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Journal of the Timor (Ship) out of Isle of Wight, England, mastered by John T. Parker and kept by Edward P. Stacy, on a whaling voyage between 1819 and 1820, 1819 - 1820

 Item — Volume: Wh T585 1819j
Identifier: logbook_vol_720

Scope and Contents

From the Collection:

The collection includes nearly 800 logbooks, documenting over 1,000 voyages and ranges from the 18th to the 20th century.

Dates

  • 1819 - 1820

Conditions Governing Access

Materials are open to research.

Extent

From the Collection: 650 Linear Feet

Language of Materials

From the Collection: English

General

Journal of a South Atlantic whaling voyage that began March 2 1819 off the Isle of Wight, and ended February 9th 1820 off Gravesend. During this time the “Timor” caught thirty-four whales, mostly right whales with an occasional humpback, and stowed hundreds of barrels of oil. Most whales were caught while working out of Angra Pequena and Walvis Bays, off the coast of what is now Namibia, and in the waters northwest of South Africa. "Timor" also fished for a time with the English whale ship “Emma,” including an agreement between the two ships during the first two weeks in June not to lower for a whale unless she had a calf with her. At one point the two ships got in a dispute over a whale, and the “Emma” departed about a month later, with “a full ship.” Whales taken are represented by Edward Stacy’s drawings of whale flukes. Perry, who was a harpooner, goes into about the ship’s whalecraft and the preparations for whaling that took up the first three months of the voyage. Also described are encounters with Khoikhoi who are described in some detail, including a party sent off by a missionary to sell cattle to the whalemen in order to raise money for the mission.

Repository Details

Part of the Providence Public Library Repository

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