1 / 10

New Bedford Whaling Museum

New Bedford Whaling Museum. Brian Powers. History & Impact. In 1823, For the first time, New Bedford's whaling fleet exceeds that of Nantucket. Whaling dominated the economy of the city for much of the century

caroun
Download Presentation

New Bedford Whaling Museum

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. New Bedford Whaling Museum Brian Powers

  2. History & Impact • In 1823, For the first time, New Bedford's whaling fleet exceeds that of Nantucket. • Whaling dominated the economy of the city for much of the century • New Bedford attracted many immigrants as a result of their dominant whaling industry

  3. Some Typical Whaling Equipment Pictured to the Right is some of the foods and tools that the Whalers would typically bring out to sea. This included canned goods, brushes, various oils for ship maintenance, and even soaps for the whales. Pictured above are whaling “Spades”. Spades were typically used for cutting up the whale. The different types are for different parts of the whale to cut. Pictured to my left is a selfie with guns known as “shoulder Guns.” Spear guns were getting dangerous when the whale would pull the boat under so this created a quick way to penetrate the blubber and put the whale down.

  4. Whaling Equipment (cont.) These were commercial tools of trade. These tools were made from iron and steel, and also were designed for repetitive use. Some of the tools that were created were specific to a certain type of ship. (above)Type of compass used on ships

  5. Uses for Whaling • Oil was the main product from whales. It was used to lubricate machinery and to provide illumination by burning it in lamps. • Oil taken from whale blubber was packaged and transported back to the whaling ship’s home port • New Bedford, Massachusetts was the busiest American whaling port in the mid-1800s • Whale oil was also used to manufacture soaps, paint, and varnish • One of the most common use of whalebone was in the manufacture of corsets(pictured in the top left). • Whalebone also used for toys • Pretty much anything made out of plastic today, was made out of Baleen (whalebone) back in the 1800’s

  6. The Lagoda Ship • This is an 89-foot model of the Lagoda • The Lagoda was built in Scituate, MA in 1826 • The ship completed more than a dozen whaling voyages before being withdrawn from the sea • The ship pictured was a half sized model rebuilt in 1916 (the ending years in US whaling.

  7. Famous Painting New Bedford artists Caleb Purrington and Benjamin Russell created a 1,295-foot painting of "A Whaling Voyage Around the World,". One of the events showed in the panorama is the ramming of the Essex and the mutiny aboard the whaleship Sharon of Fairhaven. (I took a panorama photo so it is a little distorted)

  8. Sperm Whale Sperm whale washed up to shore and was 48 ft in length and 90,000 pounds! You can get a relative idea of the size of the Sperm whale by the human skeleton next to the skull.

  9. Modern Whaling Sven Foyn, a Norwegian created a steam powered launch and bow-mounted harpoon cannon which revolutionized the whaling industry in 1870 Many countries including the US, began using this technology. Set the foundation for whaling in the 20th century.

  10. THANKS!

More Related