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Transatlantic
Stephen Fox
Harper Collins
From Transatlantic by Stephen Fox. HarperCollins Publishers
ISBN: 0-0601-9595-9
Available for purchase at amazon.com
Chapter One: The Sailing Packets
Before steamships started crossing the North Atlantic, the best way to travel between Europe and America was by the sailing ships called packets. Built and run mainly by Americans, the packet lines introduced new concepts and comfort levels for ocean voyages. They dominated the transatlantic traffic for decades, setting key precedents for the steamships that eventually replaced them. Along with their more famous contemporaries, the whaling and clipper ships, they comprised the golden age of American sail. Of these three types, the packets lasted the longest and made the most voyages and money for their owners and crews. Yet today whalers and clippers remain drenched in popular legend, while the packets are scarcely known beyond dedicated circles of ship buffs. No packet builder ever became as famous as Donald McKay with his clippers, and no novelist ever wrote a Moby Dick about the packets. They just did their jobs quietly and well, year after year, and then passed into the historical obscurity reserved for predictable competence.
A group of textile importers in New York started the first packet line. The main founder, Jeremiah Thompson, was an English immigrant from Yorkshire who had come to New York at age seventeen in 1801 to join his uncle in representing the family's woolen manufacturing business. From that base they engaged in shipping and shipowning with three local associates. These five men all lived near the waterfront at the southern tip of Manhattan. Four of them were Quakers. (Jeremiah Thompson, an active Friend, was an officer in the New York Manumission Society, dedicated to freeing slaves; but he also made a fortune by exporting raw cotton, grown in the American South by slave labor.)
Thompson had a breakthrough idea for improving ocean travel. At the time, a
shipowner might advertise a ship's day of departure, but the captain would then
wait until enough cargo and passengers had been loaded, and wind and weather
seemed favorable, before weighing anchor. A passenger hoping to embark might
have to hang around the docks, spending money on food and lodging and wasting
time, for a week or more. Thompson, dealing in volatile markets for finished
imports and raw exports, wanted faster, more reliable service. He conceived
the notion of a transatlantic ship "line": several vessels under coordinated
private management, sailing on known dates between established ports, and locked
into an unchanging departure schedule for the foreseeable future.
In the fall of 1817, the Thompsons and their three associates placed a notice
in New York's newspapers. "In order to furnish frequent and regular conveyances
for GOODS and PASSENGERS," they announced, "the subscribers have undertaken
to establish a line of vessels between NEW-YORK and LIVERPOOL, to sail from
each place on a certain day in every month throughout the year." They listed
the line's first four ships: three-masted and square-rigged, and larger than
average size for their time at around 110 feet long and 400 tons. The Pacific,
launched in 1807 and the oldest of the four, was especially fast; earlier that
year she had made a run to Liverpool in only seventeen days. "These ships
have all been built in New-York, of the best materials," the owners asserted.
"They are known to be remarkably fast sailers, and their accommodations
for passengers are uncommonly extensive and commodious." Thompson and his
partners were promising a daring trifecta of speed, comfort, and predictability-qualities
previously unknown on the North Atlantic.
The first two ships of the line sailed from New York and Liverpool in January
1818. For identification they showed a large black ball painted on their fore
topsail, at the highest point of the first mast. The "Black Ball Line"
at once earned a tight reputation for minding the calendar. Fighting winter
gales, the Pacific made a slow return trip to New York of forty-eight days;
she was then unloaded and reloaded in an impossibly short six days and left
for Liverpool as scheduled on the fifth of April. Later that year, the Black
Ball's Courier on leaving Liverpool met the Pacific coming in, and when approaching
New York met the Black Baller Amity going out. The line added more ships, allowing
two sailings a month each way. For any eastbound trip under twenty-two days
or westbound run under thirty-five, Jeremiah Thompson gave the captain a new
coat, with a dress for his wife. After two years, even Niles' Weekly Register,
from the rival port of Baltimore, had to concede that the Black Ball ships were
running with the speed and almost the regularity of a horse-drawn mail coach.
"Such steadiness and despatch is truly astonishing," said the Register,
"and, in a former age, would have been incredible."
