Disaster | Accident

The Horror of the Essex Whaling Ship

Credit: Kean Collection/Archive Photos/Getty Images
Whalers always brought multiple boats on their hunting voyages-they rowed out to the whales using smaller vessels and that vantage point allowed for better aim with their harpoons.

Barely a year into its two-and-a-half-year voyage, the Essex whaling ship was attacked and sunk by a sperm whale thousands of miles from land in 1820.

The Essex whaling ship launched from Nantucket, Massachusetts, on August 12, 1819, prepared for a two-and-a-half-year voyage. The crew of 20 headed to the west coast of South America to hunt. Delays prevented the Essex from reaching the whaling ground until November of 1820. Upon arrival, the men found that the whale population was depleted. It was days before the crew spotted their first whale. On one fateful day, an unusually large sperm whale, nearly 85-feet-long, approached the Essex. Immediately the crew was taken aback by its odd behavior. "I could distinctly see him smite his jaws together," one sailor remembered, "as if distracted with rage and fury." The whale rammed full-speed ahead into the ship, only to return and plow through the bow-the Essex sank so quickly few supplies could be salvaged. Thousands of miles from land, in three 20-foot boats, the surviving whalers strategized how to survive. Dehydrated and with dwindling supplies, the men began to starve. As some succumbed to hunger, their bodies were eaten by survivors. Yet, the dead didn't provide enough sustenance, so the living began sacrificing themselves for the crew's survival. Before the men were rescued, seven men were killed and eaten. Ultimately, most of the Essex whalers spent their remaining years on terra firma, and their horrific saga inspired Herman Melville's 1851 classic, Moby-Dick.