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Paleofuture

A history of the future that never was

Past Imperfect

History with all the interesting bits left in


March 1, 2013

The True-Life Horror that Inspired Moby-Dick

Herman Melville, circa 1860. Photo: Wikipedia

In July of 1852, a 32-year-old novelist named Herman Melville had high hopes for his new novel, Moby-Dick; or, The Whale, despite the book’s mixed reviews and tepid sales. That month he took a steamer to Nantucket for his first visit to the Massachusetts island, home port of his novel’s mythic protagonist, Captain Ahab, and his ship, the Pequod. Like a tourist, Melville met local dignitaries, dined out and took in the sights of the village he had previously only imagined.

And on his last day on Nantucket he met the broken-down 60-year-old man who had captained the Essex, the ship that had been attacked and sunk by a sperm whale in an 1820 incident that had inspired Melville’s novel. Captain George Pollard Jr. was just 29 years old when the Essex went down, and he survived and returned to Nantucket to captain a second whaling ship, Two Brothers. But when that ship wrecked on a coral reef two years later, the captain was marked as unlucky at sea—a “Jonah”—and no owner would trust a ship to him again. Pollard lived out his remaining years on land, as the village night watchman.

Herman Melville drew inspiration for Moby-Dick from the 1820 whale attack on the Essex. Photo: Wikipedia

Melville had written about Pollard briefly in Moby-Dick, and only with regard to the whale sinking his ship. During his visit, Melville later wrote, the two merely “exchanged some words.” But Melville knew Pollard’s ordeal at sea did not end with the sinking of the Essex, and he was not about to evoke the horrific memories that the captain surely carried with him. “To the islanders he was a nobody,” Melville wrote, “to me, the most impressive man, tho’ wholly unassuming, even humble—that I ever encountered.”

Pollard had told the full story to fellow captains over a dinner shortly after his rescue from the Essex ordeal, and to a missionary named George Bennet. To Bennet, the tale was like a confession. Certainly, it was grim: 92 days and sleepless nights at sea in a leaking boat with no food, his surviving crew going mad beneath the unforgiving sun, eventual cannibalism and the harrowing fate of two teenage boys, including Pollard’s first cousin, Owen Coffin. “But I can tell you no more—my head is on fire at the recollection,” Pollard told the missionary. “I hardly know what I say.”

The trouble for Essex began, as Melville knew, on August 14, 1819, just two days after it left Nantucket on a whaling voyage that was supposed to last two and a half years. The 87-foot-long ship was hit by a squall that destroyed its topgallant sail and nearly sank it. Still, Pollard continued, making it to Cape Horn five weeks later. But the 20-man crew found the waters off South America nearly fished out, so they decided to sail for distant whaling grounds in the South Pacific, far from any shores.

To restock, the Essex anchored at Charles Island in the Galapagos, where the crew collected sixty 100-pound tortoises. As a prank, one of the crew set a fire, which, in the dry season, quickly spread. Pollard’s men barely escaped, having to run through flames, and a day after they set sail, they could still see smoke from the burning island. Pollard was furious, and swore vengeance on whoever set the fire. Many years later Charles Island was still a blackened wasteland, and the fire was believed to have caused the extinction of both the Floreana Tortoise and the Floreana Mockingbird.

Essex First Mate Owen Chase, later in life. Photo: Wikipedia

By November of 1820, after months of a prosperous voyage and a thousand miles from the nearest land, whaleboats from the Essex had harpooned whales that dragged them out toward the horizon in what the crew called “Nantucket sleigh rides.” Owen Chase, the 23-year-old first mate, had stayed aboard the Essex to make repairs while Pollard went whaling. It was Chase who spotted a very big whale—85 feet in length, he estimated—lying quietly in the distance, its head facing the ship. Then, after two or three spouts, the giant made straight for the Essex, “coming down for us at great celerity,” Chase would recall—at about three knots. The whale smashed head-on into the ship with “such an appalling and tremendous jar, as nearly threw us all on our faces.”

