Captain Drew's World

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19th century trade
A01=William H. Bunting
Age of sail
Australian packet trade
Author_William H. Bunting
Boston "Straits" trade
Boston seaport
Calcutta shipping
California grain trade
Cape Horn grain trade
Cape Horn passage
Category=DNBP
Category=NHTM
Category=NK
clipper ships
Downeaster
Dutch empire ports
East India ice trade
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Far East case oil trade
forthcoming
Havana seaport
Hong Kong shipping 19th century
Ireland
Irish harbor
Kennebec Valley
Kennebeck
Kobe Japan
Krakatoa
Macao
Maine seaports
Manila seaport
Melbourne harbor
Mississippi steamboats
New South Wales
New York Harbor 19th century
Newcastle
San Francisco seaport 1800s
Sea Witch
Shanghai
Spanish empire ports
sugar trade
The Ship Caspian

Product details

  • ISBN 9781648432262
  • Dimensions: 156 x 235mm
  • Publication Date: 10 Jul 2026
  • Publisher: Texas A & M University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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From 1877 to 1889, as Captain John H. Drew plied the world's oceans aboard the full-rigged ship Sea Witch of Boston, he wrote lengthy dispatches to the Boston Journal. He was a man of action and intellect who crafted closely observed, empathic prose, well-salted with dry wit. Drew described his current and past voyaging in various trades, including the Boston "Straits" trade, the cotton and emigrant trade, the Cape Horn grain trade, the East India ice trade, the Far East case oil trade, the Australian packet trade, and the sugar trade from sleepy ports of the Spanish and Dutch empires that today are teeming megacities. He font of knowledge included the proper stowage of cargoes of pepper, sugar, and firecrackers.

An expert navigator and seaman, Drew also loved music; dabbled in art; studied history, literature, and geography; and was a world-class collector of seashells. He was outspoken against the virulent anti-Chinese bias of the late 1800s. A superlative chronicler of life at sea, Drew was a keen observer of foreign lands and cultures. Drew's later letters reflect a melancholy, the loneliness of a captain's life, the drowning of three of his brothers, and the decline of the once-preeminent American deepwater fleet. As a member of a shipbuilding family with deep maritime roots in Maine's Kennebec River valley, Drew wrote to preserve the record of the passing of an age and his place in it.

Maritime historian and editor W. H. Bunting has compiled Drew's writings and gathered them here with enlightening annotation. Captain Drew's World: Dispatches from the Age of Global Sail provides readers a vivid window onto the great age of sail from both coasts of the United States to the Caribbean, Europe, Southeast Asia, Australia, and beyond.

W. H. Bunting is an award-winning maritime historian and author of Live Yankees: The Sewalls and Their Ships and Sea Struck. He also edited Portrait of a Port: Boston, 1852–1914, among other titles.

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