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Whale Hunter: v. 6: Seafarers' Voices

(Hardback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

Whale Hunter: v. 6: Seafarers' Voices

Contributors:

By (Author) Nelson Cole Haley

ISBN:

9781848320963

Publisher:

Pen & Sword Books Ltd

Imprint:

Seaforth Publishing

Publication Date:

17th March 2011

Country:

United Kingdom

Classifications

Readership:

General

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Main Subject:
Dewey:

639.28092

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Hardback

Number of Pages:

224

Dimensions:

Width 116mm, Height 178mm

Description

This is the narrative of a harpooner in the whale-ship Charles W Morgan, whose four-year voyage in 1849-1853 took him from New Bedford, Massachusetts, to the South Pacific and on around the world. Before the days of the whale-gun and its explosive warhead, whaling was a dangerous and far from one-sided pursuit-indeed, one of Haley's earliest experiences was the destruction of his boat by a whale attack, and even when the harpoon hit the target, the whaleboat would be towed at speed until the wounded whale was exhausted, a terrifying experience that was known to whalemen as a 'Nantucket sleigh ride'. Haley's narrative covers all the excitements and dangers of the business-like trying to work on a slippery whale carcass, while the surrounding waters seethed with sharks but also encompasses the long hours of boredom, when sailors entertained each other with tall tales. Many are recounted, and surprisingly, some of the least likely can be corroborated. In fact, Haley's anecdotes of the South Seas in transition form one of the great appeals of the book. On the one hand there were still hostile islands with murderous inhabitants, while others had been so strongly influenced by Christian missionaries that pleasures of the flesh were now entirely off-limits. Whaling was, in effect, the first oil industry, a high-risk business where huge fortunes were to be made. Haley's is the authentic voice of those that chose its dangers. AUTHOR: Nelson Cole Haley was only 17 when the ship set sail, but he was already a hardened seaman and experienced enough to be rated as a boat-steerer and ultimately a harpooner, the most responsible position in any whaler. He wrote the account about the time of his marriage in 1864, when he had given up seafaring. SELLING POINTS: -An exciting insight into the vanished industry of whaling under sail -Full of action and anecdote -A real-life version of the world that inspired Moby Dick

Reviews

For those interested in the specific nature of American whaling, from the logistics of being a boat steerer to the collection of the oil, this account is a perfect first-hand tale of how this was accomplished. Also, if interested in the dynamics of shipboard life in the nineteenth century, Haley's account provides tales of laughter, danger, and maritime culture and activity. - Nautical Research Journal

Author Bio

Nelson Cole Haley, just seventeen when he set sail on the Morgan, wrote down his experiences in 1864.

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