The whale passed underneath the ship and began thrashing in the water. “I could distinctly see him smite his jaws together, as if distracted with rage and fury,” Chase recalled. Then the whale disappeared. The crew was addressing the hole in the ship and getting the pumps working when one man cried out, “Here he is—he is making for us again.” Chase spotted the whale, his head half out of water, bearing down at great speed—this time at six knots, Chase thought. This time it hit the bow directly under the cathead and disappeared for good.

The water rushed into the ship so fast, the only thing the crew could do was lower the boats and try fill them with navigational instruments, bread, water and supplies before the Essex turned over on its side.

Pollard saw his ship in distress from a distance, then returned to see the Essex in ruin. Dumbfounded, he asked, “My God, Mr. Chase, what is the matter?”

“We have been stove by a whale,” his first mate answered.

Another boat returned, and the men sat in silence, their captain still pale and speechless. Some, Chase observed, “had no idea of the extent of their deplorable situation.”

The men were unwilling to leave the doomed Essex as it slowly foundered, and Pollard tried to come up with a plan. In all, there were three boats and 20 men. They calculated that the closest land was the Marquesas Islands and the Society Islands, and Pollard wanted to set off for them—but in one of the most ironic decisions in nautical history, Chase and the crew convinced him that those islands were peopled with cannibals and that the crew’s best chance for survival would be to sail south. The distance to land would be far greater, but they might catch the trade winds or be spotted by another whaling ship. Only Pollard seemed to understand the implications of steering clear of the islands. (According to Nathaniel Philbrick, in his book In the Heart of the Sea: The Tragedy of the Whaleship Essex, although rumors of cannibalism persisted, traders had been visiting the islands without incident.)

Thus they left the Essex aboard their 20-foot boats. They were challenged almost from the start. Saltwater saturated the bread, and the men began to dehydrate as they ate their daily rations. The sun was ravaging. Pollard’s boat was attacked by a killer whale. They spotted land—Henderson Island—two weeks later, but it was barren. After another week the men began to run out of supplies. Still, three of them decided they’d rather take their chances on land than climb back into a boat. No one could blame them. And besides, it would stretch the provisions for the men in the boats.

The whaleship Essex, “stove by a whale” in 1821. Photo: Wikipedia

By mid-December, after weeks at sea, the boats began to take on water, more whales menaced the men at night, and by January, the paltry rations began to take their toll.  On Chase’s boat, one man went mad, stood up and demanded a dinner napkin and water, then fell into “most horrid and frightful convulsions” before perishing the next morning. “Humanity must shudder at the dreadful recital” of what came next, Chase wrote. The crew “separated limbs from his body, and cut all the flesh from the bones; after which, we opened the body, took out the heart, and then closed it again—sewed it up as decently as we could, and committed it to the sea.”  They then roasted the man’s organs on a flat stone and ate them.

Over the coming week, three more sailors died, and their bodies were cooked and eaten. One boat disappeared, and then Chase’s and Pollard’s boats lost sight of each other. The rations of human flesh did not last long, and the more the survivors ate, the hungrier they felt. On both boats the men became too weak to talk. The four men on Pollard’s boat reasoned that without more food, they would die. On February 6, 1821—nine weeks after they’d bidden farewell to the Essex—Charles Ramsdell, a teenager, proposed they draw lots to determine who would be eaten next. It was the custom of the sea, dating back, at least in recorded instance, to the first half of the 17th century. The men in Pollard’s boat accepted Ramsdell’s suggestion, and the lot fell to young Owen Coffin, the captain’s first cousin.

Pollard had promised the boy’s mother he’d look out for him. “My lad, my lad!” the captain now shouted, “if you don’t like your lot, I’ll shoot the first man that touches you.” Pollard even offered to step in for the boy, but Coffin would have none of it. “I like it as well as any other,” he said.

Ramsdell drew the lot that required him to shoot his friend. He paused a long time. But then Coffin rested his head on the boat’s gunwale and Ramsdell pulled the trigger.

