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1820: Sperm Whale rams, sinks, Nantucket Whaling Ship

Moby Dick and the White Whale REALLY happened
essex_378And it happened to a Nantucket ship

On this day in 1820, the whaling ship Essex, shown on right, on a two-and-a-half year voyage out of Nantucket was repeatedly rammed and sunk by a sperm whale in the South Pacific.

Twenty crew members took to three small whaling boats and, after a brief stint on an island without enough food to sustain them,  spent more than three months adrift on the open ocean.  Hunger,  disease and the weather took a fearsome toll and only eight of the crew survived.

The grim episode seized the imagination of novelist Herman Melville, whose epic "Moby-Dick"  published three decades later recounted a similar fate for the fictional whaleship Pequot.

essex-whale_300In 2000, Nantucket resident Nathaniel Philbrick's compelling bestseller, "In the Heart of the Sea: The Tragedy of the Whaleship Essex" was published, making the saga known to a much wider audience. 

The Ship and its Crew
Both the Captain and the First Mate of the Essex, George Pollard and Owen Chase, had served on the ship's previous voyage. Due to the success of that voyage, both had been promoted. Pollard was, at only 29, one of the youngest men ever to command a whaling ship. Owen Chase was a mere 23. The youngest member of the crew was the cabin boy, Thomas Nickerson, who was only 15.

The Essex itself was an elderly ship, but had recently been totally refitted. At 87 feet long and weighing 238 tons, unladen, the ship was small for a whaler. The Essex was fitted with four separate whaleboats, of around 20 to 30 feet in length, which were launched from the main ship. These boats were built for speed rather than durability, being 'Clinker built', with planks that overlap rather than lying flush with each other.

Ironically, the success of previous voyages had also left the Essex with a reputation as a 'lucky' ship... BBC.

7 comments
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11/20/08 @ 3:50 pm
Solon [Member] writes:
If you haven't read Philbrick's book,"In the Heart of the Sea," pick it up at your library today. It is an amazing story, proving once more that truth is stranger than fiction.

And, yes, it was Melville's inspiration for "Moby Dick."
11/20/08 @ 4:40 pm
Ned [Member] writes:
Wow solon... Melville in addition to being an early gay novelist with BILLY BUDD, also possessed the ability to reach forward thru time a century-and-a-half to snag a copy of Philbrick's book for reference. Handsomely done!
11/20/08 @ 4:47 pm
maverick [Member] writes:
Solon...I was offshore tuna fishing about seven years ago. We try to hang with the whales.

I spotted three humpback whales one of which had a huge hole in it's back. At first I thought a tanker strike but the closer I got it looked more like a shark bite. Either a great white or a huge mako.

As soon as we got anywhere near the injured whale the other two started heading at us at full speed. So as not to distress them I left the area.

Whales are docile but when pissed I am sure they can do some damage.
11/20/08 @ 5:09 pm
maverick [Member] writes:
"early gay novelist"...Can't Melville just be Melville? What's the gay crap?
11/20/08 @ 5:30 pm
Ned [Member] writes:
From Chapter 94 of MD:"Squeeze! squeeze! squeeze! all the morning long; I squeezed that sperm till I myself almost melted into it; I squeezed that sperm till a strange sort of insanity came over me; and I found myself unwittingly squeezing my co-laborers' hands in it, mistaking their hands for the gentle globules. Such an abounding, affectionate, friendly, loving feeling did this avocation beget; that at last I was continually squeezing their hands, and looking up into their eyes sentimentally; as much as to say,- Oh! my dear fellow beings, why should we longer cherish any social acerbities, or know the slightest ill-humor or envy! Come; let us squeeze hands all round; nay, let us all squeeze ourselves into each other; let us squeeze ourselves universally into the very milk and sperm of kindness." The dude was way ahead of his time gay-lib-wise... Not that many women characters in his books, stories and poems, mav.

11/20/08 @ 6:05 pm
maverick [Member] writes:
Nedster...was that your favorite chapter?
11/20/08 @ 6:26 pm
Ned [Member] writes:
I dunno... I just Googled "melville"+"gay" and that quote popped up first on some guy's blog. I remember The Village Voice always used to talk about how totally gay Herman's output was. Now mav, as to your command that I go look stuff up to prove YOUR point... this time you didn't even say 'please'. Less smarmy that way I suppose.
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