Gold and Ivory Shipwreck on a Beach of Diamonds

The October 2009 National Geographic magazine has a fascinating story of a 16th century shipwreck on a beach in southern Namibia.  In 1533 a  Portuguese trading ship carrying a fortune in gold and ivory, bound for the famed spice ports of India, was swept ashore and wrecked … Continue reading

Australian adventurer & teenage circumnavigator to re-enact Capt. Bligh’s epic open boat voyage

Australian adventurer Don McIntyre and teenage circumnavigator Mike Perham to re-enact Capt William Bligh’s epic mutiny on the Bounty open boat voyage Australian adventurer and solo round the world sailor, Don McIntyre announced today that Mike Perham, the world’s youngest … Continue reading

John Stobart and the Ships of South Street

Last year the National Maritime Historical Society (NMHS) published a fascinating booklet, John Stobart and the Ships of South Street, which features the pre-eminent maritime artist’s paintings of ships arriving or departing from New York’s South Street docks. At first the presentation struck me as odd.  The … Continue reading

Spotted Dick Off the Menu

The Aubrey/Maturin series of novels by Patrick O’Brian introduced the world to, among other things,  a range of obscure traditional British cuisine, which notably included suet puddings such as “Floating Island”, the unappetizing “Drowned Baby” and the perennial favorite “Spotted Dick”.   This … Continue reading

The Floating Chapels of the Seamen’s Church Institute

If you can’t get sailors to church, bring the church to the sailors.  That was the strategy used in 1844 by the Protestant Church Missionary Society for Seamen, which was renamed the Seamen’s Church Institute. As they celebrate their 175th … Continue reading

Maritime Evacuation on 9/11 – An American Dunkirk

Eight years ago today, on a beautiful Tuesday morning in September,  hundreds of thousands of commuters were trapped  in lower Manhattan.  Manhattan is an island and all bridges, tunnels and subways had been shut down following the attacks on the World Trade Center. Shortly after … Continue reading