Shipwrecks in 100 Objects: Stories of Survival, Tragedy, Innovation and Courage
The history of shipwrecks involves many shocking episodes: from men who saw shipmates eaten by sharks, to castaways who ate each other. Learn about the cowardly captain who deserted his passengers on a sinking ship, the obstinate ship-designer who took 480 men to their deaths, and the first mate who wrecked his own ship for insurance money.

Historian and genealogist Dr Simon Wills is maritime adviser to BBC’s Who Do You Think You Are? program. In this fascinating book he uses objects associated with real incidents as touchstones for every tale. Our ancestors believed that sea monsters destroyed ships, but better-established causes include storms, war, pirates, human incompetence, fire and ice.

The pages of this book are packed full of tales of dramatic rescues and miraculous survivals, and as well as the stories of the innovations that have improved safety at sea. Meet the man shipwrecked three times within an hour, a coastguard still diving overboard to save lives at 79, and the lifeboat inventor who endured someone else taking credit for his work. Ships can have character too: refusing to sink despite overwhelming odds, or even returning to haunt us as ghost ships.

The dangerous life afloat stimulated pioneers to create the lifeboat service, offshore lighthouses, and lifejackets. Vessels lost at sea also inspired rewards for bravery, and artists and writers such as J.M.W. Turner, William Wordsworth, and Yann Martel the author of Life of Pi.

Featuring famous wrecks such as Mary Rose and Titanic, this book introduces other less well-known but equally remarkable events from our nautical heritage, some of which seem almost too extraordinary to be true.
1141382106
Shipwrecks in 100 Objects: Stories of Survival, Tragedy, Innovation and Courage
The history of shipwrecks involves many shocking episodes: from men who saw shipmates eaten by sharks, to castaways who ate each other. Learn about the cowardly captain who deserted his passengers on a sinking ship, the obstinate ship-designer who took 480 men to their deaths, and the first mate who wrecked his own ship for insurance money.

Historian and genealogist Dr Simon Wills is maritime adviser to BBC’s Who Do You Think You Are? program. In this fascinating book he uses objects associated with real incidents as touchstones for every tale. Our ancestors believed that sea monsters destroyed ships, but better-established causes include storms, war, pirates, human incompetence, fire and ice.

The pages of this book are packed full of tales of dramatic rescues and miraculous survivals, and as well as the stories of the innovations that have improved safety at sea. Meet the man shipwrecked three times within an hour, a coastguard still diving overboard to save lives at 79, and the lifeboat inventor who endured someone else taking credit for his work. Ships can have character too: refusing to sink despite overwhelming odds, or even returning to haunt us as ghost ships.

The dangerous life afloat stimulated pioneers to create the lifeboat service, offshore lighthouses, and lifejackets. Vessels lost at sea also inspired rewards for bravery, and artists and writers such as J.M.W. Turner, William Wordsworth, and Yann Martel the author of Life of Pi.

Featuring famous wrecks such as Mary Rose and Titanic, this book introduces other less well-known but equally remarkable events from our nautical heritage, some of which seem almost too extraordinary to be true.
49.95 In Stock
Shipwrecks in 100 Objects: Stories of Survival, Tragedy, Innovation and Courage

Shipwrecks in 100 Objects: Stories of Survival, Tragedy, Innovation and Courage

by Simon Wills
Shipwrecks in 100 Objects: Stories of Survival, Tragedy, Innovation and Courage

Shipwrecks in 100 Objects: Stories of Survival, Tragedy, Innovation and Courage

by Simon Wills

Hardcover

$49.95 
  • SHIP THIS ITEM
    In stock. Ships in 6-10 days.
  • PICK UP IN STORE

    Your local store may have stock of this item.

Related collections and offers


Overview

The history of shipwrecks involves many shocking episodes: from men who saw shipmates eaten by sharks, to castaways who ate each other. Learn about the cowardly captain who deserted his passengers on a sinking ship, the obstinate ship-designer who took 480 men to their deaths, and the first mate who wrecked his own ship for insurance money.

Historian and genealogist Dr Simon Wills is maritime adviser to BBC’s Who Do You Think You Are? program. In this fascinating book he uses objects associated with real incidents as touchstones for every tale. Our ancestors believed that sea monsters destroyed ships, but better-established causes include storms, war, pirates, human incompetence, fire and ice.