Success brought competition. Atlantic packet lines started running from Philadelphia
and Boston. Early in 1824, the Boston line's Emerald caught a rare easterly
gale and rode it all the way home from Liverpool in an astonishing seventeen
days, a westward record for years. In New York, the Red Star and Blue Swallowtail
lines competed directly with Black Ball. Other new lines ran to London and to
Le Havre on the northern coast of France. The sharp rivalry among all these
lines added another new concept to transatlantic travel. Ship technologies in
Europe and America had been essentially static for some two hundred years; conservative
builders and owners resisted innovations and kept turning out the same old models.
Packet competition kicked ship design into the progressive nineteenth century.
Constructed mainly in shipyards along the East River in New York, ever bigger
and fancier, the new packets became the largest and finest ships yet built in
America, evolving more quickly than any other type of vessel.
Black Ball set the initial pace. The Canada, 132 feet and 525 tons, was launched
in March 1823. "We have never examined a ship which was in all respects
equal to her," said a local newspaper. Her dining cabin offered polished
mahogany tables and pillars, sofas, and plush crimson draperies. The men's cabins,
brightened by skylights of ground glass in the main deck overhead, had olive-colored
damask silk curtains. In the ladies' cabins the curtains were fine blue silk.
A year later, the Blue Swallowtail Line answered Black Ball with its own York.
To the now-expected mahogany woodwork, the York added a library with a printed
catalog, redwood pillars finished in imitation bronze, and venetian blinds in
the cabin doors that allowed ventilation with privacy. Cabin washstands doubled
as desks. A Turkish carpet covered the floor and muffled shipboard sounds. The
ladies' lounge even featured a small piano flanked by large mirrors. "In
the comfort and entertainment which the American ships afford," a Liverpool
newspaper's account of the York acknowledged, ". . . their superiority
over British vessels is most conspicuous."
While ship interiors became plusher and better equipped, the East River shipwrights
puzzled over how to increase speed without losing cargo space. By slow degrees,
the rounded bow and plump midship lines of the first packets gave way to faster
ships with longer, thinner hulls and sharper bows and sterns. Shipwrights believed
intuitively that speed also required a V-shaped hull, tapering down to a narrow
keel at the bottom of the ship. These design tendencies all meant less payload
and lower profits for a ship of a given length.
A solution to this tightening dilemma was discovered accidentally. In the early
1830s, Edward Knight Collins of New York started running coastal packets to
New Orleans. Because the bar at the mouth of the Mississippi River required
ships of shallow draft, the New Orleans packets were built with flat bottoms;
speed was not deemed so important in the coastal traffic. But it turned out,
to general surprise, that flat hulls did not make the ships any slower or harm
their sailing qualities. A flat bottom also let a ship rest upright when grounded
by a low tide.
In 1836 Collins launched his Dramatic Line of flat-bottomed packets to Liverpool,
with ships named for famous theatrical figures. Flamboyant and excessive, indeed
theatrical, and bold to the point of recklessness, Collins left the competition
in his foaming wake. His Shakespeare ran 142 feet and 747 tons; his Garrick,
Sheridan, and Siddons, 158 feet and 895 tons each; and the Roscius, at 168 feet,
was the first New York packet to exceed 1,000 tons (and to cost $100,000). Collins
also moved his passenger cabins from below deck, where they were subject to
nauseating bilge odors, to a long deckhouse on the main deck stretching from
the stern almost to the central mainmast. Up there, the cabins got more air
and light-but without making the ship top-heavy or harming her behavior or safety.
The cabins themselves were three times larger than those on the first Black
Ball ships. The Dramatic Line's food, wines, and decor all set new standards
of elegance. And the ships were fast. Over their first ten years, the New York
packets had averaged twenty-four days out, thirty-eight days home-excellent
times compared to those of previous ships. By 1839 the Collins packets, the
swiftest in the trade, had cut those averages to twenty days, twelve hours and
thirty days, twelve hours. Ocean travel had never before made such vaulting
strides in only two decades.
An ocean voyage, in this era or any other, had to work around three endemic
aspects of the experience: seasickness, danger, and boredom. The worst bouts
of mal de mer usually lifted after the first few days but could last longer,
especially for women and in heavy seas. Any ship-in particular a sailing vessel-remained
at the mercy of mighty natural forces, and on the heavily traveled North Atlantic
might also collide with another ship or with an iceberg. Every day passengers
had to find ways to kill time, a search that became more desperate and exhausted
toward the end of the passage. "A sea voyage . . . is a sort of Purgatory
under the best of circumstances," William Young of Halifax, Nova Scotia,
wrote in his journal aboard a packet in 1839. "You can follow no regular
employment and tho' not sick, I am never quite well enough for study. You can't
write on account of the motion and one's reading is uninstructive and desultory."
