Historic Nantucket, Spring 2018, Vol. 68, No. 1

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A TRADITION OF SCIENCE AND EXPLORATION

SPRING 2018   | VOLUME 68, NO. 1 WESTWARD BOUND: SNAPSHOTS OFnha.org NANTUCKET/ WOMEN IN THE PACIFIC NORTHWEST 11 NANTUCKET HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION 1 UNCHARTED WATERS: NANTUCKET WHALERS AND THE FRANKLIN-FOLGER CHART OF THE GULF STREAM 17


SPRING 2018

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VOLUME 68, NO. 1

BOARD OF TRUSTEES Kelly Williams, PRESIDENT Victoria McManus, VICE PRESIDENT William J. Boardman, TREASURER Michael Cozort, CLERK Sarah Alger Patricia Anathan Josette Blackmore Susan Blount Anne Marie Bratton Chip Carver Olivia Charney Wylie Collins Cam Gammill John Hilton Wendy Hudson Carl Jelleme William Little Hampton Lynch, FRIENDS OF THE NHA VP Carla McDonald Kennedy Richardson Marla Sanford Janet Sherlund, TRUSTEE EMERITA

FEBRUARY & MARCH

Whaling Museum open Thursday–Sunday 10 a.m. –  4 p.m., free to islanders through April

APRIL –DECEMBER

Whaling Museum open daily 10 a.m. –5 p.m.

MAY– DECEMBER

Hadwen House Open daily 10 a.m.–5 p.m. Historic Sites Open daily Memorial Day through Labor Day  10 a.m.–4 p.m. Research Library Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, Friday 10:30 a.m.– 4:30 p.m., first Saturday of the month during the summer, or by appointment

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Carter Stewart Jason Tilroe Phoebe Tudor Finn Wentworth Jay Wilson, FRIENDS OF THE NHA PRESIDENT Alisa Wood David D. Worth Jr. PR I NT E D I N T H E U SA O N R E CY C L E D PA PE R , U S I N G V EG E TAB L E-B AS E D I N K

NEW PUBLIC HOURS

Daisy Soros

James Russell, GOSNELL EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR

EDITORIAL COMMITTEE M. Chris Manning, EDITOR Elizabeth Oldham. COPY EDITOR Eileen Powers/Javatime Design, ART DIRECTION

HISTORIC NANTUCKET (ISSN 0439-2248) is published by the Nantucket Historical Association, 15 Broad Street, Nantucket, Massachusetts. Periodical postage paid at Nantucket, MA, and additional entry offices. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to Historic Nantucket, P.O. Box 1016, Nantucket, MA 02554–1016; (508) 228–1894; fax: (508) 228–5618, info@nha.org. For information visit nha.org. ©2018 by the Nantucket Historical Association. a l l p h o t o s b y n h a s ta f f u n l e s s o t h e r w i s e n o t e d .

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Associations like ours require active participation from their membership to remain meaningful, relevant, and engaged This issue celebrates two members who have been involved with the Association for over forty-five years. We congratulate Carole L. Windham and Lt. Col. James W. Youngberg for their stalwart commitment to Nantucket history and culture. In addition, we recognize members of our 1894 Founders Society. The NHA’s high-quality programs, new initiatives, and dedicated scholarship are fueled in part by their significant investment.

NANTUCKET BY DESIGN

Looking ahead, please mark your calendars for August 1–4, when our much heralded Nantucket by Design week unfolds, chaired again by Phoebe Tudor. NBD celebrates the important role that Nantucket has played in the design aesthetic of America, and we are thrilled that our media partners, Veranda and House Beautiful, will lead the design panel and luncheon. The week will culminate on Saturday night with a party at the Whaling Museum, providing a wonderful opportunity for our supporters to enjoy the museum after hours.

NEW PROPERTY

With respect to recent strategic decisions, the most significant by far has been the purchase of the property at 4 Whalers Lane abutting the Whaling Museum. The structure of the acquisition allows time for the NHA to analyze our property portfolio, architect a holistic campus-wide plan, and conduct a feasibility study with our membership. We look forward to your input in this process as we collectively determine this next phase of growth for the Association.

THE 2018 ANNUAL FUND IS WELL UNDERWAY. YOUR SUPPORT IS REQUESTED AS WE EMBARK ON ANOTHER EXCITING YEAR.

NEW EXHIBITIONS

We are focused on six areas: exhibitions, collections, scholarship, education, community, and collaboration. More immediately, we look forward to delivering a full program of work for 2018. Our staff are working to maximize our valuable gallery spaces, and we look forward to mounting new exhibitions in the Whaling Museum, at Greater Light, and at Hadwen House. We are particularly excited about our major summer exhibition in the McCausland Gallery, titled Nantucketers and Their Boats. If you have a boat, or as Melville might say, “have an interesting terraqueous experience,” see page 26 on how to participate. We are delighted to partner with the Nantucket Community Sailing on a summer “Sailors Scuttlebutt” lecture series and with Cape Cod Maritime Museum on boat building classes. An exhibit commemorating the achievements of Maria Mitchell on the bicentennial of her birth opens in April in collaboration with the Maria Mitchell Association. New exhibits researched by Matthew Stackpole on both levels of the Hadwen & Barney Oil and Candle Factory will showcase Nantucket’s important land-based industries. Collaborations with Marine Mammal Alliance Nantucket and the Center for Coastal Studies, plus a stunning exhibit of underwater photography by Eric Savetsky, will provide the basis of our presentation on whale ecology in and around Nantucket Sound. We are excited that the first floor of Hadwen House will reopen in May and the triple parlor and the formal parlor will receive a facelift once new HVAC equipment has been installed. Simultaneously, the Thomas Macy House at 99 Main Street will open for walking tours. Greater Light will showcase treasures from the NHA’s important collection of Nantucket Art Colony-era paintings, including a choice selection from the Artists Association of Nantucket.

