The Mystery of the Beeswax Ship

An intriguing item from Jim Klein on the Marine History List.     They are now filming the search for the cannons from the Beeswax wreck.   From the Beeswax Wreck Project site: One of the most popular mysteries of the Oregon Coast … Continue reading

Clocks from the Monitor’s Engine Room and the Lusitania’s Captain

Thanks to Alaric Bond for passing along two articles about historic maritime clocks.   The conservators at the Mariner’s Museum have restored the engine room clock from the USS Monitor which sank in 1862.   On the other side of the Atlantic, … Continue reading

The Talisker Bounty Boat Begins its Epic Voyage

Two hundred and twenty one years ago yesterday, the crew of HMS Bounty staged a mutiny that remains famous to this day.   Four sailors are attempting to recreate Captain Bligh’s epic 3,700 nautical mile voyage in a 23 foot long open boat … Continue reading

For Sale: Neil Young’s Classic Baltic Trader

I’ve always been a fan of Baltic traders.  They were serious working craft.  They aren’t  necessarily graceful but do possess a certain robust beauty.  The schooner W N Ragland, a Baltic trader built in 1913, converted to a yacht, is for sale. For … Continue reading

Seized, A Sea Captains Adventures – Battling Scoundrels and Pirates while Recovering Stolen Ships in the World’s Most Troubled Waters

Max Hardberger’s Seized, a Sea Captains Adventures – Battling Scoundrels and Pirates while Recovering Stolen Ships in the World’s Most Troubled Waters is a fascinating account of one man’s remarkable career and personal journey. In addition to working professionally as … Continue reading

Fur, Fortune, and Empire: The Epic History of the Fur Trade in America

In 2007, Eric Jay Dolin wrote Leviathan, The History of Whaling In America, a wonderful book that follows the American whale fisheries from shore whaling, to the fleets of whale ships that sailed in every ocean, to the industry’s decline in the … Continue reading

Headline Wars over Whales

There is an interesting conflict going on over the new draft proposal by the International Whaling Commission which would allow limited commercial  whaling at levels significantly lower than currently practiced by Japan, Iceland and Norway.   Depending on who you listen to this is either a good thing – … Continue reading

Right Whales in Block Island Sound, Whale Poop & Global Warming

Recently almost one hundred endangered right whales were observed feeding in the waters of Block Island Sound. Given that only between 350 and 400 of the North Atlantic Right Whales are believed to currently exist, the gathering was quite unusual. … Continue reading

Abby Heads for Cape Town and Jessica Battles Huge Waves

Abby Sunderland’s attempt to become the youngest sailor to sail around the world non-stop ended as she decided to put into Cape Town due to mechanical failures.  The boat’s main autopilot has been giving her problems during the voyage recently … Continue reading

Pirate Weekend in Newburgh, NY and Real Pirates Charged in Norfolk

This week HMS Bounty, the replica ship built for the 1960 movie, “Mutiny on the Bounty,”  will be the centerpiece of the “Pirate Weekend”  in Newburgh, New York, on the Hudson River, sixty miles north of new York City.  The Bounty … Continue reading