The SS Terra Nova (1884-1943): Whaler, Sealer and Polar Exploration Ship
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About this ebook
Michael C. Tarver
Michael C. Tarver spent his career compiling and supervising files of evidence in police work and criminal records. In retirement, he has followed his lifelong passion for polar exploration, visiting the Antarctic twice and writing articles and books on the subject. He lives in Devon and is an associate member of the Scott Polar Research Institute and a Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society.
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The SS Terra Nova (1884-1943) - Michael C. Tarver
INTRODUCTION
BY RANULPH FIENNES
This second-edition story of SS Terra Nova , a famous Scottish-built ship, brings together so many tales of maritime history, not only of the vessel itself as told by the men who sailed in her, but equally through the development of a flourishing trade in animal oils, combined with the increase in demand for general cargos around the world.
In the nineteenth century the shipbuilding company of Alexander Stephen & Son prospered through the days of sail and steam, while at the same time Benjamin Bowring and his family developed their business in Newfoundland as ship owners, general merchants and insurance brokers. The SS Terra Nova was to become owned by the Bowring company in 1898.
This development was to coincide with territorial exploration and the advancement of science in the polar regions, where such ships were known to be ideal for the rigours of ice work. The ‘heroic age’ of polar exploration saw many wooden ships used by expeditions and, years later, when we set out on the Transglobe Expedition, we were so proud that the Bowring company rekindled its links with both the Arctic and Antarctic by providing us with our ice-strengthened ship MV Benjamin Bowring, named after the founder of that historic company.
Mike Tarver’s fascinating and detailed history of the SS Terra Nova shows just how tough those early days of polar exploration really were.
Ranulph Fiennes
September 2019
1
INTO THE EVENING OF A PASSING AGE
Introduction
This is the story of a ship – a whaler, sealer and polar exploration ship that sailed the seas for sixty years. From her launch in 1884 she sailed the oceans from the Arctic regions to Antarctica until she foundered in 1943. Once she was launched, her story can only be told by the men who sailed in her – they bonded with the ship in which they placed their trust when they put to sea.
How does one tell the story of a ship? To those who do not know the sea, a ship is an inanimate object but to those who have been carried over the oceans, who have been close to nature in all conditions, who have seen the horizon under a ceiling of stars, felt that feeling of humbleness beneath the power of the universe and experienced the moving awesomeness of the sea which presents a constantly changing picture, a ship seems to have a heart, a soul and a spirit of her own. This also applies to smaller craft on inland waters – whether you have contributed to her construction and equipment or merely been a passenger, you must place your trust in your ship. Ask any old seaman his feelings on seeing his ship go down, perhaps torpedoed in wartime, or ask a captain who takes his ship to be decommissioned. Ask any yachtsman who sells his boat which has given him many years of pleasure. Whatever the vessel, whatever her character, whatever stretch of sea or water is crossed, a special relationship grows between ‘man’ and ship. Your trust is in the vessel which carries you – and a ship must be a ‘she’.
It is rare for a ship to sail the seas for sixty years, particularly a ship built of wood. She will have many tales to tell. Life will begin on the drawing board and as her lines take shape, the men who build her begin a relationship themselves as they put together their skills toward the day she is launched. Most ships are built for a specific purpose and are suitable only for that role. Few last for as long as sixty active years. Not so the SS Terra Nova, designed and built as a whaler and sealer in the tradition of her time.
Towards the end of an era in nineteenth-century Britain, in a country with an empire built on an economy driven by coal and steam, Terra Nova entered into an age of ever-changing technology and still kept sailing, changing roles as the times demanded. Parts of the story of Terra Nova have already been told by the men who sailed in her. The author has sought to discover those stories spanning her entire career and bring together the tales of those men of yesteryear.
