On 23 March 1851, the Daily Alta California reported him in command of the Ellen Morrison, a merchant bark at the time. How long he had been commanding merchant ships is unknown, but later that year he went to Stonington, Connecticut, to take command of the whaleship Tiger. It was apparently not a happy move. The Tiger left Stonington Septermber 19, 1851, and shortly after that six of the crew mutinied and were sent home for trial. The ship was not reported again until February 18, 1852, when Gavitt made port at Valparaiso. Then he was at Lahaina on April 26, to cruise, and at Maui on November 10. That December, the ship was declared full and headed home; arrived May 21, 1853. A short and profitable voyage. Unsurprisingly, Gavitt was given another command, this time of the Rebecca Sims, and while it is not known if Rebecca sailed on the merchantmen or the whaleship Tiger, she was certainly with him this time.
One of the boatsteerers, Alonzo D. Sampson, who published
his whaling memoir, Three Times Around the World in 1867, had a great
deal to say about her. Sampson thought Gavitt (he spelled it Gavett) ‘was the
best man I ever sailed with. He was too good. He spoiled such of his men as
good treatment could spoil.’ By
contrast his wife, ‘who sailed with him, was not so popular. In the first place,’
he elaborated, ‘sailors have a prejudice, pretty generally justified, against
women on board a ship. They think a woman there is always in the way of
somebody, and the Captain’s wife is generally in the way of everybody. For the
want of something else to do, she is constantly meddling with matters that she does
not understand, and influencing her husband to neglect his duty for her, to
shirk the danger and exposure inseparable from a faithful discharge of his
office, and instigating him to acts that annoy and irritate the crew.
‘Mrs. Gavett was a fine lady, and a fine-looking lady — all
the worse, we thought, for a woman in her position of a sailor. She was
unnecessarily haughty, or rather supercilious, towards the men, going out of
her way sometimes to intimate her contempt for them. On the other hand we did
not lack for ways in which to make her understand we considered her more of a
nuisance than otherwise. We had a story
among us, with a great deal of truth I believe, that she was fast, and
that the Captain brought her along to save her character and his purse.
‘During the beautiful weather that favored our run to the Cape Verdes, she passed most of the daytime on deck, where a chair was set for her, she not having, in sailors’ phrase, "got on her sea-legs," if it is not irreverent to suppose that the Captain’s wife possesses these members.’ (pages 78-79) And, when they arrived at St Vincent in the Cape Verdes, she had the pleasure of being entertained on board the American sloop of war Dale, which was nice for her, and a good augury for the voyage. Despite this the ship was storm beset when doubling Cape Horn, and at one stage ‘the whole ship’s company, the Captain’s wife not excepted, were gathered on deck expecting the worst.’ She watched as energetic seamanship saved the ship, and apparently approved when Captain Gavitt treated the crew to as much grog as they could drink.
It was not the last emergency, by any means. The officer on watch mistaking a landmark on entering the harbor of Lahaina in the dark, the ship was ‘brought up all standing’ when it crashed on a sandbar. The shock was tremendous, all the lanterns went out, dunnage clattered everywhere, and everyone rushed up to deck — ‘Among the crowd that stood dumbfounded around the captain was his handsome wife. She seemed to be even worse affected than she had been under far more fearful circumstances in the Strait of Le Maire ... "Oh! Samuel," she cried in tones of despair. "Oh! Samuel, what shall we do?" To be ready for the worst,’ in case the bottom of the ship was broken, the boats were cleared away. More energetic seamanship got the ship off the sandbank with no harm done, and by daybreak they were anchored off Lahaina.
Then there was more excitement, as Captain Gavitt raced his
ship against the Vesper, having laid a bet with Captain Edward Howes that
he would beat him to the ‘fishing’ ground, a race that he won by one day. There,
in the Ochotsk Sea, Rebecca endured snow storms where the ship pitched madly, and an
anxious night when the ship was driven by the ice, with the loss of all her
anchors. There were bears to watch, too — bears that came to eat the carcasses
of the whales after the blubber had been removed. There was much to watch that
was grisly.
In November 1854 they dropped anchor at Hilo, where they
stayed two months, and Rebecca could marvel at the current eruption. ‘A stream
of lava from one of the many craters started in the direction of the town, but
Mr. Coan, the missionary there, went up to the mountain and prayed, and soon
after the lava stopped flowing that way.’ From there they sailed to Honolulu,
laying off and on outside the port instead of dropping anchor, to deter
attempts to desert that ship. As Sampson casually mentioned, there were
attempts to swim ashore, but it was often a doomed venture, because of the
sharks.
