed, when he toppled from the crow's nest of the USS Roark while trying to impress the foreman, only his rote safety training kept him alive.

Desperate to keep his job after joining a primarily African American Ship Scalers Union No. 541, Mike lied about being a sandblaster. In reality, he knew nothing about the trade and deserved to be fired. Instead, his kind-hearted Black coworkers took the white kid under their wing, and the former honor student from a small, not-so-diverse college became "Brother Nols," the only white sandblaster on the crew. His mentors included Eddie, on work release from prison, who sympathized with Mike's situation and showed him the tricks of the trade, and U.S. Olympic rowing coxswain hopeful, Chris, who became his best friend.

Taking pride in his blue-collar life and developing immense respect for his fellow ship scalers, Mike's entertaining accounts shine a light on the gritty, dangerous, yet still often humorous—world of heavy construction. Along the way, he offers insightful reflections on his growing self-awareness and empathy, ties between work and identity, and finally, his evolving perceptions surrounding race and privilege.

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Hardhat Days: My Re-Education in Seattle's Shipyards

Hardhat Days: My Re-Education in Seattle's Shipyards

by Mike Nolan
Hardhat Days: My Re-Education in Seattle's Shipyards

Hardhat Days: My Re-Education in Seattle's Shipyards

by Mike Nolan

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Overview

Following weeks of fruitless 1970s job-hunting, new college graduate Mike Nolan was broke and miserable, sleeping on his sister's couch. As a last resort, he signed on as a shipyard laborer, and discovered that the most worthwhile education often happens outside of a classroom. Indeed, when he toppled from the crow's nest of the USS Roark while trying to impress the foreman, only his rote safety training kept him alive.

Desperate to keep his job after joining a primarily African American Ship Scalers Union No. 541, Mike lied about being a sandblaster. In reality, he knew nothing about the trade and deserved to be fired. Instead, his kind-hearted Black coworkers took the white kid under their wing, and the former honor student from a small, not-so-diverse college became "Brother Nols," the only white sandblaster on the crew. His mentors included Eddie, on work release from prison, who sympathized with Mike's situation and showed him the tricks of the trade, and U.S. Olympic rowing coxswain hopeful, Chris, who became his best friend.

Taking pride in his blue-collar life and developing immense respect for his fellow ship scalers, Mike's entertaining accounts shine a light on the gritty, dangerous, yet still often humorous—world of heavy construction. Along the way, he offers insightful reflections on his growing self-awareness and empathy, ties between work and identity, and finally, his evolving perceptions surrounding race and privilege.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781638640325
Publisher: Washington State University Press
Publication date: 09/17/2025
Pages: 200
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x (d)

About the Author

An earlier version of this book was selected as a finalist for the 2022 Pacific Northwest Writers' Association (PNWA) Nonfiction/Memoir Literary Award, and in 2019, Tidepools, the art/literary magazine published by Peninsula College, awarded Mike Nolan first place in adult prose. His writing is included in the third volume of the Olympic Peninsula Authors anthology, and he has also had stories published in Flash Fiction Magazine, The Seattle Times, The Spokesman Review, and AAA Washington.

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