Young and his fellow passengers enjoyed clean berths, attentive service, abundant
food and drink, and clear sailing. "And yet, from a sea voyage, Good Lord
deliver me."
A packet voyage began with the captain. A safe passage depended absolutely on
his skill, judgment, and tenacity. He had to make the daily computations with
sextant and chronometer that established the ship's position and heading. At
any time of day and night, he might order sailors aloft to set or take in sail.
All steel and velvet, he was supposed to charm the passengers and, on occasion,
bully the crew. His authority was final in all shipboard matters; yet he was
ultimately just another mortal dealing with the unknowable mysteries of sailing
the ocean. Every sailing ship displayed her own individual personality: what
sailors called "ship sense," an ineffable quality of seeming alive,
even of having consciousness. Under way, each seagoing amalgam of natural materials-of
wood, hemp, and canvas-thrummed a unique vibration which the captain could feel
tingling from the rudder to the wheel, and hear blowing overhead through the
sails and rigging. The trick was to pay careful attention and work with the
ship, not to dominate her. To the extent that a packet voyage responded to mere
human will and intention, it came down to a captain and his ship getting along
well.
Passengers would pay their one-way fares of $140 to secure a particular captain
as much as for his particular ship or packet line. An especially popular commander-such
as George Maxwell of the Black Ball, Nash DeCost of the Blue Swallowtail, or
Nathaniel Palmer of the Dramatic-reliably attracted extra business. That meant
more money for the captain himself, because he typically owned a one-eighth
stake in his ship and received 5 percent of the freight and steerage charges
and 25 percent of the cabin fares. The governments in Washington and London
also paid him two cents for each American letter and two pence (four cents)
for each British letter he carried. These extras brought his nominal annual
salary of $360 up to as much as $5,000 a year, a plush income at the time. The
packets therefore drew the services of the best captains on the Atlantic.
The crews were made up of sailors from many nations of Europe and North America.
The cooks and stewards were usually black Americans, "clever mulattoes,"
according to James Fenimore Cooper, "who have caught the civilization of
the kitchen." Passengers had most of their shipboard contact with the stewards,
who served food, cleaned and fetched, and answered redundant questions about
the weather and general course of the trip. The sailors kept to themselves,
bunking in cramped quarters in the forecastle at the bow of the ship and conversing
in the arcane, excluding patois of the sea. Passengers would marvel, from a
distance, at the sailors' strength and agility as they danced around the rigging
in all weathers and acted variously as tailor, carpenter, cooper, stevedore,
clerk, and astronomer. It was easy to romanticize their often brief, dangerous
lives. Captains drove the packets hard, always to the limit that sails and masts
could bear, straining for speed. That meant constant action in the rigging (especially
in bad weather), much bellowing and cursing, and sailors occasionally falling
to their sudden deaths.
Everyone, ships and humans, remained at the indifferent mercy of the North Atlantic
Ocean, in particular of the capricious wind. "We are pensioners of the
wind," Ralph Waldo Emerson wrote in his journal at sea in 1833. "All
our prosperity, enterprize, temper come and go with the fickle air. If the wind
should forget to blow we must eat our masts." A ship could lie becalmed
in midocean for a week or more, the wilted sails slapping irritatingly against
the masts, the ship rising and falling helplessly on the endless swells. At
the other extreme, too much wind brought its own delights. In April 1831 the
President of the London Black X Line picked her way from New York through twelve
straight days of cold, dense fogs and heavy, rolling seas. A fierce gale pushed
waves almost up to her topmast. As the ship rolled back and forth on her bow-to-stern
axis, water came over the five-foot bulwarks onto the deck, then into the cabins
below. The captain, standing in water up to his knees, could not leave his post
for twenty-four hours. The President limped into port after a hard passage of
thirty-nine days. Other ships at journey's end might come within tantalizing
sight of land and then have to spend days tacking back and forth along the coast,
held at sea by contrary winds.