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NEW PUBLICATIONS

Look for two important publications to be released this July. Collecting Nantucket: Artifacts from an Island Community, by Michael R. Harrison, Robyn & John Davis Chief Curator, will be a beautifully illustrated book that will explore one hundred fascinating artifacts and documents from the collection. “Sometimes Think of Me”: Notable Nantucket Women through the Centuries, by Betsy Tyler, NHA Research Fellow, with embroidered narratives by Susan Boardman, will be expanded and reissued in hardcover. We participated enthusiastically in the Nantucket Atheneum’s One Book One Island community reading project.

NEW EDUCATIONAL PROGRAMS

With respect to our educational initiatives, we look forward to our reinvigorated decorative arts program at the 1800 House, and extensive planning for another successful year of classes is well under way. On internships, practicums, and semester-long learning, active engagement with seven colleges and universities is producing great results. We are thrilled to have students coming to the island beginning this winter and spring. Great excitement mounts around our new High School Mentorship Program, with a goal to provide life skills and learning in a professional milieu to Nantucket High

School students during two semester-long, after-school, paid mentorships. The NHA staff is hard at work designing a new website with greater functionality for our broad range of supporters. The website will launch this spring and greatly increase our capacity to provide more content to a broader audience. A multi-year project to substantially increase our digital footprint is under way with the goal of leveraging digital and web-based technologies to provide an exemplary experience. This will include increased access to the collections and ensure that they are protected, accessible, searchable, and showcased. One of the greatest impacts thus far has been to open the Whaling Museum free of charge to the community four days a week during the winter season. We are thrilled to have students and seniors alike take advantage of the opportunity to congregate, socialize, and enjoy this community resource. In so many ways the essence of our mission is to provide access to our collections and to Nantucket stories for the entire community, and how appropriately this harkens back to the Quaker tenet of nurturing our own warm, well-lit interiors!

Kelly Williams, President

James Russell, Gosnold Executive Director

The preface in “Sometimes Think of Me” reads: “Few living residents know as much about Nantucket as Elizabeth ‘Libby’ Oldham, and if she doesn’t know something, she knows where to find it.” We agree, and it is with deep regret but warm wishes that we announce the retirement of Research Associate Libby Oldham. After more than two decades of working with everyone from casual researchers to serious scholars, Libby is a well-regarded figure of the Research Library. Known as “the seat of all wisdom,” and recognized for her ability to go deep in order to help researchers connect the dots, she will be greatly missed. We wish Libby well as she begins another chapter in her long life.

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P H O TO BY MA I A FAR I S H

AN NHA LEGEND RETIRES: ELIZABETH ‘LIBBY’ OLDHAM


SHARE YOUR NHA STORY

45 YEARS OF MEMBERSHIP

Do you have a memorable tale to tell?

The NHA is grateful for the loyalty and devotion of our generous supporters

Contact Lexi Norton at lnorton@nha.org

and members. Here, two longstanding members share their favorite memories.

LT. COL. JAMES W. “SKIP” YOUNGBERG “MY FIRST VISIT TO THE NHA and the Whaling Museum was actually in June 1968. My late wife, Joyce, and I spent our honeymoon on the island. I had read Moby-Dick in college and decided a visit to Nantucket would be a great way for us to embark on life together. Later that year I entered the Air Force and, after an unsuccessful stint in pilot training, was reassigned as an engineer to a Department of Defense activity in Maryland. In the summer of 1972, Joyce and I set out on an island vacation with our two two-year olds—a daughter and a Saint Bernard. It was during that visit that I joined the NHA. Flash forward: A twenty-five-year Air

Force career in communications, navigation, and intelligence followed by a decade and a half of civilian engineering work supporting GPS. Two wonderful daughters and four grandkids. And retirement. Oh, and a couple more visits to the island over the years. My membership in the NHA kindled a longstanding interest in the history of the whaling industry. Historic Nantucket has been mailed to me at six different addresses here in the U.S. and in Germany. I’ve enjoyed reading about the association’s activities and growth as well as the expansion and update of its facilities and exhibits.”

Skip in 1971, and today

CAROLE L. WINDHAM “LITTLE DID I KNOW when we stepped off the steamship on that sunny day in 1971 that I would begin a love affair with a New England island that has lasted a lifetime! So many wonderful memories. Some of my most treasured memories of my visits to Nantucket involve the Nantucketers I met (some referred to as “characters”), particularly the people who worked at the houses and museums managed by the NHA. One of my favorite characters was John “Gunney” Stackpole. I first met Gunney when my five-yearold daughter, Laura, and I visited the 1800 House. My daughter was just beginning to become interested in things like old houses and whales and other important

Nantucket stuff, so she started asking Gunney a thousand questions about this and that and that’s when a dear friendship between the two of them began. Not only did Gunney deliver the usual informative remarks about each room in the house, but he gave her the “royal tour” and showed her some mighty fascinating things that other people didn’t get to see. He showed her how to find the secret drawer in a very large desk in one of the first-floor rooms. She was delighted! He was an amazing man, filled with so much history and adventures that he happily shared with an inquisitive girl. We sure did love him!”

Carole in 1972, and today

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P H OT O: C O R O L L A C O NT R AC T I N G I N C .

