
Happy to be stranded in New Bedford
By Silver Donald Cameron, posted on The
ChronicleHerald.ca
THE MOTORSAILER Queen Charlotte was forced into New
Bedford, Mass., by engine problems, but truly, the crew
could hardly be sorry. New Bedford is a splendidly salty
town — the headquarters of the New England whaling
fleet, the town where Herman Melville shipped out on the
voyage that inspired his masterpiece Moby Dick, the
place where a jocular whaling captain gave an abandoned
oyster smack to Joshua Slocum, who rebuilt it here and
then sailed it alone around the world.
New Bedford is also home to C.E. Beckman Co., the oldest
family-owned business and the oldest chandler in
America, now being managed by the seventh generation of
Beckmans in the ultra-historic building it has occupied
since 1790. Needing a new starter for Queen Charlotte’s
Perkins diesel, the crew repaired to Beckman’s, where a
droll marine-electric parts manager supplied a perfectly
satisfactory General Motors starter for about 10 per
cent of what the Perkins distributor was quoting.
While the skipper installed the starter, the others
explored New Bedford, starting with the city block
occupied by Beckman’s, a ramshackle treasure-house of
antique and modern nautical gear. We passed the Seaman’s
Bethel, where Melville’s whalers attended services, and
then crossed the street to the Whaling Museum.
The museum includes the entire skeleton of a 40.5-tonne
sperm whale, and a full-sized replica of a whaling
ship’s fo’c’sl. Here are the ship models, and there are
all the tools of the trade — harpoons, flensing knives,
tryworks. The museum boasts a fabulous collection of
scrimshaw — intricate works of art created by sailors on
bone, baleen and ivory, including knife and razor
handles, picture frames, jewel boxes, spools and much
more.
The most stunning exhibit is the largest ship model in
the world — a complete half-sized replica of a real
whaling bark named the Lagoda, 27 metres long, built in
1915-16 for the owner’s daughter, Emily Bourne, in
memory of her father.
The vessel is housed in a lofty exhibit hall also built
by Ms. Bourne, and it is complete in every detail — the
catted anchors, the light whaleboats hanging in davits,
the clouds of sail, the rope-driven steering gear and
much else.
Whaling is New Bedford’s heroic myth — puny men pitting
themselves against the monsters of the deep — and its
images and assumptions ring somewhat strangely in a
world in which whales cling to survival, while human
enterprise has become the most powerful force in the
world.
It seems odd, too, that so many of the leading figures
in this furious world of blood, death and blubber should
have been Quakers, who are identified in our day with
peace and non-violence — and who even then made New
Bedford a haven for escaped slaves, a terminus of the
Underground Railway.
The ship I really wanted to see in New Bedford had
nothing to do with whaling — and it wasn’t in port,
either. Built in 1894, the schooner Effie M. Morrissey
was named for the sister of her skipper, Clayton
Morrissey. Although the Morrisseys lived in Gloucester,
they came from Lower East Pubnico, where Cap’n Clayt was
born. He became famous as skipper of the Gloucester
schooner Henry Ford, which in 1922 unsuccessfully
challenged the Bluenose for the International
Fishermen’s Cup.
In 1926, after 32 years of fishing and freighting, the
Effie M. Morrissey was sold to Captain Bob Bartlett, the
Newfoundland master who had carried Admiral Robert E.
Peary to the North Pole in 1909. Bartlett refitted the
ship for the Arctic ice, and skippered her on 20 voyages
of northern exploration sponsored by organizations like
the National Geographic Society and the Smithsonian
Institution. She once reached within 600 miles of the
Pole, and newsreels made the ship and her skipper
world-famous.
During the Second World War, the Morrissey served as a
supply vessel for U.S. Arctic bases and for the Soviet
port of Murmansk. After Bartlett’s death in 1946, she
was sold to the Cape Verde Islands, and re-named
Ernestina.
For the next 30 years, she sailed as a packet boat
between Cape Verde and New England, maintaining a link
originally established by the whalers, who frequently
picked up crew in the Cape Verdes. She was the last
sailing ship in regular service to carry immigrants to
the United States.
In 1975, she was presented to the United States as a
gift by the new Republic of Cape Verde. She now belongs
to the Commonwealth of Massachusetts — and when I was in
New Bedford, she was in Boothbay Harbor, Me., receiving
a $4 million refit. I was sorry to miss her, but I was
delighted to know that she’ll be strong and hardy again,
at the age of 114. She is an international treasure,
this stout-hearted wooden ship, born in the 19th century
and still serving in the 21st. Going aboard her remains
one of the greatest pleasures I’ve never had.
Silver Donald Cameron’s website is
www.silverdonaldcameron.caPublished: 2008-09-14
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