A recurring drama of initiation awaited those crossing for the first time. The
first few days at sea might seem deceptively tranquil. No prior experience of
the ocean from the vantage point of a beach or an offshore boat could adequately
prepare a neophyte for the North Atlantic in full cry. In November 1835, Fanny
Appleton of Boston (the future wife of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow) embarked
on the packet Francis Depau for Le Havre. Eighteen years old, bright-eyed and
curious, she dismissed the fourteen other passengers as "well meaning,
uninteresting folks" but liked watching the sailors and the shifting sea.
Commanders often managed to find time for pretty young women on board their
ships; so Captain Henry Robinson gave her a puzzling lesson in navigation and
"shooting the sun" with his sextant at noon to find the Depau's position.
Five days out, running before a brisk following wind, the ship dashed along
at ten knots, prancing like a sea horse. "What a glorious exhilaration
in this fine sea-air, a reckless thought-defying sense of liberty and life,"
Appleton wrote in her journal, with the joy of a cosseted young woman now perceiving
a wider world. "The exhilaration of our speed fills us with a mad glee
. . . we run and shout."
The wind continued as the sea got rougher. Still bowling along at ten knots,
the ship pitched and rolled and tossed. Appleton felt dizzy and exhausted, had
trouble dressing, and-one week out-started longing for land. After a miserable
night, she "wondered where the romance of the sea was found-certainly not
below the deck." She wept in despair. The steward brought tea. The constant
motion and cacophony of wind, sea, and shipboard sounds kept her from reading
and writing. "Oh this eternity of noise and motion stupefying the brain,
exhausting the body. Truly a ship-board life teaches one . . . humility: we
are brought to our lowest ebb of self-respect." Her mood fluctuated wildly
for the rest of the trip, depending on the weather. Like many sea diarists,
she gradually ran short of fresh material and made briefer entries as the journey
dragged on. Other passengers expressed surprise that she could still write so
much about so little. "I am determined to prove one can write a Journal
at sea," she vowed-and then left three straight days blank. ("Little
worth recording," she noted.) The ship reached Le Havre after twenty-five
days, none too soon for Fanny Appleton.
Most of the cabin passengers on packets were men: British textile merchants
and army officers, and American businessmen. Thrown together at close quarters
amid the Anglo-American political tensions of the time, they sometimes bristled
at each other. More typically, as frequent transatlantic travelers they settled
amicably into the shipboard routines they had come to know well. In this quite
masculine atmosphere, isolated by time and circumstances, they could dress casually
and indulge at will in boyish recreations. "We endeavored to amuse ourselves
as best we could," one man noted, "and, for the want of work, turned
boys again, and went to play." They shot rifles at random targets in the
rigging, sang songs, made bets, played cards and games, held mock courts, told
jokes and stories; they drank all day long. Even the tightly buttoned Ralph
Waldo Emerson, on the Black Baller New York from Liverpool in 1833, succumbed
to shipboard spirits. "These are the amusements of wise men in this sad
place," he decided. "I tipple with all my heart here. May I not?"
In midsummer 1832, the English actress Fanny Kemble, bemused and amused, watched
the men on a packet in a festive Saturday-night mood of drinking, dancing, singing,
and romping around on the quarterdeck at the stern. They toasted their absent
wives and sweethearts, in the tradition of sailors. The captain proposed "The
Ladies-God bless them." ("And the Lord deliver us!" someone added.)
The most promisingly pleasant aspect of packet life available to all cabin passengers,
drunk or sober, was the food. A housed-over longboat on deck held a three-tiered
menagerie: sheep and pigs on the bottom, then ducks and geese, and hens and
chickens on the top. The ship's cow lived in another structure nearby, not happily.
These animals provided fresh meat, eggs, milk, and cream for the laden plates
in the dining saloon. On the Black Ball's Europe in 1833, breakfast consisted
of ham, eggs, bacon, mutton cutlets, shadfish, rolls, and cognac. Dinner ran
to three comparable courses, good pastries, seven kinds of alcohol, and dried
fruits for dessert. The long, rolling swells of the North Atlantic left many
passengers unable to eat or hold down their meals; but whenever circumstances
allowed, especially during the early weeks of the voyage, the food and drink
were generous.
