Sunday 1 April 2012

A Sailor's Lot


Mr N has a very salty family background; one of his direct ancestors from the North East of England was a ship's captain, two direct ancestors met their deaths in shipwrecks and at least five other close relatives from the past were sailors or master mariners, most of whom were lost at sea. It was a very risky business.


                                                           
If you wish to listen to an appropriate musical accompaniment to this tragic tale please click on the arrow on the picture above.


John Foulstone was the above mentioned ship's captain and here is an account of the night he drowned, almost 213 years ago to the day, on April 5th 1799, bad weather for April...



                                                The coast at Seaham


Lord Byron was married at Seaham in January 1815 - it bored him (and so did his new wife). He wrote to a friend:
"Upon this dreary coast we have nothing but county meetings and shipwrecks; and I have this day dined upon fish, which probably dined upon the crews of several colliers lost in the late gales."
We do hope he choked on a fish bone.
                                                             
Captain Foulstone's gravestone can be found propped up in an untidy corner of St Thomas's churchyard, Stockton upon Tees. 
                                         
                                                           
His daughter Priscilla lost her father, two brothers and two sons to the sea so we feel it is not by chance that her youngest son, Mr N's Great Great Grandfather, became a sailmaker by trade.


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Despite the sadness of this family history, or perhaps because of it, we love to find little antique mementoes of a life on the ocean wave. Small items, carved by sailors for loved ones, from animal bones saved from the stew-pot, are known as scrimshaw.


                       A delicate bodkin or stiletto for making holes in fabric.

              A combined pipe tamper and seal in the form of a shapely leg.




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6 comments:

  1. Hello:
    This is an absolutely fascinating post which is illustrated with the most intriguing nautical items and accompanied, as you suggest, with an appropriate song still playing as we write this.

    But such mishaps and dangers at sea make Mad Boys almost appear to be a safe bet!

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    1. I think that Mr N and I are a little too timid for our own good sometimes!
      Thank you for looking at my post.

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  2. Interesting post and I just love the little tamper.

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    1. Thank you! I love the Hill of Crosses that you shared.

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  3. Thank you for you comment on my blog. Sorry I can't reply to you direct but you appear as a 'no-reply blogger'. I think you need to change something in your settings? I will look out for the film - sounds interesting.

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    1. Thank you - I will look into it. (The film is enchanting, for young and old.)

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