At this stage Samuel Gavitt was rather keen to leave Rebecca
at the islands, according to this raconteur, but she flatly refused to leave
This meant that she was on the deck when they called at the island of Ascension
(Pohnpei), where the natives who came on board to trade ‘were dressed in suits
of cocoa nut oil, only without a rag of anything else about them, [and] the
captain’s wife voted them a great curiosity, and gave them considerable of her
attention.’ And then there was a racy
encounter with an immense sea serpent, described by Sampson with relish. The huge, writhing beast had first been
raised by the whaleship Monongahela, and the Rebecca Simms,
according to the boatsteerer, arrived in time to witness the great battle
between the whaler’s boats and the harpooned monster. The head, he said, was like an alligator’s,
and eleven feet long. This, however, should be taken with a grain of salt,
as it was an old story, dating back to 1852, and he was utilizing a current
craze for monstrous sea serpents to spice up his yarn.
Easier to
authenticate is that the Rebecca Sims then called at Guam, where Captain
Gavitt found himself in a quandary. ‘Of course it was absolutely necessary that
his lady should visit town, and at the same time it was equally impossible to get
any other mode of conveyance except on ox-back …’ wrote Sampson. ‘Mrs. Gavett,
with a bravery that distinguishes her sex when the result sought is a visit,
declared her ability to ride an ox, and her willingness to "try it on." So she
went on shore where quite a number of these horned steeds were quietly waiting …
An animal was selected rather with reference to steady going than to speed, and
a small mountain of folded blankets, which gave him quite a poetic resemblance
to a camel, at least in the hump, was strapped onto his back.
‘To this eminence the lady was elevated, not exactly “by a
turn of the wrist,” but by pure muscle, and bos was solicited to propel
in the direction of town. On the contrary he began a rapid “advance backwards,”
until the rider was brought into contact with certain cocoa nut trees … [and]
she was wiped off at imminent risk of limbs and neck. The stupid brute, unaware
and probably unworthy of the honor intended him, then trotted off for the bush.’
Rebecca Gavitt, though bruised and humiliated, was still determined to go to
town, so a couple of poles were fetched and a chair slung from them, and four
natives took up the burden and ‘Mrs. Gavett was borne in state, if not in
triumph, to town.’
Captain Gavitt needed a new first mate at this stage, but
the one he hired in Guam took a strong dislike to Mrs. Gavitt, and left. Then, thought without a first officer, Gavitt carried a theatrical troupe to
Manila, and there he hired a Frenchman, Lavalette by name, on the recommendation
of Mrs. Gavitt. ‘He may have had any possible number of qualities fitting him
for the place, but none of us ever discovered them. Lavalette’s heels [had]
turned Mrs. Gavett’s head, and she exclaimed in an ecstasy of admiration, "Oh!
Captain, do ship Mr. Lavalette, he is such a splendid dancer!" and that decided
the matter. The dancing master, as we
called him, was shipped.’ He turned out
to be totally incapable of harpooning a whale, which disappointed Mrs. Gavitt
greatly — ‘She was probably at a loss to imagine how a man who danced so well
could fail to be a good whaleman.’
Gavitt headed for the Hawaiian Islands after another season
in the ice, and then sailed from Honolulu on Christmas Day, 1856, to cruise on
the way home, arriving at New Bedford May 23, 1857. The voyage was over, and ‘Alonzo’ Sampson was
headed for another ship. As for Captain
Gavitt, as Sampson meditated, ‘I hope he was able to live in some other
occupation [as] I certainly think he deserved it.’ And that is what must have
happened, as there is no records of Gavitt whaling again. Or of what happened
to Rebecca.
So, how true is all this?
There is no Alonzo Sampson on the Rebecca Sims crewlist, but
there is a William Sampson shipped as an ordinary seaman, and authors, like
sailors and ships, often sail under false colors. The crew of the ship changed
constantly, so Sampson could easily have become a boatsteerer (harpooner) as
the voyage went on. The dates mentioned in the book are mostly confirmed, too: April
28, 1854, at Lahaina; October 18, at Honolulu from Ochotsk Sea; March 17, 1855,
at Lahaina after a cruise; at Shantar Bay October 1855; at Hilo November 9, from
the Ochotsk; cleared December 14, to cruise; at Guam in March 1856, then the
Ochotsk; took oil from the wreck of the Alexander; Honolulu November 17,
also December 12, then home, arriving May 31, 1857. (Dennis Wood abstract)
So, while William Sampson was a born raconteur who embroidered
his yarn, his humorous stories of Mrs. Captain Samuel Gavitt are probably based
on reality.
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