Except for the Le Havre lines, which brought over thousands of German immigrants
to America, the packets carried few steerage passengers until after 1840. During
the first two decades, steerage business in general was just an afterthought;
if a packet didn't fill the 'tween-deck's upper hold with fine freight, the
ship's carpenter would fashion temporary bunks of rough, unplaned lumber, and
the steerage would take on human cargo at twenty dollars a head. That fare paid
only for the cramped bunk and a place on deck to cook. Steerage passengers had
to bring their own food, pots and pans, and plates and utensils. The tightly
packed steerage became a fetid horror at night and in bad weather. Two small
ventilating hatches had to be closed in rain or heavy seas. The steerage air
mingled a stifling bouquet of foul bilge water, rotting wood and ropes, and
human sweat, vomit, and excrement. At times these closed-down conditions went
on for days, getting worse until the storm lifted.
Everybody, cabin and steerage passengers alike, felt better up on deck. There
one could breathe fresh air and take walks, play shuffleboard, and watch the
sea and the other passengers. A dampening shipboard rhythm of ennui and lassitude
gradually settled onto the company. Earnest intentions of reading, writing,
and needlework were laid aside, and people lounged away the time. Even the most
trivial daily events-meeting and (after due inquiry) identifying another ship,
sighting a whale or porpoise, or discovering a stowaway-took on gripping, inordinate
significance. Wagers were placed on the daily run and the date of arrival. After
evening tea, the dining saloon might hold lectures, charades, rounds of whist,
and singing. A bold man could even venture, trolling, into the ladies' cabin.
"This snuggery affords tolerable convenience for a little flirtation,"
noted the Irish actor Tyrone Power, "if you are lucky enough to get one
up."
On clear nights, far from the obscuring lamps of shore, and in the prevailing
deprived mood of being easily diverted, passengers seized on natural light shows.
The sun would fall into the western horizon, a blazing ball that slowly guttered
out as though being submerged in the sea. The moon would rise, never before
so distinctly. Stars filled the sky, brighter and denser than when seen from
land. Whole new constellations revealed themselves to the naked eye. In every
direction, the sky arched all the way down to the horizon. Shooting stars zoomed
around this vast inverted bowl, and the aurora borealis looked deeper and more
brilliant in its roses and purples. From the Europe in 1835, cruising along
at nine knots, Anna Eliot Ticknor of Boston watched the phosphorescence tossed
up by the bow. The foam at the stern glittered like diamonds. Distant waves
broke and lit up. Porpoises darted around, leaving trails like seaborne comets.
The sails and rigging glowed. It was all so wild and beautiful.
People stayed up late because sleeping was so difficult. After the sumptuous
meals and lounges, the private sleeping quarters inevitably disappointed: small,
unheated, dimly lit, and poorly ventilated. "About as big as that allowed
to a pointer in a dog-kennel," the English novelist Frederick Marryat groused.
"I thought that there was more finery than comfort." The berth, generously
called a bed, offered thin sacking over boards and a hollow down the middle
that was supposed to hold the occupant in place. Emerson's sides grew sore from
rolling back and forth. "Oh for a bed!" Fanny Kemble keened. "A
real bed! Any manner of bed, but a bed on shipboard!" Settled down for
sleep, a passenger could not miss the remarkable, unexpected variety of noises
on a wooden sailing ship. The waves kept up a steady background of thumps and
pulses, generating constant small motions in the seams of the hull, flexing
and twisting, which caused sharp creaking sounds in the jointed woodwork of
bulkheads, cabin partitions, and steerage bunks. Passengers lay awake in their
berths, trying not to hear. The animal barnyard overhead maintained a running,
distressed commentary. The mates and sailors yelled back and forth, their footfalls
thuddingly heavy at night, as they changed sails and scraped down the deck with
screeching holystones. Wind whistled through the rigging. Morning could take
a long time coming.
The English author and protosociologist Harriet Martineau wrote the fullest,
most forgiving account of a packet voyage. In August 1834, thirty-two years
old, she had just completed a popular series of short stories that improbably
urged the beauties of classical economics. For over two years she had written
so constantly that she could not spare time even to take a walk. With that work
finally done, basking in her first great success, she booked passage for New
York on the Red Star Line's United States, 140 feet and 650 tons. Martineau
looked forward to a restful month on the ocean without mail, newspapers, or
intruding strangers, and then would travel around America to report on that
boisterous, unmatured experiment in democracy.