The pages of this book are packed full of tales of dramatic rescues and miraculous survivals, and as well as the stories of the innovations that have improved safety at sea. Meet the man shipwrecked three times within an hour, a coastguard still diving overboard to save lives at 79, and the lifeboat inventor who endured someone else taking credit for his work. Ships can have character too: refusing to sink despite overwhelming odds, or even returning to haunt us as ghost ships.

The dangerous life afloat stimulated pioneers to create the lifeboat service, offshore lighthouses, and lifejackets. Vessels lost at sea also inspired rewards for bravery, and artists and writers such as J.M.W. Turner, William Wordsworth, and Yann Martel the author of Life of Pi.

Featuring famous wrecks such as Mary Rose and Titanic, this book introduces other less well-known but equally remarkable events from our nautical heritage, some of which seem almost too extraordinary to be true.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781526792211
Publisher: Pen and Sword
Publication date: 10/07/2022
Pages: 224
Product dimensions: 6.70(w) x 9.60(h) x (d)

About the Author

Simon Wills is a history journalist and genealogist who writes regularly for magazines such as Family Tree and Discover your Ancestors. He advises and has appeared in the TV program Who Do You Think You Are? and contributes to the magazine of the same name. Simon gives history presentations and interviews at national and local events all around the UK for organizations such as The National Archives, Chalke Valley History Festival, National Trust, and the BBC. He is also a dedicated wildlife and nature photographer, and all the photographs in this book were taken by him.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements 7

