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🗓️ 9 April 2024
⏱️ 48 minutes
🔗️ Recording | iTunes | RSS
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0:00.0 | Scott here with another episode of the History Unplugged Podcast. |
0:07.0 | One of the most important professions in early American history that has essentially disappeared is Whaling. That's because of the products |
0:14.7 | derived from whales were used in all sorts of ways in pre-industrial America. A processed whale |
0:19.2 | provided whale oil, which was used to make candles and for oil lamps. |
0:23.2 | Fat was used to make soap and butter, |
0:24.8 | and bones were used in fashion to make corsets and hoop skirts. |
0:27.8 | Whaling was also extremely dangerous. |
0:29.9 | Hermann Nelville wasn't exaggerating here. |
0:32.0 | To catch a whale, a crew of six to eight men would leave the main vessel in a whale boat, |
0:35.9 | row up to it silently, and then a harpooner would thrust a harpoon into the whale's body. |
0:40.1 | After the whale dive, the boat would be pulled along in what was called an antucket sleigh ride, |
0:44.1 | and then when it resurfaced, they would lance a whale, kill it, and bring it back to the ship. |
0:48.0 | Now a whole lot could go wrong here. A whale can easily capsize the boat, |
0:51.4 | bludging the men or throwing them into the water, which isn't pleasant when |
0:54.7 | you're wailing up near the Arctic Circle. |
0:56.5 | And that says nothing about the general harsh conditions of seafaring life with storms, hostile encounters |
1:01.5 | with South Pacific natives, or dealing with cannibals in Fiji. |
1:05.5 | All of this really happened, and in today's episode we're speaking with Alexander Brash, |
1:09.6 | whose great-great-grandfather, Robert Armstrong, was a whaler and spent 10 years traveling the world, |
1:14.4 | encountering Peruvian villagers, Pacific Islanders, Maori warriors in New Zealand, |
1:18.7 | the aforementioned cannibals. |
1:20.5 | We discussed this account today, what it was like to be a whaler and |
... |
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