Site model built by students at Roger Williams University

The NHA is pleased to announce the recent purchase of 4 Whalers Lane oard President Kelly Williams and Victoria McManus, chair of the Housing and Properties Committee, articulated the case for purchasing the property to a packed house at a special meeting of NHA members on December 1, 2017. The unanimous vote in favor sets up conditions to grow the organization in future years. Most importantly, it will allow us to expand and deepen our program of work and, consequently, better serve our community. “An acquisition that allows us to expand at our prime museum location creates exciting possibilities to enhance our exhibition spaces, connect our educational and community programming to our core location, and view our campus of properties through a new lens,” notes McManus. For those of you unfamiliar with the location, the property is situated directly behind the Whaling Museum’s Gosnell Hall and runs parallel to the Foulger Museum building. With the current tenants staying in the building for at least two more years, and with favorable financing terms from Cape Cod Five Cents Savings Bank, trustees Sarah Alger and Bill Boardman have negotiated an agreement that allows time to both raise funds and work through how best to integrate this property into our operations. “The purchase of the Whaler’s Lane property reaffirms the commitment of the NHA to, and represents

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The NHA seeks Angel donors to underwrite 4 Whalers Lane. Call James Russell for more information: (508) 228–1894, ext. 12

a significant investment in, the community,” notes trustee Sarah Alger. “It is an important piece in the continuing revitalization of the Broad and North Water Street area and will help shape the direction of tourism and the downtown economy in the years to come.” These decisions need to be made in a holistic manner as we determine the best uses for all NHA properties, the Thomas Macy Warehouse and Hadwen House in particular. Regarding the Thomas Macy Warehouse, there is good news to report. The Nantucket Community Preservation Committee has recommended a $150,000 grant, pending approval at Town Meeting, to upgrade the historic exterior of the building. This grant will fund approximately sixty percent of critical exterior work, which will be done in fall 2018. Thanks to Ken Beaugrand, former NHA trustee, for his expert guidance throughout this process. (For a detailed history of the Thomas Macy Warehouse, see the Fall 2017 issue of Historic Nantucket.)

PH OT O: E I L E E N POW E R S

WHAT’S NEW AT THE NHA PROPERTIES


1894 FOUNDERS SOCIETY The NHA takes great pleasure in announcing the establishment of the 1894 Founders Society, which recognizes individuals who participate in supporting the Association at the highest levels hrough this prominent giving circle, the board of trustees acknowledges the generous total annual giving by our top individual donors to the NHA’s operations. 1894 Founders Society members contribute $3,000 and upwards annually to the annual fund, membership, and fundraising events, as well as for exhibitions, educational programs, and other special initiatives. In addition to membership benefits, participants enjoy private behind-the-scenes tours of the collections; preferred access to the NHA’s expert staff; invitations to exclusive receptions, trips, and programs; a commemorative gift; and recognition on the 1894 Founders Society donor plaque in the Whaling Museum and in Historic Nantucket and the Annual Report. The NHA is honored to present the inaugural members of the 1894 Founders Society, based on their generous support in 2017. For more information about the 1894 Founders Society, email us at 1894founders@nha.org or call (508) 228–1894.

$50,000 and above President’s Circle Kim & Finn Wentworth Leslie Forbes & David Worth $25,000 to $49,999 Margaret Ritchie Battle Maureen & Edward Bousa Anne DeLaney & Chip Carver Kelly Williams & Andrew Forsyth Helen & Will Little Laura & Bob Reynolds Susan & L. Dennis Shapiro Janet & Rick Sherlund Phoebe & Bobby Tudor $10,000 to $24,999 Mary-Randolph Ballinger Susan Blount & Richard Bard Carol & Harold Baxter Max Berry Mary & Marvin Davidson Deborah & Bruce Duncan Nan & Chuck Geschke Barbara & Amos Hostetter Ann & Charles Johnson Jean Doyen de Montaillou & Michael Kovner Miriam & Sonny† Mandell Victoria McManus & John McDermott Carla & Jack McDonald Franci Neely Mary & Al Novissimo Ella Prichard Susan & Kennedy Richardson Margaret & John Ruttenberg Wendy & Eric Schmidt Helen & Chuck Schwab Kathleen & Robert Stansky Harriet & Warren Stephens Jason Tilroe $5,000 to $9,999 Susan Akers Patricia & Thomas Anathan Marlene Benson Susan & Bill Boardman Anne Marie & Doug Bratton Diana Brown Laura & Bill Buck Donald Burns Jenny & Wylie Collins Amanda Cross John DeCiccio Elizabeth Miller & James Dinan Ana & Michael Ericksen

Olamaie & Randall Fojtasek Barbara & Ed Hajim Julia & John Hilton Wendy Hubbell Carl Jelleme Cynthia & Evan Jones Jill & Stephen Karp Hampton Lynch Bonnie & Peter McCausland Diane & Britt Newhouse Sarah & Jeff Newton Carter & Chris Norton Ann & Chris Quick Danielle Rollins Linda Saligman Denise & Andrew Saul Thekla & Don Shackelford Daisy Soros Maria & Bill Spears Merrielou & Ed Symes Theresa & Michael Taylor Garrett Thornburg Elizabeth & Geoff Verney Karen & Chris Watkins Stephanie & Jay Wilson Alisa & Alastair Wood $3,000 to $4,999 Dinah & Barry Barksdale Edith Bouriez Marianna & Chris Brewster Christina Lee Brown Prudence & William Crozier Lucy & Nat Day Catherine & Michael Farello Kathy & H. Crowell Freeman Karyn McLaughlin Frist Robert Greenhill Sabine & Richard Griffin Kaaren & Charles Hale Kimberly & Alan Hartman Cassandra Henderson Coco & Arie Kopelman Sharon & Frank Lorenzo Courtney & Greg McKechnie Ronay & Richard Menschel Ann & Craig Muhlhauser Maria & George Roach Marla & Terry Sanford Joanna & Steven Sarracino Lorraine Snell Ann & Peter Taylor Alison & Charles Townsend Clark Whitcomb

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THANK YOU TO OUR GENEROUS SUPPORTERS LEAD SPONSOR 2017

Marine Home Center EVENT CHAIR 2017

Penny Dey

EVENT CHAIRS 2017

Beth English & Mark Donato

OCTOBER 5–12, 2018

Discover the Azores

HISTORIC PHOTOS & PRINTS NANTUCKET BOOKS & MAPS GIFTS & HOME GOODS

Members receive

10% OFF

every purchase 8

HISTORIC NANTUCKET / SPRING 2018

SHOP ONLINE

Take part in a thrilling trip to the beautiful archipelago of the Azores, October 5–12, 2018, led by Gosnell Executive Director James Russell. Learn about the history of the Azores, the island’s close affinity with Nantucket, and the pivotal role this strategic crossroads played in whaling and maritime history. The multi-island, multi-city trip will include private tours of museums, sumptuous cuisine, a reception at the prized Lusitano Horse Show, and a visit to volcanoes and a volcanic hot spring. The trip will be historically and culturally stimulating while providing time to enjoy the natural beauty of the archipelago. In addition to structured tours and activities, you will have time to venture off on your own and explore. The NHA, along with Sagras Vacations, will take care of all your travel needs, including airfare, hotel accommodations, and transportation. Space is limited to twenty people, and reservations are required by June 15, 2018. Explorations are educational trips that allow us to experience different countries, cities, and cultures that have contributed to Nantucket’s rich history. For reservations and more information, call (508) 228–1894, ext. 116, or email lexi@nha.org.


A TRADITION OF SCIENCE AND EXPLORATION s many Nantucketers are aware, in 1847, island native Maria Mitchell (1818–89), daughter of surveyor and amateur astronomer William Mitchell (1791–1869), while viewing the night sky through a telescope mounted on the roof of the Pacific Bank, discovered a comet. The following year, Maria became the first woman to be admitted to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and in 1865 was hired as the first professor of astronomy for the newly established Vassar College. In honor of the bicentennial of her birth, the NHA and the Maria Mitchell Association are collaborating on a new exhibition on her life, accomplishments, and lasting legacy, opening at the Whaling Museum in April. Maria Mitchell is not an anomaly, however. Nantucket has a long tradition of contributions to science and exploration. This issue of Historic Nantucket is dedicated to those individuals. As Philip L. Richardson and Nathan T. Adams write in their article, “Uncharted Waters: Nantucket Whalers and the Franklin-Folger Chart of the Gulf Stream,” Nantucketers were some of the first amateur environmental scientists to accurately and regularly record ocean currents and conditions, weather patterns, and other notable natural phenomena in their logs. This information is still valuable today and is being used by scientists to reconstruct historic weather patterns around the globe. For a century and a half, the men and women of Nantucket boldly launched from

this tiny island into the open oceans of the world, encountering remote places and people vastly different from those they knew back home. They returned to Nantucket with artifacts and ideas encountered on their journeys and new knowledge to be shared. In the mid-nineteenth century, Nantucket women rounded Cape Horn, traveled up the Pacific coast, and helped establish new settlements. In her article, “Westward Bound: Snapshots of Nantucket Women in the Pacific Northwest,” Cheyenne Dunham recounts the experiences of two such pioneer women. For those who did not undertake such voyages themselves, letters home and objects brought back by loved ones offered a taste of far-flung destinations. Eliza Ann (Chase) McCleave (1811–95), wife of Nantucket whaling Captain Robert McCleave (1809–76), even operated a small museum in her home at 109 Main Street in the mid- to late-nineteenth century, where she displayed objects from the South Pacific collected by her husband as well as historic artifacts and natural specimens from Nantucket. At home, Nantucketers and those with Nantucket connections helped lead social-reform movements such

Portrait of Maria Mitchell, by Herminia B. Dassel, ca. 1857, oil on canvas Image courtesy of the Nantucket Maria Mitchell Association

Stingray-skin belt (te katibana) from Kiribati, formerly the Gilbert Islands, ca. 1850 NHA Collections 1972.2.1b

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as women’s suffrage, abolition, and educational equality, motivated in part by their Quaker beliefs regarding individual responsibility and an equitable society—social-justice movements that have relevance in the sociopolitical culture of today. Some of those contributions will be explored in a new exhibition on the people and places of Nantucket, opening at Hadwen House this spring. Both at home and abroad, Nantucketers have contributed to our collective understanding of the natural and scientific world, have explored the far corners of the globe, have helped us see into the cosmos and deep underwater, and have been active voices for social change. As Maria Mitchell once wrote, “We have a hunger of the mind which asks for knowledge of all around us, and the more we gain, the more is our desire; the more we see, the more we are capable of seeing.”

Mounted bird of paradise (Paradisea apoda) from the Aru Islands, west coast of New Guinea. Brought to Nantucket by Captain J. Beebe of the whaleship Brewster 1937.20.1

Interior of the McCleave museum at 109 Main Street in the 1890s NHA Collections PH90-17-1

IN MEMORIAM CATHY TAYLOR It is with deep sadness that we share the news that Cathy Taylor, the NHA’s Director of Museum Resources from 2015 to 2017, passed away in January. A native of Texas, Taylor lived in California for most of her life. She earned a B.A. in history at the California State University, Sacramento, and received a certification in museum leadership from the Museum Management Institute at UC Berkeley. In her short time with the NHA, Cathy made a lasting impact on our collections and properties, in particular organizing a preventive-maintenance program as well as initiating and supervising renovation of the Macy-Christian House. She will be greatly missed by her friends and colleagues.

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Host your event at the Whaling Museum, Hadwen House, or one of our historic sites. Contact Ashley Martin: (508) 228 –1894, ext. 131, or rentals@nha.org.


By Cheyenne Dunham

SNAPSHOTS OF NANTUCKET WOMEN IN THE PACIFIC NORTHWEST

Illustration of the bark Sarah Parker by Parker McAllister, staff artist for the Seattle Times NHA Collections MS64 SB94

n June 23, 1852, the crew of the Sarah Parker, a former whaling vessel, left Nantucket on a voyage to engage in the shipping trade along the western coast of the United States. On board, a young mother, around thirty-two years old, sat on her bed below deck while her seven-year-old son, George, peered out the window with his spyglass. Charlotte Coffin Gardner (1820–82), second wife of Captain William Bunker Gardner (1813–56), had chosen to leave her island home to venture out to sea with her husband and young son on a voyage that would likely last for several years. Amidst a crumbling economic empire, Nantucket families dependent on the island’s whaling industry were turning their sights elsewhere for economic opportunity while Nantucket sought to redefine itself as a global entity. In the

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Photo of Charlotte Coffin Gardner published in the Seattle Sunday Times, November 22, 1953 NHA Collections MS64 SB94

case of the Gardner family, the whaling vessel Sarah Parker had been repurposed to a cargo ship commissioned to haul timber from the forests of the Pacific Northwest to San Francisco, California. This voyage would bring the Gardner family to the banks of Puget Sound in Washington Territory, where Charlotte’s narratives of her experiences would become some of the earliest accounts of the region written from a woman’s perspective. Thirty years later, similar economic motivations and an adventurous spirit would lead another Nantucket woman, Augusta Bunker (1855–86), to adopt the frontier life of a school teacher in eastern Washington. While the western part of the territory had continued to grow and flourish since the time of the Gardners’ visit, the inland Northwest was rapidly gaining traction in relation to the prospect of settlement, thanks

to the expansion of transcontinental rail lines. Soon, pioneers and educators flocked to new towns such as Spokane to help build the communities from the ground up. Augusta joined several educators from New England on the venture westward and meticulously documented her experience through correspondence, offering a unique perspective of frontier life in Washington through the lens of a young and unmarried, yet educated, woman. Both Charlotte and Augusta were part of the island’s longstanding legacy of extraordinary women who demonstrated success in science, religion, education, business, politics, and social movements. Carrying their independence into the frontier, they made their marks on wilderness territories such as Washington, establishing a connection between Nantucket and the burgeoning Pacific Northwest.

CHARLOTTE COFFIN GARDNER: EXPLORATION AND INTERCULTURAL INTERACTION IN THE PUGET SOUND REGION Charlotte Coffin Gardner, the ambitious and independent wife of a whaling captain, readily accepted the opportunity for exploration when her husband asked her to accompany his to San Francisco. The simultaneous decline of the whaling industry on Nantucket and the economic boom of the California Gold Rush enticed members of the island’s maritime community to seek new opportunities on the western frontier. (For more on Nantucketers and the Gold Rush, see Historic Nantucket, Vol. 48, no. 3). William Gardner himself was a captain turned merchant looking to employ and repurpose his skills to profit from transporting goods along the west coast of the United States. After roughly seven months of enduring storms, cramped spaces, bouts of seasickness, and occasional meals of dolphin or porpoise, the Sarah Parker arrived at the wharf in San Francisco. Within a day of arriving safely

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Sewing cabinet in the form of a Chinese pagoda presented to Charlotte Coffin Gardner by the crew of the Sarah Parker on her voyage to California in the 1850s NHA Collections 1973.10.1


A List of Persons from Nantucket Now in California, published in 1850 NHA Collections RBnanCA-8

at port, the Gardners reconnected with other Nantucketers, including Albert Macy, William C. Paddock, Charles Hussey, William B. Swain, and Captain Isaiah Folger. While the ship’s cargo and supplies were exchanged, the family hosted and entertained the transient community of Nantucketers, most of whom were hoping to profit from business and shipping opportunities fueled by the Gold Rush. Several months later, William P. Sayward bought the rights to seven-eighths of the Sarah Parker, retaining most of the crew—including the Gardners—with the intent of transporting timber from Puget Sound to California. The connection between Nantucket and the Pacific Northwest had been established two years earlier in 1851, when Captain Isaiah Folger piloted the schooner Exact carrying the Denny party to an area known as Alki Point, establishing the first white settlement at what would eventually become Seattle. Since then, the area had rapidly developed into an epicenter for the timber industry, and Sayward was eager to seize the opportunity for investment. Several weeks after departing San Francisco, Charlotte Coffin Gardner looked out at the snow-capped peaks and tree-lined shores along the Strait of Juan de Fuca as the ship drew nearer to its destination. On April 4, the crew arrived at the settlement at Alki, called New York at the time. They immediately replenished their supplies with the help of Charles C. Terry, a man who had arrived with the Denny Party but remained at the settlement to claim it as his own. By the time of the Gardners’ arrival, Terry’s business had solidified and he was utilizing partnerships to make sales and deliver cargo to the ships that were now entering Puget Sound with increasing frequency. Upon arrival, Charlotte experienced her first interactions with both the settlers of the newly established community and the indigenous population. This was a place with rapidly growing business prospects and,

therefore, a male-dominated community that relied heavily on cooperation with the indigenous people. Her initial impressions of this new land and the dynamics of intercultural relations were rooted in curiosity and a sense of adventure common among the well-traveled people of Nantucket. On April 7, 1853, she wrote in her diary: Early yesterday morning George Henry and myself went ashore. G. enjoyed himself well, racing about over the prairie under the trees and down to the shore with Alonzo and John Low. I walked a great distance with the two little girls, Mary and Minerva. I picked several wild flowers and saw some Indian graves no[t] far from the shore, some with a board fence around them, others in this form with their basket and tin plate or cup laid upon the grave or hung over it. Over one child’s grave was hung the little tin cup he used to play with. Mr. Low’s is a log house with one door and one paper window a foot square, only one room. There are several wigwams and two grog shops here kept by white men. There is an abundance of codfish, flatfish, salmon and quahogs here which the Indians exchange for shirts, bread, fish hooks, etc.

Charlotte continued to explore her surroundings and interact with groups of the native Coast Salish people while assisting in the acquisition of lumber, encountering for the first time unfamiliar customs like infant head-binding: [W]e saw an infant undergoing the process of having its head flattened. It was bandaged to a board, its hands and feet fastened down, the back of the head and forehead pressed

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between two boards, the eyes closed, the face very much swollen and its little heart beat violently, its breathing was difficult and I should have thought it was dying if it were not that they all share the same fate when infants. [Diary of Charlotte Coffin Gardner, May 6, 1853]

In her diary, she often wrote of how intrigued she was by the natives’ knowledgeable use of local resources and their choices and methods of food preparation, noting which local food sources were gifted to the party members or incorporated into daily life. Meanwhile, Sayward remained committed to finding a location to establish a sawmill, intending to be one of the first to stake a business claim in some of the more untouched areas of the sound. Nearly a month after their arriv-

al, the Gardners and the rest of the crew of the Sarah Parker set sail for San Francisco with their first load of 15,509 feet of “piles,” 6,372 feet of square timber, and roughly eighty cords of wood. Charlotte’s accounts provide some of the earliest views of intercultural relations in the Pacific Northwest and offer insight into the necessity of these partnerships. Knowledge of the land, its resources, and the various food supplies that could be found throughout the area was shared with the outsiders by many of the local tribes. Back home, Nantucketers had long worked and lived alongside the native Wampanoag, employing mixed-race whaling crews and engaging in land transfers and business transactions. Likewise, for well over a century Nantucket whaling vessels had traveled the world’s oceans, where they encountered farflung people and places much different from their own. This legacy of exploration, cooperation, and exposure to different ways of life may have contributed to Charlotte’s acceptance of the partnership between the Coast Salish peoples and the white settlers of Puget Sound, as well as her appreciation for their use of the available natural resources. Roughly a year later—during which time the Sarah Parker made at least four trips between Puget Sound and San Francisco, and Charlotte gave birth to another son—the Gardners returned home to Nantucket, arriving on May 10, 1855. The stories Charlotte brought with her connected the northwestern frontier to the island of Nantucket in a tangible way. A hundred years later, a Seattle newspaper published the story of the New England pioneer woman who offered a different view of Puget Sound. Charlotte Widrig wrote of Charlotte Coffin Gardner in the Seattle Times: “The small events of daily living she took time to record, with details slanted towards a woman’s observation of pioneer times, are now invaluable in enlarging the picture of those early days.” Chart of the voyage of the Sarah Parker from San Francisco to Sandy Hook, December 8, 1854, to May 4, 1855 NHA Collections S9249

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AUGUSTA BUNKER: INDEPENDENCE AND EDUCATION ON THE WASHINGTON FRONTIER As the years went by following the Gardners’ westward voyage, Nantucket continued to rebuild itself, but its economy had yet to fully recover from the loss of whaling. Meanwhile, the nation as a whole continued to expand and become more connected, fueled by a rapidly growing transportation network and a rising number of homesteaders yearning for a new life on the frontier. By the 1870s, the nation’s transition from an economy of rural self-sufficiency and agrarian roots to one of metropolitan dependence and industrial commerce was well under way. These changes presented a greater need for trained educators to facilitate this transition, especially in frontier communities dependent on a single trade or industry. This rising need combined with an increase in training at normal schools throughout New England and the country resulted in a new wave of teachers venturing into the northwestern frontier. Those developments motivated Augusta Bunker to leave Nantucket to attend the State Normal School at Bridgewater, Massachusetts. Along with around eighty classmates, both men and women, she received formal training to become a teacher, completing her education by 1875. Augusta came from a family of educators, which likely influenced her choice to enter the field herself. Her father, James M. Bunker (1811–73), worked for a time at Vassar College and taught at Bradford Academy before retiring to Nantucket, while her older sister, Phebe Bunker (1839–1915), taught on the mainland near Boston for many years. Meanwhile, the settlements of Spokane Falls (now the city of Spokane) and nearby Cheney were taking root in eastern Washington. Both communities had

their eyes on the impending conPortrait of struction of the Northern Pacific Augusta Bunker Fee, Railroad, which would ensure ca. 1880 the establishment of the area as an NHA Collections CDV1028 accessible commercial epicenter. Before Cheney was surpassed by Spokane as the hub of the inland Northwest, the small town briefly held the county seat of government, attracting the attention of Boston railroad tycoon and town namesake Benjamin P. Cheney. Cheney felt the community needed accessible education, and in 1882 founded the Benjamin P. Cheney Academy, which would ventually become Eastern Washington University. By the spring of 1882, Augusta had completed her education at Bridgewater and was bound for Eastern Washington to become one of the first teachers at the Cheney Academy. She spent more than two years teaching in the small but growing frontier town and kept up a regular correspondence with her sister, Phebe, on Nantucket, describing life at school and her travels around the region. As a young and independent woman on the eastern Washington frontier, only twenty-seven years old and unmarried upon arrival, she interacted with both the ranching and railroad communities of Cheney and nearby ranch towns as well as Spokane’s burgeoning upper class. She was active in her church, social with friends and suitors, and, despite personal struggles with deteriorating health and a challenging work environment marked by overcrowded and understaffed classrooms, inadequate facilities, and a transient student body, remained positive and committed to her role as an educator.

