Having finished with the deck cargoes, the men would send
the water can ashore, together with such tools as they had been
using. The dock men having removed the stevedore gear from
the cargo hook, the save-all would be let go and sent ashore.
The men would then "wing in the gear," i.e., let go the
preventers and guys and haul in the boom until they were both
standing above the hatch. With that, they headed for the
gangway.

Frequently, as many as ten gangs (of some sixteen to twenty
men each), plus the necessary dock workers, would work a
general cargo vessel. With a proper allocation of the shipboard
men, all of the hatches would as a rule be finished about the
same time. As the last of the gangs finished up, tugs would be
positioned against the vessel. The pilot who would take the
vessel through the Golden Gate and into the open sea would
appear on the bridge. By then, linesmen, too, would have
stationed themselves abreast the bits to which the mooring lines
had been made fast.

As the last gangs came down the gangway, the dock men
would be closing the doors of the cargo shed. With the men
ashore, the crew hauled in the gangway, the mooring lines were
slackened and let go. As the vessel cleared the dock, the men
were pouring onto the Embarcadero. By the time they had
reached their automobiles or the trolley stop, the vessel had
moved into the stream and was headed for sea.
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