“He was soon dispatched,” Pollard would say, “and nothing of him left.”

By February 18, after 89 days at sea, the last three men on Chase’s boat spotted a sail in the distance. After a frantic chase, they managed to catch the English ship Indian and were rescued.

Three hundred miles away, Pollard’s boat carried only its captain and Charles Ramsdell. They had only the bones of the last crewmen to perish, which they smashed on the bottom of the boat so that they could eat the marrow. As the days passed the two men obsessed over the bones scattered on the boat’s floor. Almost a week after Chase and his men had been rescued, a crewman aboard the American ship Dauphin spotted Pollard’s boat. Wretched and confused, Pollard and Ramsdell did not rejoice at their rescue, but simply turned to the bottom of their boat and stuffed bones into their pockets. Safely aboard the Dauphin, the two delirious men were seen “sucking the bones of their dead mess mates, which they were loath to part with.”

The five Essex survivors were reunited in Valparaiso, where they recuperated before sailing back for Nantucket. As Philbrick writes,  Pollard had recovered enough to join several captains for dinner, and he told them the entire story of the Essex wreck and his three harrowing months at sea. One of the captains present returned to his room and wrote everything down, calling Pollard’s account “the most distressing narrative that ever came to my knowledge.”

Years later, the third boat was discovered on Ducie Island; three skeletons were aboard. Miraculously, the three men who chose to stay on Henderson Island survived for nearly four months, mostly on shellfish and bird eggs, until an Australian ship rescued them.

Once they arrived in Nantucket, the surviving crewmen of the Essex were welcomed, largely without judgment. Cannibalism in the most dire of circumstances, it was reasoned, was a custom of the sea. (In similar incidents, survivors declined to eat the flesh of the dead but used it as bait for fish. But Philbrick notes that the men of the Essex were in waters largely devoid of marine life at the surface.)

Captain Pollard, however, was not as easily forgiven, because he had eaten his cousin. (One scholar later referred to the act as “gastronomic incest.”) Owen Coffin’s mother could not abide being in the captain’s presence. Once his days at sea were over, Pollard spent the rest of his life in Nantucket. Once a year, on the anniversary of the wreck of the Essex, he was said to have locked himself in his room and fasted in honor of his lost crewmen.

By 1852, Melville and Moby-Dick had begun their own slide into obscurity. Despite the author’s hopes, his book sold but a few thousand copies in his lifetime, and Melville, after a few more failed attempts at novels, settled into a reclusive life and spent 19 years as a customs inspector in New York City. He drank and suffered the death of his two sons. Depressed, he abandoned novels for poetry. But George Pollard’s fate was never far from his mind. In his poem Clarel he writes of

A night patrolman on the quay

Watching the bales till morning hour

Through fair and foul. Never he smiled;

Call him, and he would come; not sour

In spirit, but meek and reconciled:

Patient he was, he none withstood;

Oft on some secret thing would brood.

 

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Sources

Books: Herman Melville, Moby-Dick; Or, The Whale, 1851, Harper & Brothers Publishers. Nathaniel Philbrick, In the Heart of the Sea: The Tragedy of the Whaleship Essex, 2000, Penguin Books. Thomas Nickerson, The Loss of the Ship Essex, Sunk by a Whale, 2000, Penguin Classics. Owen Chase, Narrative of the Whale-Ship Essex of Nantucket, 2006, A RIA Press Edition. Alex MacCormick, The Mammoth Book of Maneaters, 2003, Carroll & Graf Publishers.  Joseph S. Cummins, Cannibals: Shocking True Tales of the Last Taboo on Land and at Sea, 2001, The Lyons Press. Evan L. Balkan, Shipwrecked: Deadly Adventures and Disasters at Sea, 2008, Menasha Ridge Press.