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On September 10, 1882, she wrote to her sister: I have about concluded that I must be faithful to the work I have and make it as interesting to myself and pupils as I can and admit to myself what I have disallowed before, that teaching in Cheney Academy for me for this year means to teach a higher primary school made up of the worst of the children in the school, a kind of school that no money would have persuaded me [to] teach [back] East. A work for which I’ve no special inclination and for which I certainly have no physical strength. I have also made up my mind not to let the matters worry me but to be as cheerful under the circumstances as possible.

By her second year in Cheney, Augusta had applied for a 160-acre homestead several miles outside of town near what is now Medical Lake, Washington. By adhering to the Homestead Act of 1862, as an unmarried woman she was able to procure this land as long as she agreed to occupy the property for at least five years and outlined her intent to build, supply it with stock, and

increase its value for future profit. While further settling into frontier life, she watched the town grow as it prepared for the transcontinental completion of the Northern Pacific Railroad followed by the celebratory arrival of both Benjamin P. Cheney and railroad president Henry Villard in the fall of 1883. After roughly two years of overseeing between forty-six and sixty students per term at the Cheney Academy, Augusta’s ongoing battle with her health and changes in school faculty contributed to her dismissal. She accepted a marriage proposal from Walter M. Fee and relocated to the Fee family ranch in north central Idaho, where she lived until her untimely death on April 24, 1886, at the age of thirty-one. Augusta’s narrative of her experiences in the inland Northwest stands as a testament to the independence and strength of the many women who helped build the region and connected small eastern communities such as Nantucket to the expanding western frontier.

MARKS ON HISTORY The stories of Augusta Bunker and Charlotte Coffin Gardner illustrate two examples of how the tiny island off the coast of Massachusetts interacted with and influenced people, places, and events throughout the country and the world. In their accounts, both women offer different perspectives on the establishment of Washington. They lived in distinct social spheres while maintaining personal autonomy in unique ways—Augusta in her teaching career and homesteading efforts and Charlotte in her ability to act as a public liaison for the family while upholding multiple responsibilities. While these women represent two examples of Nantucketers in the Pacific Northwest, their narratives also contribute to our understanding of the experiences of white women on the Washington frontier. Their stories raise the question of what set Nantucket’s women apart from others in New England. This historical chapter is further enriched by the historical context surrounding Nantucket’s development, the decline of the whaling industry, and the islanders’ motivations to set their sights westward. It is a largely untold narrative that

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still has many insights to reveal concerning women on the frontier, intercultural relations between indigenous peoples of the Pacific Northwest and white settlers, industrial transformations across the country, and how the far-reaching influence of Nantucket continued even after the decline of its whaling industry. CHEYENNE DUNHAM After growing up in the Pacific Northwest, Cheyenne Dunham received her M.A. in Public History from the University of Massachusetts Boston in 2017. Her studies and interests connected her to Nantucket and the Nantucket Historical Association, eventually leading to an internship, cooperative capstone project, and two years of exploration into various aspects of the island’s heritage. This article relates to the research she completed in relation to her graduate degree. A more in-depth exploration of this topic can be found in her online exhibit, Westward Bound: An Exploration into the Presence of Nantucket Women in Washington, 1852–1890 (https://nantucketwomeninwashington.wordpress.com).

To read about other Nantucket women who headed west, see the Spring 1995 issue of Historic Nantucket, Vol. 44, No. 1.


NANTUCKET WHALERS AND THE FRANKLIN-FOLGER CHART OF THE GULF STREAM By Philip L. Richardson and Nathan T. Adams n 1672, Nantucketers contracted with Cape Cod whaleman James Loper (sometimes appearing as Lopar) to begin whaling operations and teach the islanders the process of hunting the leviathan we now know as the North Atlantic right whale. For the next two centuries, the whalers who set forth from the island acquired a vast store of knowledge about whales, the ocean environment, and the natural world in general. A whaling voyage would entail long periods of inactivity, the whalemen keeping a constant watch for whales. Like other colonial New Englanders, some whalemen were prodigious record keepers. Whaling logbooks contain a vast record of wind, weather, and

whale sightings. Other records, such as journals and letters, show that whalemen gained remarkable insight into whale behavior and anatomy through their observations of the ocean and the processing of whales into oil. By gaining an understanding of whales and their behavior, Nantucket whalemen were able to expand their range of operations to the entire Atlantic Ocean, and by the end of the eighteenth century into the Pacific. Knowledge of whale morphology and anatomy allowed for identification of whales at a distance and made the processing of blubber more efficient. Although this knowledge was principally used to further efforts at catching and killing whales, whalemen also

EDITOR’S NOTE:

A previous article on the Franklin-Folger

provides Richardson the opportunity to

of the figures in Lacouture’s 1995 article

Chart of the Gulf Stream appeared in the

tell the story of his finding of the “lost”

were misidentified. The chart on page 83

Fall 1995 issue of Historic Nantucket, Vol.