The British Whaling Industry and its Ships
Animal oils from whales, seals and fish were much used in the manufacture of foods, fabric products, soap, fertiliser and lighting until the late nineteenth century. From the early nineteenth century, the whaling and sealing fleets of Britain were sent from many ports, principally Hull, Aberdeen, Peterhead, Newcastle and Dundee to Arctic waters in search of their catch.
As iron and composite ships were developed and steam power was introduced, entrepreneurs thought they could increase their catch by sending out ever larger vessels. Crews soon found that working aboard the very early iron ships brought problems in cold regions. The ships were damp, cold and dripped with condensation. Their rivetted, plated iron hulls became damaged in the ice and the engines frequently broke down.
All this was much to the delight of traditional crews in wooden ships, which sometimes had steam engines but were always rigged for sail and could be sailed out of trouble. These crews would often be called on to help other crews in their icebound and damaged ships. Sometimes help couldn’t be given or was perhaps even refused. There were accidents and there was loss of life.
One port, above all, which persisted with whaling and sealing by using traditional wooden ships assisted by steam power was the Scottish port of Dundee, which, as records show, had sent out whaling ships since 1750. When the early iron ships failed, the activity at other ports diminished, but Dundee prospered and continued to build ships with wooden hulls.
Dundee Docks and tidal harbour. (British Docks Association Handbook, 1912)
By the first half of the nineteenth century, with the coming of the railway, Dundee became established as a major engineering centre in Scotland. Shipbuilding and railway industries and jute and hemp importing businesses developed there and the port became the centre of the British whaling industry. With this growth in employment and prosperity, Dundee became important enough to be granted a royal charter as a city by Queen Victoria in 1889. One of the local industrialists, Sir James Caird, a jute and hemp importer, became a great benefactor to the city.
The earlier years of whaling in ships without steam power carried a high cost in loss of human lives and shipping. Tragedies in Arctic regions, particularly the Davis Strait, were commonplace, with many ships failing to return. Whole crews were lost or left abandoned on the ice, either to perish of the cold or, if they were lucky, to be rescued by another ship. This was the way of life in those days. Dundee produced many famous whaling skippers, amongst them Captain William Adams and Captain Charles Yule, who became harbourmaster at Dundee.
The early nineteenth century saw the development of docks along the banks of the River Tay. Between 1815 and 1830 the King William IV Dock and Graving Dock were completed with sea walls and quays forming the Tidal Harbour. Then came a fine custom house in 1843. Later came the Earl Grey Dock, the Victoria Dock and then the Camperdown Dock. Here, at Dundee, a growing and prosperous town with fine maritime facilities and an allied industry, was the centre of Britain’s whaling fleet.
By the middle of the nineteenth century, Dundee had grown into the third-largest town in Scotland after Glasgow and Edinburgh. The number of textile mills and the growth of steam power technology increased rapidly, providing employment for the growing population. This led to increasing activity at the docks where exports of the cloth, sack and bag by-products of imported jute and hemp combined with the hustle and bustle of the importing of the raw materials, all alongside the busy landing of whale and seal products.
In The Dundee Whalers, Norman Watson describes Balaena mysticetus (Bowhead Whale) as the chief quarry of the whalers. It was called the Greenland ‘Right’ whale, so-called because this distinguished it from the wrong whale to catch! It was ‘Right’ because it was slow moving, easy to hunt and floated when it was dead. This docile giant possessed a fortune in its cavernous upper jaw, overlapping plates of springy, tough baleen (sometimes referred to as whalebone), which was valuable for use in ladies’ corsets and other flexible products. No other whale had such a mass of baleen and this made the ‘Right’ whale a prime commercial target. It also had a thick layer of fat, or blubber, a valuable commodity when boiled to oil.
Certainly, if the ships came home with a good catch financial rewards were greater than could be earned ashore, but the risks to human life were enormous. Even the introduction of steam power in the middle of the nineteenth century, while bringing many benefits, still brought extra loss of life as more ambitious attempts were made to bring home the catch. The biggest danger was that the ship might be ‘nipped’, i.e. squeezed or crushed by moving pack ice. Many were lost in this way, the crews being left on the ice dressed only in what they stood up in and with what possessions could be scrambled from the ship before she disappeared through the ice. Such losses must have been dreadful for the surviving crews and those who rescued them.