Image Credits 8

Introduction 11

1 Sea monster depiction (Conrad Gessner, after Olaus Magnus, 1539) 15

2 Rosary from Mary Rose (1545) 17

3 Armada medal (Armada wrecks, 1588) 19

4 Coat of arms of Bermuda (Sea Venture, 1609) 21

5 Cannon from Trial (1622) 23

6 Hull timbers of Sparrow-Hawk (1626) 25

7 Pocket sundial from the warship London (1665) 27

8 North Foreland lighthouse (built 1691) 29

9 Giant clam collected by William Dampier (Roebuck, 1701) 31

10 Storm clouds over the sea (Great Storm, 1703) 33

11 Portrait of Sir Cloudeslev Shovell (Sally Naval Disaster, 1707) 35

12 Pirate nag 'Jolly Roger' (eighteenth-century Caribbean pirates) 37

13 First edition of Robinson Crusoe (Daniel Defoe, #19) 39

14 Satellite image of Wager Island, Chile (HMS Wager, 1741) 41

15 Epic poem The Shipwreck by William Falconer (1762) 43

16 Château de Fougères (HMS Arethusa, 1779) 45

17 Snuff-box made from timbers of HMS Royal George (1782) 47

18 Bowl and lid from Palau (Antelope, 1783) 49

19 Lifeboat design plans (Lionel Lukin, 1785) 51

20 Mirror (Halsewell, 1786) 53

21 Iceberg (Lady Hobart, 1803) 55

22 Flint for a musket (Earl of Abergavenny, 1805) 57

23 East India Company token (Admiral Gardner, 1809) 59

24 Message in a bottle (Kent, 1825) 60

25 RNLI gold medal (instituted 1824) 62

26 Diving helmet design (invented 1828) 64

27 Wreckers, a painting by J.M.W. Turner (1833) 66

28 Grace Darling's boat (SS Forfarshire, 1838) 68

29 Membership ticket for the Shipwrecked Fishermen and Mariners' Royal Benevolent Society (1839) 70

30 An officer's epaulettes (HMS Erebus, c.1848) 73

31 Lisle family gravestone (pilot ship, 1848) 75

32 Handwritten account of two storms at sea (Sutlej, 1848) 77

33 Commemorative brass plaque (RMS Amazon, 1851) 79

34 Pocketwatch belonging to Ralph Shelton Bond (HMS Birkenhead, 1852) 81

35 Ship's anchor (Eglinton, 1852) 83

36 Cork life jacket (invented 1854) 85

37 Lifebuoy (widely adopted 1855) 87

38 Gold nugget (Royal Charter, 1859) 89

39 Wreck chart for the British Isles (Board of Trade, 1859) 91

40 Ceramic commemorative mug (SS London, 1866) 93

41 Autograph of John King (SS London and others) 95

42 Transported convict Thomas Berwick (Severn, 1866) 97

43 Fragment of HMS Captain's bowsprit (1870) 99

44 Sheet music and lyrics (Northfleet, 1873) 101

45 Hand-drawn map of the coast of Chile (SS Tacna, 1874) 103

46 Sketch of survivors (Cospatrick, 1874) 105

47 Plimsoll line ('coffin ships', 1876) 107

48 Anchor of HMS Eurydice (1878) 109

49 A silver sixpence (Princess Alice, 1878) 111

50 A captain's trunk (SS Jeddah, 1880) 113

51 Photo of Abraham Hart Youngs (heroic coastguard, 1881) 115

52 Ship portrait as carte de visite (Magdala, 1882) 117

53 Memorial to Richard Parker (Mignonette, 1884) 119

54 First innings cricket scores (SS Bokhara, 1892) 121

55 Advert for a lecture (HMS Victoria, 1893) 123

56 Chalice (SS Drummond Castle, 1896) 125

57 Board of Trade wreck report (SS Mohegan, 1898) 127

58 Stained glass window (SS Stella, 1899) 129

59 Maritime distress signals ('CQD' emergency code introduced in 1904) 131

60 Obelisk for submariners (HMS A1 submarine, 1904) 133

61 Photo of survivors (SS Hilda, 1905) 135

62 Postcard of half a ship (SS Suevic, 1907) 137

63 Former White Star Line offices, Southampton (RMS Titanic, 1912) 140

64 Press photo of Arthur Rostron and Molly Brown (RMS Titanic, 1912) 142

65 A ship ablaze (SS Volturno, 1913) 144

66 Newspaper front page announcing the death of Laurence Irving (RMS Empress of Ireland, 1914) 146

67 German publicity image of U-boat U-9 crew (HMS Crecy, Hague and Aboukir, 1914) 148

68 Ship's propeller (RMS Lusitania, 1915) 150

69 The 'Lusitania medal' (RMS Lusitania, 1915) 152

70 A badge for a lost son (HMS Black Prince, 1916) 154

71 In memoriam card for Lord Kitchener (HMS Hampshire, 1916) 156

72 Souvenir of a captured enemy vessel (U-boat UC-5, 1916) 158

73 Aerial photo of a sinking hospital ship (HMHS Gloucester Castle) 160

74 Image of officers and cadets before a final voyage (Dee, 1917) 162

75 Reconnaissance photo of three ships wrecked at Zeebrugge (HMS Intrepid, Iphigenia and Thetis, 1918) 164

76 Merchant Navy torpedo cuff badge (1918) 166

77 Postcards of scuttled German warships at Scapa Flow (1919) 168

78 Cecil Foster's best-selling book (SS Trevessa, 1923) 170

79 Photo on the deck as a ship is sinking (SS Vestris, 1928) 173

80 Unmarked grave of Arthur John Priest (died 1937) 176

81 Souvenir badge for passengers (TSS Athenia, 1939) 178

82 Lifeboat from SS Anglo-Saxon (1940) 180

83 Memorial plaque on Merseyside (Lancastria, 1940) 182

84 Book of remembrance (HMS Hood, 1941) 184

85 Doris Hawkins' remarkable account (RMS Laconia, 1942) 186

86 Model of a Japanese bomber (HMS Dorsetshire and Cornwall, 1942) 188

87 Sailor's cap tally (HMS Curacoa, 1942) 190

88 HMS Belfast (sinking of Scharnhorst, 1943) 192

89 MRC War Memorandum No. 8 (medical advice on surviving shipwrecks) 194

90 A ship's log on sailcloth (SS Lulworth Hill, 1943) 196

91 Snapshots of ships aground (SS Leicester, 1948) 198

92 Sailors' Church, Liverpool (rebuilt 1952) 200

93 Tower Hill Memorial (completed 1955) 202

94 A dead seabird (oil tanker Torrey Canyon, 1967) 205

95 Memorial sculpture and gardens (MV Derbyshire, 1980) 207

96 A Falkland Islands memorial (HMS Sheffield, 1982) 209

97 Newspaper headlines of a ferry disaster (Herald of Free Enterprise, 1987) 211

98 Two London bridges (Marchioness, 1991) 213

99 RNLI sculpture (lifeboatmen who died in service, 2009) 215

100 Two Titanic museums (Titanic Belfast and Sea City, Southampton, 2012) 217

Index 219

From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews