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History Unplugged Podcast

How Five Castaways Survived After Being Left for Dead on the Falklands in 1812

History Unplugged Podcast

History Unplugged

Society & Culture, History

4.23.7K Ratings

🗓️ 9 July 2024

⏱️ 46 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Charles H. Barnard, captain of the American sealing brig Nanina, had only the best of intentions. His aim was to ensure the survival of the people under his care. On June 11, 1813, Barnard and four other volunteers disembarked the anchored Nanina, climbed into a small boat, and sailed about 10 miles from New Island to Beaver Island, both part of the Falkland Islands archipelago in the South Atlantic. Armed with knives, clubs, lances, and guns, and with the assistance of Barnard’s trusty dog, Cent, the five men planned to kill birds and hogs and take them back to the Americans and British who remained on the Nanina and were fast running out of fresh provisions. It was a mission of mercy.

The hunt went well, and within a few days the boat was filled to the gunwales with the bloody carcasses of slain animals. But when the men sailed back to New Island late on June 14, they were greeted with an alarming sight. The Nanina was gone. Stunned, confused, and angry, the men hauled the boat up onto the beach and, according to Barnard, “awaited the approach of daylight in the most impatient and tormenting anxiety.” Sleeping fitfully in the cold night air, they hoped that in the morning light they would find a letter telling them why the Nanina had left, and when it was coming back.

A frantic search at dawn turned up nothing: no note either in a bottle or hung conspicuously from a piece of wood or a boulder. They saw only sand, rocks, scrubby vegetation, and birds in the distance, walking on the beach or flying overhead.

The events leading up to this abandonment, and what happened afterward, produce a story with so many unlikely threads, and a cast including such exceptionally colorful characters, that one might think that it sprang from the pen of a fiction writer with an overactive imagination. And yet, the story is true. It is a tale involving a shipwreck, British and Americans meeting under the most stressful circumstances in a time of war, kindness and compassion, drunkenness, the birth of a child, treachery, greed, lying, a hostile takeover, stellar leadership, ingenuity, severe privation, the great value of a good dog, perseverance, endurance, threats, bullying, banishment, a perilous thousand-mile open-ocean journey in a 17.5-foot boat, an improbable rescue mission in a rickety ship, and legal battles over a dubious and disgraceful wartime prize. And it all started with two ships—one American, the other British—sailing to the Falklands from different directions.

To explore this story is today’s guest, Eric Dolan, author of Left for Dead: Shipwreck, Treachery, and Survival at the Edge of the World.”

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

It's going to hear with another episode of the History Unplugged Podcast.

0:07.0

A sailor's greatest fear in the age of sailing ships, second only to drowning, was being left for dead on a deserted islands and cast away by his crewmates.

0:15.6

This was especially true for whalers and seal hunters who went to some of the most remote parts of the world,

0:20.4

and the islands in the far polar north or south, weren't the lush islands of Polynesia,

0:24.4

but stark-bearing hellscapes where there was no trees and almost no food, but plenty of wind and cold.

0:29.6

This is what happened to five castaways stranded on the Falcon Islands during the War of 1812,

0:34.5

which happened because of a chance encounter between an American ceiling vessel, a shipwrecked British brig, carrying

0:39.8

prisoners from Australia, and a British warship.

0:42.4

Misunderseings and mistrust led to the abandonment of three British sailors and two Americans

0:46.8

in the unforgiving terrain of the Falklands for 18 months.

0:50.3

Today's guest is Eric Dole, author of Left for Dead, Shipwreck, Chutchery, and survival at the edge of the world.

0:55.6

We look at the story of banishment, a thousand mile open ocean voyage in a 17 foot long boat,

1:00.6

an unlikely rescue, and ensuing legal battles over a contentious wartime prize.

1:05.0

The story gives us a great sense of how dangerous exploration was in the age of sale and the stories

1:09.7

that happen against the backdrop of a global war.

1:12.1

Hope we enjoy this discussion with Eric Dole.

1:14.0

And one more thing before we get started with this episode,

1:19.0

a quick break for word from our sponsors.

1:21.0

The history of the popes of Rome and Christianity reaches into nearly every aspect of history.

1:28.0

In the History of the Pay-P-P-P-P-Pahsee podcast, we step over the rope.

1:31.6

We dive into discover more about the people events and

1:34.9

background that define the influence of the popes of Rome and church not only on

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