As towns and cities grew in the late nineteenth century, demand for heat, light and power came to depend more on coal and gas. In 1885 the Austrian scientist Carl Von Welsbach (1858–1929) invented the gas mantle for lighting. Gasometers sprang up in populated areas, and the demand for animal oils declined and market prices for whale products dropped. At the same time, there was a danger that the ‘Right’ whale might be hunted to extinction. An era appeared to be ending.
In 1841 Captain James Clark Ross had sailed his ships HMS Erebus and HMS Terror through the pack ice into the sea round Antarctica, which is now named after him. He had reported great numbers of whales for the taking. Perhaps an answer to the decline of the whaling industry might be found in the southern hemisphere? In hopeful expectation of a sea of plenty, ship owners and shareholders decided to send a fleet south.
Dundee Seal & Whale Fishing Co., St John’s, Newfoundland (est. circa 1870 for co-operation of men and resources). Photo taken around 1880. Back row (left to right): Captain Alexander Graham (Bloodhound), Captain McLennan (Narwhal), Captain James Bannerman, Captain Charles Dawe (Aurora), Hon. Moses Monroe (Company founder), Mr John Pye (shipbuilders, Alexander Stephen & Sons, Dundee), Mr. A.G. Smith (broker). Front row (left to right): Captain John Green (Tug Co.), Captain Charles Yule (Esquimaux), Captain William Adams Snr (Arctic), Mr Francis Winston (editor of the Morning Chronicle). (Courtesy Memorial University of Newfoundland)
The Dundee Antarctic Whaling Expedition of 1892–93 consisted of four ships which sailed to Antarctic waters with the hope of discovering new and plentiful hunting grounds, but the speculators were to be disappointed. Captain Alexander Fairweather in the whaler Balaena led the fleet, accompanied by Polar Star (Captain James Davidson), Active (Captain Thomas Robinson) and Diana (Captain Robert Davidson). They sailed via the Falkland Islands to the peninsular region of the Antarctic continent.
Unfortunately, no ‘Right’ whales were to be found, only an abundance of a species not profitable to pursue. The fleet returned to port some nine months later with a cargo of sealskins and oil, together with some scientific and geographical information, all much to the financial disappointment of those who had funded the project. It is of interest, however, that in probing south, these were the first power-driven ships to have penetrated the Antarctic Circle since the scientific voyage of HMS Challenger, when, on 16 February 1874, Challenger crossed the Antarctic Circle and stood on for 10 miles before turning north. These events predated the heroic age of Antarctic exploration but might be regarded as a practical beginning.
It is interesting to note that of these four Dundee-based ships that went south on the expedition of 1892, only Diana, at 473 tons, was built at Dundee by Alexander Stephen & Sons and launched in 1891 for Job Bros of St John’s. Balaena was built in Norway, Active and Polar Star were built at Peterhead. Diana is shown bringing in a seal catch at Newfoundland early in 1892 after which she joined the fleet for the Antarctic venture which left Dundee on 6 September 1892.
Today, the city of Dundee, its maritime and associated industrial past now left to historians to record, remains famous for its marmalade and Winston Churchill’s favourite fruit cake. As a reminder of nineteenth-century times, Dundee is home to the Royal Research Ship Discovery, the last example of a nineteenth-century wooden ship based on the design of a Dundee whaler built in the yard of her forerunners. Her keel was laid down on 16 March 1900 and she was launched on 21 March 1901 specially for use in polar exploration.
She is now restored and preserved as an exhibition ship. Though Discovery was never a whaler or a sealer, the visitor strolling round her decks can easily imagine all the excitement and tension of those days. When taking dinner in her splendid wood-panelled and elegant wardroom, it brings to mind all the nostalgia of being part of another age when the furtherance of polar exploration to extend man’s knowledge of the globe was so geographically and scientifically important.
