So Ends This Day

Author:   Donald Warrin
Publisher:   University of Massachusetts Press
Volume:   13
ISBN:  

9781933227283


Pages:   416
Publication Date:   01 July 2010
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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So Ends This Day


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Overview

In the first half of the nineteenth century whaling was one of the young American nation's most important industries, providing lubricants and illumination as well as baleen, the plastic of its day. So Ends This Day: The Portuguese in American Whaling, 1765-1927 traces the history of the American whaling industry from its seventeenth century beginnings in Massachusetts and Long Island to its demise in the third decade of the twentieth century, while highlighting the role of its Portuguese participants. Their story begins with Joseph Swazey who, in 1765, returned to Martha's Vineyard from an Atlantic whaling voyage; and it terminates with the aborted voyage of Capt. Joseph F. Edwards aboard the John R. Manta in 1927. From a few random crew members in the latter half of the 18th century, these men from the Portuguese Atlantic islands of the Azores and Cape Verde came to dominate the industry in its final decades. Their participation would ultimately determine the principal settlement patterns of the Portuguese in the U.S.: New England, California, and Hawaii. But it led as well to distant communities in such diverse places as Alaska, New Zealand, and the Pacific atolls. It is a story of courage and determination in a far-reaching industry in which many of these individuals advanced to positions of responsibility unparalleled among non-English-speaking immigrants to the United States.

Full Product Details

Author:   Donald Warrin
Publisher:   University of Massachusetts Press
Imprint:   University of Massachusetts Press
Volume:   13
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 2.30cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.680kg
ISBN:  

9781933227283


ISBN 10:   1933227281
Pages:   416
Publication Date:   01 July 2010
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   No Longer Our Product
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

Foreword Preface Background Beginnings of the American Whaling Industry Heyday of American Whaling, 1835 - 1860 Decline of American Whaling, 1860 - 1900 End of American Pelagic Whaling, 1900 - 1927 Conclusion Epilogue APPENDIX 1: American Whaling Ports by Region APPENDIX 2: Portuguese and Portuguese American Whaling Masters in American Whaling APPENDIX 3: American Whaling Voyages under Portuguese and Portuguese American Command Glossary of Maritime Terms Guide to Archival Collection Bibliography Index

Reviews

It is gratifying that So Ends This Day not only undertakes a grand historical overview of the Islands involvement in the blubber-hunting business, but also characterizes many of the individual personalities, events, circumstances, and anecdotes that reveal the complexity of the whaling industry as a whole and the human character of Azorean and Cape Verdean involvement in it. Stuart M. Frank, author of Dictionary of Scrimshaw Artists and More Scrimshaw Artists: A Sequel Center


It is gratifying that So Ends This Day not only undertakes a grand historical overview of the Islands' involvement in the blubber-hunting business, but also characterizes many of the individual personalities, events, circumstances, and anecdotes that reveal the complexity of the whaling industry as a whole and the human character of Azorean and Cape Verdean involvement in it. --Stuart M. Frank, author of Dictionary of Scrimshaw Artists and More Scrimshaw Artists: A Sequel Center


It is gratifying that So Ends This Day not only undertakes a grand historical overview of the Islands' involvement in the blubber-hunting business, but also characterizes many of the individual personalities, events, circumstances, and anecdotes that reveal the complexity of the whaling industry as a whole and the human character of Azorean and Cape Verdean involvement in it. --Stuart M. Frank, author of Dictionary of Scrimshaw Artists and More Scrimshaw Artists: A Sequel Center It is gratifying that So Ends This Day not only undertakes a grand historical overview of the Islands involvement in the blubber-hunting business, but also characterizes many of the individual personalities, events, circumstances, and anecdotes that reveal the complexity of the whaling industry as a whole and the human character of Azorean and Cape Verdean involvement in it. Stuart M. Frank, author of Dictionary of Scrimshaw Artists and More Scrimshaw Artists: A Sequel Center -It is gratifying that So Ends This Day not only undertakes a grand historical overview of the Islands' involvement in the blubber-hunting business, but also characterizes many of the individual personalities, events, circumstances, and anecdotes that reveal the complexity of the whaling industry as a whole and the human character of Azorean and Cape Verdean involvement in it.---Stuart M. Frank, author of Dictionary of Scrimshaw Artists and More Scrimshaw Artists: A Sequel Center


Author Information

Donald Warrin specializes in the history and literature of Portuguese and Cape Verdean immigrants in the United States. His books include Land, As Far As the Eye Can See: Portuguese in the Old West, written with Geoffrey L. Gomes, which appeared recently as Portugueses no Faroeste: Terra a Perder de Vista, published by Bertrand Editora, Lisbon. He has written as well on the participation of Portuguese from the Azores and Cape Verde islands in American whaling. So Ends This Day greatly expands upon this previous research. After retiring from the faculty at California State University East Bay, in 2003 Warrin became the first Visiting Distinguished Professor of the Hélio and Amélia Pedroso/Luso-American Foundation Endowed Chair in Portuguese Studies at the University of Massachusetts Dartmouth. He subsequently served as associate director of the Regional Oral History Office at The Bancroft Library, University of California, Berkeley; and currently continues in that program as a historian.

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