She cataloged the twenty-three cabin passengers on board: a Prussian physician,
a New England preacher, a Boston merchant "with his sprightly and showy
young wife," a high-spirited young South Carolinian returning from study
in Germany, a newly married couple who kept to themselves, a Scottish army officer
whose many crotchets amused the young people, an elderly widow, a Scottish lady
of undisclosed age, and a young man from Yorkshire. The rest were English and
American merchants, transatlantic veterans not deemed interesting enough by
Martineau for detailed comment. With two or three exceptions, they all mingled
congenially into a single traveling party.
The voyage began slowly, dawdling through calm days of little wind. The Americans,
longing for home, became anxious. Martineau seized the welcome quiet time to
think and be still. On the third day the wind freshened and the sea churned,
leaving the dining saloon empty at dinner as most passengers remained seasick
in their berths. The next morning, Martineau rose unsteadily but forced herself
to dress and go up on deck to escape the bilious sights and activities below.
Captain Nathan Holdredge took her to a seat by the rail. She looked out to sea,
avoided noticing the invalids strewn around the deck, and felt better after
half an hour. The wind was too strong for a large, flaring bonnet, but she tried
a warm black silk cap, snugly fitted, which she recommended for any woman at
sea.
An uncommon traveler, Martineau had two qualities that maintained her spirits
on the ocean: a bottomless curiosity and delight in new experiences, and an
absolute refusal to be discouraged by anything whatever. After six days of mostly
unhelpful winds, the United States was still only three hundred miles from Liverpool;
at that rate the voyage would take two months. No matter. "Our mode of
life was very simple and quiet; to me, very delightful," she wrote. "A
voyage is the most pleasant pastime I have ever known." After breakfast,
the happiest meal of the day, she sat down to write a long article, the one
major task she had set herself for the trip. The New England preacher would
find her a place on deck, out of the wind and sun, and there she wrote through
luncheon until two o'clock. Children from the steerage peered at the famous
lady writer over her shoulder and from behind chests and casks. One particular
man planted himself in front of her, arms akimbo, and stared at the point of
her pen, transfixed by the mysterious act of female composition.
Finished writing for the day, she took her position at the rail and exulted
in the passing scene. If she wanted to be left alone, she held a volume of Shakespeare.
Otherwise someone joined her. "I strongly suspect," she later reflected,
"that those who complain of the monotony of the ocean do not use their
eyes as they do on land." She saw Portuguese men-of-war, flying fish, dolphins,
and the web-footed birds called Mother Carey's chickens. A sail on the horizon
brought everyone over to look and exclaim. Early one morning a distant ship
made signals of distress. Great flutters of excitement; "the faces of the
gentlemen began to wear, in anticipation, an expression of manly compassion."
Captain Holdredge took in sail and hove to. The other ship, it turned out, had
only lost her longitude bearing. Holdredge shouted it out, angry over losing
valuable time for such a small matter, and ordered the sails up again.
The captain, kind and patient even with repeated, unanswerable questions, could
never forget his mandate for maximum speed at all times. One day Martineau noticed
another ship ahead on the same westerly course. She told the captain, who took
a hard look through his telescope and then barked out sharp orders to the helmsman
and crew. The other ship was the Montreal of the rival Black X Line. Smaller
and slower, she had left England four days before the United States. An ocean
race was on. "Our captain left the dinner-table three times this first
day of the race, and was excessively anxious throughout. It was very exciting
to us all." In three days the United States overtook the Montreal and left
her far behind, slowly falling below the eastern horizon.
Most days were clear enough for visible sunsets. Everyone, from cabin and steerage
alike, gathered on deck. A few climbed up into the rigging. People grew quiet
except for pointing out particular features in the clouds or sea. As the sun
went under, some of the party stood on tiptoes, reaching for one last glimpse.
Then the normal talk and bustle resumed as walkers promenaded the deck, thirty
paces up and back.
After evening tea, Martineau avoided the convivial cabin and found a place to
herself at the stern. A true writer, an onlooker by nature, she craved a safe
solitude from which to watch developments. She studied the wake behind, "a
long train of pale fire," and the sails ahead, outlined against the sky
and stars. A night fog might scud through, thick and moving fast, with occasional
open spaces for the moon. Lost and engrossed, utterly content, sometimes she
forgot that she was at sea. Snatches of old songs floated through her head from
nowhere, and the first poems she had ever loved. "Such are the hours when
all that one has ever known or thought that is beautiful comes back softly and
mysteriously."