The Discovery is a symbolic reminder of those famous years when, despite all the hardships and losses of life in the whaling industry, the city of Dundee grew and developed as a world centre for whaling, together with the import and manufacture of jute and hemp products. Here, too, evolved the skill of constructing wooden ships. Dundee people proudly built the western world’s finest whalers and sailing ships. Towards the end of the era, SS Terra Nova was the second largest, most powerful (and, indeed, the last) whaler to be built for active duty in those days.
The Shipyard of Alexander Stephen & Sons, Dundee
The city of Dundee is set on the north bank of the River Tay, and downriver from its famous railway bridge was once situated the entrance to a tidal harbour and the city docks. Industrial archaeology reveals some of what remains of the nineteenth- and early twentieth-century shipyards. A slipway at what was once known as Stephen’s Yard, the Panmure Shipyard, Marine Parade, still remains almost ‘spooky’ within a restructured industrial area. Here can be found traces of Alexander Stephen & Sons’ Dundee yard. Some of the old dockyard buildings which would have housed offices and ancillary services to the industry are still to be seen. Here would have stood the sheds from which the smell of boiling whale blubber would have wafted across the town.
In those days we would have entered the Tidal Harbour from the River Tay and turned to starboard (that is, right). There, we would have seen the shipyard of Alexander Stephen & Sons. The yard extended east beyond the buildings, and tall sheds held launching slips which ran directly into the river. This area later became a timber yard, now lost. Much alteration has taken place. Within the past twenty-five years the building of a new road bridge over the river and a new road network embracing the old city docks has changed the face of the waterfront. The plans included a dock for the RRS Discovery and a visitors’ exhibition centre.
The old tidal harbour has been filled in, leaving what remains of Stephen’s shipyard to the imagination. The Stephen family began building small boats for fishermen at Burghead on the Moray Firth in 1750 and afterwards at Aberdeen. The railway had reached Dundee in 1838, and at about the same time came the introduction of the screw propeller and the development of steam power in ships.
By 1843, the family firm became established at what became known as the Panmure Shipyard, Marine Parade, Dundee. There were some setbacks. In 1868 the Dundee yard, with two unnamed ships on the stocks, was totally destroyed by a fire which started near the sawmill. One ship was a composite and the other a whaler, both well advanced and almost ready for launching. Two hundred employees were thrown out of work. However, perseverance triumphed in the face of adversity. Within a year the shipyard had been rebuilt and a ship was ready for launching.
The performance of Dundee whalers caught the eye of the sealing industry in Newfoundland and ships were built for a number of companies operating at the ports of St John’s and Harbour Grace. From 1851, Alexander Stephen & Sons expanded the Glasgow business on the River Clyde, first at Kelvinhaugh and afterwards at the Linthouse Yard, building large steam ships. The family business passed down the line and continued well into the twentieth century.
Tidal harbour entrance and Panmure Shipyard. (Courtesy Dundee Museums and McManus Art Galleries)
Tidal harbour entrance and Panmure Shipyard. (Courtesy Dundee Museums and McManus Art Galleries)
Alexander Stephen (1795–1875) was a national figure whose career as a Scottish shipbuilder marked him out in stature and accomplishment as one of the great Scottish industrialists of the nineteenth century, with his sons alongside him. Their company eventually became the second largest of the Scottish shipbuilders on the Clyde. Their business eventually became part of Upper Clyde Shipbuilders Ltd, which went into voluntary liquidation in the 1970s, part of the sad decline of British shipbuilding in the twentieth century. (For the company history see Appendix I.)
