To King George
the Third Sound
for Whales
Transcribed from the original Kingston's logbook
by
Rod Dickson.
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The log a of a voyage aboard the British whaling vessel Kingston of London under the command of Captain Thomas Dennis, 1800-1802. Transcribed from the original ship’s logbook by Rod Dickson. This is the first publication in the series of publications complementary to Western Australian Exploration, known as the Historical Records of Western Australia. To King George the Third Sound for Whales is one of the seminal documents of Western Australia and describes the voyage of the first whaling ship to New Holland, just nine years after Vancouver's voyage, a year before Matthew Flinders ‘rediscovered’ King George Sound, and significantly, 26 years before the 1826 settlement of Albany. Unknown until located by the Editor in the State Library of Western Australia, the historical importance of the Kingston’s log book, in detailing the origins of the first European industry in Western Australia, is significant.
This book has been transcribed and annotated from the Pacific
Manuscripts Bureau series of microfilms of mainly American whaling
log books. Further work by the Editor resulted in the finding of a
series of rare maps and charts of the period, which accompany the
log.
The log book
kept by Captain Dennis is marvellously descriptive and the writer produced an
enduring record of a secret two year voyage carried out by two small ships owned
by the London merchant and whaling ship owner, Daniel Bennett. The Kingston
and the Elligood ( under the command of Captain Dixon) were sent to New
Holland for whales, with instructions to examine King George Sound, then proceed
to Shark Bay and the north-west coast before returning via Madagascar and
southern Africa.
The incidents
recorded are both amusing and horrifying. In 1800 Britain and France were at war
and any vessel wishing to proceed from the Thames to the West Indies or the
South Seas had to sail to the Solent and form into convoys guarded by ships of
the Royal Navy.
The
Kingston's convoy was escorted by three of His Majesty's Ships, one of which was
HMS Snake, a sloop of war. Shortly after clearing the English Channel,
the Commander of the Snake, Captain J.M. Lewis, decided to hold a gun
drill. His seamen and gunners were timed during the loading and running out of
the 18 pounder great guns. The black powder in the touch holes was lit and
within seconds a massive broadside was fired.
Unfortunately, one of the massive guns was still loaded with ball and when fired
was aimed directly at a merchant ship, the Salamander. The shot
penetrated the hull, just as the vessel rolled, three feet below the waterline.
A boat crew from the Kingston went across to assist in keeping the
Salamander afloat until repairs were effected.
Another
incident in this two year long voyage was a whipping round the fleet. The cooper
of the Cornwall, another South Seas whaler, allegedly committed mutiny
and for that he was sentenced to 150 lashes with the cat-o-nine tails - thirty
lashes alongside of each of five vessels as a warning to all.
Of the crews,
Captain Dixon and nine of his seamen died horribly from the dreaded scurvy and
were buried at sea between New Holland and Madagascar.
This is a
hard cover, illustrated, 174 page volume in the series.
ISBN 0 85905
372 5
A limited
edition of 500 copies (2006 New) Hard cover, dj, 174 pp,
25 x 17cm, illustrated, maps, 480grams.
$55.00*
+
POST By the same
author:- A voyage of
no importance, The price of a
pearl, They kept this state afloat.
All Hesperian Press books
are printed on quality paper and will not discolour with age.
They are section sewn, the pages will not drop out and the binding will
not crack. This book is made to last.
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