Articles: “The Whale and the Horror,” by Nathaniel Philbrick, Vanity Fair, May, 2000. “Herman Melville: Nantucket’s First Tourist?” by Susan Beegel, The Nantucket Historical Association, http://www.nha.org/history/hn/HN-fall1991-beegel.html. ”Herman Melville and Nantucket,” The Nantucket Historical Association, http://www.nha.org/history/faq/melville.html. Into the Deep: America, Whaling & the World, “Biography: Herman Melville,” American Experience, PBS.org, http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/americanexperience/features/biography/whaling-melville/. “No Moby-Dick: A Real Captain, Twice Doomed,” by Jesse McKinley, New York Times, February 11, 2011. “The Essex Disaster,” by Walter Karp, American Heritage, April/May, 1983, Volume 34, Issue 3. “Essex (whaleship),” Wikipedia, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Essex_(whaleship).  ”Account of the Ship Essex Sinking, 1819-1821., Thomas Nickerson, http://www.galapagos.to/TEXTS/NICKERSON.HTM

 



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18 Comments »

  1. Always enjoy reading Past Imperfect; it is unfailingly the most thorough of all the blogs here

  2. Jared says:

    I was particularly intrigued by the sentence “Years later, the third boat was discovered on Ducie Island; three skeletons were aboard.” I always understood the fate of the third boat to be undetermined.

    • Gilbert King says:

      Hi, Jared, Thanks for writing. You raise an interesting point. My source for the fate of the men in the third Essex boat was Evan Balkan’s book, Shipwrecked: Deadly Adventures and Disasters at Sea, where Balkan states that Essex crew members William Bond, Obed Hendricks, and Joseph West were the three skeletons found in a rotting whaleboat washed up on the shores of Ducie Island. Philbrick, however, remains unconvinced that the skeletons found on Ducie Island were unequivocally crew from the Essex.

  3. August Muench says:

    The textual similarity of the description of the events on Charles Island here in this article and on Wikipedia (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Essex_(whaleship)#Voyage) [unattributed here] suggests that both articles source a third party source perhaps a bit too closely.

    • Gilbert King says:

      Mr. Muench, Thank you for writing and for pointing this out. The “blackened wasteland” wording I used in that sentence was from Philbrick’s book, which is attributed in both sources and within the article. Philbrick writes, The Essex had left a lasting impression on the island. When Nickerson returned to Charles years later, it was still a blackened wasteland. “Wherever the fire raged neither trees, shrubbery, nor grass have since appeared,” he reported. As for the sourcing of the passage regarding the extinction of the Floreana Tortoise and the Floreana Mockingbird, Wikipedia footnotes Thomas Nickerson’s account of the Essex sinking, and links to a Galapagos excerpt taken from Nickerson’s manuscript. That manuscript was eventually published by Penguin Classics, which I have also sourced, (Thomas Nickerson, The Loss of the Ship Essex, Sunk by a Whale, 2000, Penguin Classics.) and my reading of these materials was distilled into a simple statement of fact. However, I am now adding to the sources the link to the Nickerson excerpt, as well as to the relevant Wikipedia page itself. I should add that as I was following up your comment, checking and rechecking my sources on the Galapagos extinctions, I was pleased to learn that the Floreana Tortoise may not be extinct after all, http://www.earthtimes.org/nature/extinct-giant-Floreana-tortoise-alive-scientists/1747/ and that there are plans to reintroduce to Floreana the critically endangered Floreana Mockingbird, which was once extinct there. http://www.savegalapagos.org/galapagos/floreana-mockingbird.shtml Thank you again for your comment, and I hope this response adequately addresses your concern.

      Read more: http://blogs.smithsonianmag.com/history/#ixzz2MKK34WBN
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  4. Jaime says:

    i have read that the sourse of inspiration was a whale from Chile near isla mocha (mocha dick)

    • Gilbert King says:

      Hi, Jaime. It’s my understanding that Mocha Dick was a sperm whale that had attacked whaleboats off the coast of Chile, and although Melville never said so, it’s believed that he derived the name “Moby-Dick” from this whale. But, as Anne Chapman points out in her book, European Encounters with the Yamana People of Cape Horn, Before and After Darwin, Essex first mate Owen Chase’s account of the doomed voyage includes a description of the whale attacking “as if fired with revenge for their sufferings,” (“their” being the companion whales hunted in the area at the time of the incident) and Melville uses this same expression several times in Moby-Dick.