Alexander Stephen (1795–1875). (Courtesy Mr A.M.M. Stephen)
The Launch of the SS Terra Nova and her Early Years
In the list of ninety-seven ships built at the Dundee yard of Alexander Stephen between 1844 and 1893, Terra Nova is listed as No. 84 (see Appendix A). That list of whalers and sealers contains the names of many famous ships such as Aurora, Arctic, Bear, Esquimaux, Nimrod, Thetis, Ranger, Neptune and Diana, whose names crop up in connection with Terra Nova in Dundee and Newfoundland and some in association with polar exploration in addition to whaling and sealing. Many other ships on the list were lost before Terra Nova was built.
Terra Nova is shown as a sealer 187ft long x 31ft beam x 19ft draught, of 744 tons (gross in Builders’ Old Tonnage). She was laid down by Alexander Stephen’s eldest son, William, to the account of the company. William is shown as owning all sixty-four shares. The ship was launched as a steam-assisted barque on 29 December 1884. Her hull is described as having frames of oak laid on a keel of rock elm and clad with pitch pine and elm. (A more detailed description of her construction is given in the Appendix B.) Her steam engines were built by Gourlay Brothers of Dundee and were two-cylinder inverted compound steam engines of 120hp (combined) with 27in and 54in diameter cylinders, giving a 2ft 9in stroke to a 10½in shaft driving a four-bladed cast-steel propeller.
William Stephen (1826–93). (Courtesy Mr Christopher Grant)
Gourlay Brothers was a Dundee engineering company which had produced agricultural machinery from the early nineteenth century and then turned to developing marine steam engines. As the Stephen’s company activities on the Clyde developed, Ebenezer Kemp, engineering manager at Gourlay Brothers, took his talents from Dundee to the Clyde and entered into partnership with Alexander Stephen & Sons to develop and build engines for larger ships.
The engine details of Terra Nova recorded on registration documents at the time of launch show 120hp, though 140hp is shown as her power in a following chapter. She was rigged as a barque, i.e. fore and main mast square-rigged, mizzen mast rigged fore and aft. Her official number was ON 89090. If there were original plans for her building, they have not come to light. Such were the skills of shipwrights in those days that individual plans for each ship were not always drawn up.
Terra Nova was launched in 1884 by William Stephen’s daughter, Alice. The Dundee Advertiser reported on 30 December 1884:
Yesterday the whaler Terra Nova was launched from the shipbuilding yard of Messrs Alexander Stephen and Sons. This vessel has been built to replace the Thetis which was sold to the American Government last year for the Greely Relief Expedition. The Terra Nova has been specially built for Arctic Navigation. It is calculated she will carry about 40,000 seals or 260 tons of oil. She will be employed in the Newfoundland and Davis Straits whale industry and be commanded by Captain Fairweather.
So began the life of a ship which, when her intended career as a whaler and sealer is coupled with her more famous role as a polar exploration ship, became the longest serving and most travelled expedition vessel to survive the Antarctic heroic age. She had sixty years’ distinguished service, and it could be said that her excellent service has never received the true recognition it deserved.
Terra Nova was based at Dundee for her first fourteen years. She was under the command of Captain Alexander Fairweather from 1884 to 1888. In 1889, and thereafter to 1893, the year which included Captain W. Archer also of Dundee, she was under the command of the Newfoundlander, Captain Charles Dawe.
Alice Stephen (1854–1916), who launched Terra Nova, daughter of William Stephen. (Courtesy Mr Christopher Grant)
Alexander Fairweather’s brother James had earlier commanded the whaler Aurora for many years. During those years, Terra Nova and other Dundee whalers would sail to the sealing grounds with large crews taken on at Dundee and in Newfoundland. Here, they would join the fleet from St John’s and take part in the seal hunt in the spring of each year. Newfoundland law prescribed that this would not commence before 10 March.
Early in the 1870s the Stephen company had leased ground on the south side of St John’s harbour where it built a yard with essential plant for processing seals. This meant a saving in time as, during the sealing season, ships could discharge their cargo on that side of the Atlantic and return to the sealing grounds rather than sailing back to