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Cruise Ship Doorman's Jacket

American History Museum

Door Man Jacket
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Object Details

Description

This brilliant red polyester jacket with brass buttons, a blue stand-up color, and gold braid epaulets was worn by a doorman named Dadang, who worked aboard the Holland America Line’s cruise ship Zuiderdam in 2007. As a food and beverage worker in the ship’s hotel department, Dadang reported directly to the dining room manager. His primary job was to welcome passengers into the dining room by opening the door, to ring the dinner chime, to serve breakfast pastries, and to perform other services in the restaurant arm of the organization. In 2009, a cruise ship job similar to this paid about $1,200 to $1,400 per month, with room and board provided on the ship.
Taking a cruise has become a popular leisure activity for many Americans. In 1980, 1.4 million Americans took a North American cruise and by 2005, that number had increased to 9.6 million. As both the number and size of cruise ships have grown, the number of people required to keep them running smoothly and to serve the needs of passengers has increased as well. Aboard the Zuiderdam, 800 crew work around the clock to fulfill the needs of 1,848 passengers.
Cruise ship employees are recruited from around the world for a wide variety of jobs, from waiters to chefs, housekeepers to hair and nail technicians, and shop managers to wine stewards. For the many jobs requiring interaction with passengers, workers must have a good command of English, and English-speaking workers from the Philippines or Indonesia (like Dadang) fill many hospitality jobs aboard modern cruise ships. Americans are not typically attracted to most cruise-ship hospitality and service jobs because of low wages, long workdays at sea, and the hardship of having to be away from home and family for long periods of time.

Credit Line

Gift of Holland America Line

date made

ca 2007

ID Number

2007.0172.02

catalog number

2007.0172.02

accession number

2007.0172

Object Name

jacket

Physical Description

polyester fabric (overall material)

Measurements

overall: 27 in x 44 in x 1 in; 68.58 cm x 111.76 cm x 2.54 cm

Related Publication

National Museum of American History. On the Water exhibition website

Related Web Publication

http://americanhistory.si.edu/onthewater

See more items in

Work and Industry: Maritime
Clothing & Accessories
Work

Exhibition

On the Water

Exhibition Location

National Museum of American History

Data Source

National Museum of American History

Subject

Sailing Ships
Uniforms
Fishing

related event

Contemporary United States

Metadata Usage

CC0

Link to Original Record

https://n2t.net/ark:/65665/ng49ca746ac-33c4-704b-e053-15f76fa0b4fa

Record ID

nmah_1332792

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