  5. janye says:

    “Moby Dick” is on my list of world’s most boring books.

  6. Jerred says:

    Sad,very sad but such as nature.

  7. Peter Warren says:

    “Moby Dick” is far from boring. It is at the top of my list of the greatest books in American literature. While rooted in a horror story, “Moby Dick” is engaging at all levels. I have read it 5 times.

  8. Mother Flogger says:

    Just leave the whales alone. Let them be. What would compel sane men to get in a leaky boat, to chase down whales?

  9. rhk111 says:

    Yep, “Past Imperfect” is becoming one of my favorite blogs to read. Keep it up!!!

  10. Jean Wyatt says:

    I’ve read In the Heart of the Sea and found it to be very compelling. I’ve purchased and given away 2 copies to share the fascinating tale. Well-written Non-fiction, in my opinion, surpasses the best novels. Good article, Smithsonian! jw

  11. P T TOMPKINS says:

    MANDATORY READING IN THE 7TH GRADE, WE GRUMBLED THROUGH THE REQUIRED READING. I WONDERED WHY IT WAS IN OUR ENGLISH READER. FOUND YOUR WRITING GREAT READING. WISH I’D READ IT BEFORE SPENDING TIME IN NANTUCKET.
    THANK YOU. P T TOMPKINS.

  12. Dan Riggs says:

    Moby Dick, more than any other novel, tells us what we are as a people (I do not say who). Look at us now: miles and miles of urban sprawl, carpet stores, furniture outlets bedroom stores, liquor shops; we can be pretty boring. Melville exposes the hidden costs of business quite well, something we are extremely reluctant to acknowledge. This article is excellent seasoning for reading him.

  13. Keith McD says:

    What a thoughful set of comments! I will always be solemnly grateful to the Captain and Crew of the Essex for their unwilling sacrifice in inspiring this most important tale. I smile at the comments regarding whether Moby-Dick is ‘boring’ because that is exactly how I, as a teenager, when forced to read the book, recalled it to be. Only when I reached the advanced age of 50 (!) and after careful re-readings in my 30s/40s, have I come to see the importance of this book, and it’s wonderful depictions of human nature.

    Why did whalemen whale? They needed jobs. Why did Nantucket consider neutrality/joining the Commonwealth? To avoid taxation/intervention by Britain. Why did young men willingly go to sea for 3 and 4 year voyages? To escape miserable situations, seek adventure and/or to make their fortunes. Why did New Bedford become a 19th century world capital in its own right? Because it produced a product that everyoneone in the industrial world wanted to have.

    It is really no different a path than most of us would choose today to make our own ends meet if we had somewhat limited options. And the wonderful tales of personal relationships that transcend nationality and race are things for all of us to thoughtfully consider.

    My views of Moby-Dick are based not only in economic survival and a desire to prosper, but the underlying pressure on individuals to survive and which helped the United States become what it was to become, for better or worse. The need to survive is an ever-present theme of the Essex, and the re-telling of the Essex’ story, from both Mr. Melville and Mr. King helps us to remember the importance and relevance of the voyages of the Esex, and the Pequod. Thanks all, I’ve enjoyed the discussion!

  14. Jonathan Bright says:

    Nice article, but it seems kind of ironic that there is no mention of the earlier work Mocha Dick Or The White Whale of the Pacific (http://www.melville.org/reynolds.htm) by explorer and journalist Jeremiah N. Reynolds, whose persistant and tireless struggle to convince the US Congress for organising an Antarctic expedition eventually led to the US Exploring Expedition (http://www.sil.si.edu/digitalcollections/usexex/expedition), the findings and specimens of which, Smithsonian Institution was established to house…

  15. I enjoyed reading this blog. It inspires me and I love adventure!

    Cheers!

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