She did acknowledge a few discomforts at sea: rainy days that kept everyone
below in stifling air, and prolonged calms that made tempers short, provoking
rude behavior at dinner and accusations of cheating at shuffleboard. In midocean,
a ferocious storm lasted all night, to the disquieting sounds of breaking glass
and screaming women. Toward the end of the long voyage, the dried fruits got
moldy, and the kitchen ran out of cider, ale, claret, and soda water. In general,
though, Martineau denied the usual purported annoyances of ocean travel. She
made a list, in her methodical way, of all such claimed aggravations, along
with their (to her) satisfactory remedies.
1. Seasickness. ("An annoyance scarcely to be exaggerated
while it lasts." No remedy.)
2. The damp, clammy feel of everything one touches. (Wear gloves, and clothes
too worn to be spoiled. "In this latter device nearly the whole company
were so accomplished that it was hard to say who excelled.")
3. Lack of room. (Put everything away in tight, orderly fashion.)
4. The candles flare, dribble wax, and look untidy. (Avoid looking at candles;
go to the stern at night, which has its own, better lights.)
5. The seats and beds are too hard. (Have patience. Try air cushions.)
6. Freshwater use is limited. (Bathe in seawater, and drink cider at dinner.)
7. The cider may run out. (Switch to other beverages.)
8. The noise of sailors scraping the deck. (Again, patience; because the deck
must be scraped.)
9. The clamor overhead when the sails are shifted at night.
(Go back to sleep.)
10. Sour bread. (Eat biscuits.)
11. Getting sunburned. (Don't look in a mirror.)
Not even the North Atlantic Ocean could daunt such a temperament. (It should be noted that Martineau was partly deaf and therefore protected from the worst noises at sea.) After the restive final stretches of the passage, everyone's spirits rose as the ship approached America. People changed into their best clothes, not seen for weeks, in preparation for landing. The United States reached New York after forty-two days: "a long but agreeable voyage," she insisted.
By the late 1830s, twenty packet ships were running from New York to Liverpool, twelve more to London, and sixteen to Le Havre. Every month, a dozen packets left New York for Europe and a dozen more arrived; an average of one ship every thirty hours, all year long, regardless of the wind and weather. The packets suffered occasional collisions and founderings at sea, but only two accidents caused any loss of life over the first two decades. The Albion of the Black Ball Line sank off Ireland in 1822, killing forty-six people, and four years later the Crisis of the Black X Line disappeared on a westbound run with her crew and about a dozen passengers. Those two disasters aside, the packets had compiled-for the time-a remarkable record of fast, safe, predictable transatlantic travel.
According to testimony from both sides of the ocean, Americans were building
and running the finest sailing ships in the world. A London newspaper in 1834,
after comparing the safety records of the New York packets and the British government's
mail ships, urged the Admiralty to buy American vessels. In 1836, a committee
of the British Parliament inquiring into the problem of shipwrecks presented
evidence that American ships were better built than their British counterparts
(and thus preferred by shippers and insurance agents), and that American commanders
and officers were more educated and competent and American seamen more carefully
selected, more efficient, and better paid-to the point that the best British
sailors were defecting to American ships. American authorities could only happily
agree. Matthew Maury, an American naval officer and one of the founders of oceanography,
praised the New York packets in 1839 in language of patriotic but unchallenged
hyperbole: "For strength, safety, fleetness and beauty; and for a combination
of all the requisites of a good ship, in such admirable proportions, no nation
can boast of vessels, public or private, comparable to them."
The packets became, in some measure, the victims of their own success. They
had created the very notion of rapid technical improvement in transatlantic
travel. Passengers came to expect bigger, faster ships every few years. The
wind, however, could not be improved: it blew hard or not at all, from the east
or west, but always beyond any human control. Sailing ships could only depart
on a scheduled date. The time of arrival might then vary by weeks, depending
on the ocean's vagaries. Steam power extended the possibility of keeping a ship
on schedule, or nearly so, at both ends of the passage. But Americans became
so proficient and applauded at turning out wooden sailing ships that, as time
passed, they-in complacency and inertia-kept building those ships for too long,
far past their technological prime. In Great Britain, especially in Scotland,
other men were about to take over the leadership of transatlantic shipbuilding.
From Transatlantic by Stephen Fox. HarperCollins Publishers. Used by permission.
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