1769 chart and to compare and contrast

is captioned as the 1769 version of the

44, No. 2, pp. 82–86, written by Captain

the different versions. It also includes

chart when in fact it depicts the version

John Lacouture. Much of the information

additional discussion of the role of Nan-

published in 1786 as part of Franklin’s

included in that article was based on

tucket whalers in the charting of the Gulf

“Maritime Observations.” Likewise, the fig-

original research conducted by Philip L.

Stream and their knowledge of the north-

ure on page 84 is captioned as the 1786

Richardson of the Woods Hole Oceano-

ern Atlantic, provided by historian Nathan

version, although the image shown is the

graphic Institution. The following article

T. Adams. It should also be noted that two

first version published in 1769 in London.

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Top right: Portrait of Benjamin Franklin, engraved ca. 1847 by Henry S. Sadd for the Albion (New York), after a painting by T.H. Matteson Library of Congress, Prints & Photographs Collection

Bottom right: Portrait of Captain Timothy Folger by John Singleton Copley, 1764 NHA Collections 2003.18.1

acted as sources for numerous scientific journals in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. For instance, Paul Dudley’s 1725 Essay upon the Natural History of Whales relied heavily on the accounts of a former New England whaleman regarding the origin of ambergris, which was long known but little understood at that time and quickly becoming a valuable product of the whaling trade. These sources disseminated the vast store of knowledge acquired by whalemen to the scientific community and the general public. The knowledge of Nantucket whalers made its way to the public in other ways, too. During a stint in London as Deputy Postmaster General for the American colonies between 1764 and 1775, Benjamin Franklin was consulted as to why mail packets sailing from Falmouth, England, to New York took two weeks longer than merchant ships traveling from London to Rhode Island. In October 1768, Franklin presented the problem to his cousin and friend, Timothy Folger (1732–1814), a Nantucket ship captain recently arrived in London on business. Franklin’s mother, Abiah Folger (1667–1752), was born on Nantucket and her brother, Eleazar Folger (1648–1716), was Timothy Folger’s great-grandfather. Although Franklin referred to him simply as “Cousin Folger” in correspondence, they were in actuality first cousins twice removed. As captain of a Nantucket merchant ship and longtime whaler, Timothy Folger possessed an intimate knowledge of the Gulf Stream. By 1768, Nantucket whalers had collectively accumulated a considerable body of information about the Gulf Stream. Of the nearly 150 Nantucket vessels employed in the whale fishery in the mid- to late-eighteenth century, nearly half plied their trade in the waters around the Gulf Stream. Whalers were acutely observant of currents, since their livelihood was partially dependent upon them, and observations of ocean cur-

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rents, water depths, sand bars, and other elements of the marine environment were frequently exchanged, both at sea and at home. As Franklin stated in The American Mariner in 1789, “Nantucket whalemen [are] well acquainted with the gulf stream, its course, strength, and extent by their constant practice of whaling on the edges of it, from their island quite down to the Bahamas.” The Nantucket whalemen’s process of observing the natural world, recording that information, and making sense of it allowed them to identify environmental knowledge that others had overlooked. As with most oral traditions, the oceanographic knowledge of the Nantucket whalemen was seldom written down and much has been lost. While logbooks provide a record of whaling voyages, they offer only a small glimpse of the environmental knowledge that whalemen possessed. Furthermore, understanding and synthesizing that knowledge requires considerable effort. The first Franklin-Folger chart of the Gulf Stream provides another way this knowledge could be accessed: through an actual whaleman who, through his lived experience combined with the knowledge of others, could make sense out of a vast sea of information. During their discussion, and at Franklin’s request, Folger sketched the path of the Gulf Stream onto an existing chart of the Atlantic, providing additional written instructions on how to avoid the northeastward-flowing current when sailing west from England to America. Franklin then forwarded the chart to Anthony Todd, Postmaster General, with an accompanying letter describing Folger’s navigational instructions, to be disseminated to the captains of British mail packets, who largely ignored the advice.

Letter from Benjamin Franklin to Anthony Todd, 29 October 1768

Craven Street October 29th [1768]

Sir Discoursing with Captain Folger a very intelligent Mariner of the Island of Nantuckett in New England concerning the long passages made by some Ships bound from England to New York I received from him the following Information. Viz: That the Island in which he lives is Inhabited Chiefly by people concerned in the Whale Fishery, in which they employ near 150 Sail of Vessels, that the Whales are found generally near the Edges of the Gulph Stream, a strong Current so called which comes out of the Gulph of Florida, passing Northeasterly along the Coast of America, and then turning off most Easterly running at the rate of 4, 3½, 3 and 2½ Miles an Hour; that the Whaling Business leading these people to Cruise along the Edges of the Stream in quest of Whales, they are become better acquainted with the Course, Breadth, Strength and extent of the same, than those Navigators can well be who only cross it in their Voyages to and from America, that they have opportunities of discovering the Strength of it when their Boats are out in pursuit of this Fish, and happen to get into the stream while the Ship is out of it, or out of the Stream while the Ship is in it, for then they are separated very fast, and would soon lose sight of each other if care were not taken, that in Crossing the Stream, to and fro, they frequently in the same meet and speak with Ships bound from England to New York Virginia &ca, who have passages of 8, 9, and 10 weeks, and are still far from Land, and not likely to be in with it for some time, being engaged in that part of the Stream that sets directly against them, and it is supposed that their fear of Cape Sable Shoals, Georges Banks or Nantuckett Shoals, hath induced them to keep so far to the Southward as unavoidably to engage them in the said Gulph Stream, which occasions the length of their Voyage, since in a Calm it carries them directly back, and tho’ they may have fair Winds, yet the Current being 60, or 70 Miles a day, is so much Subtracted from the way they make thro’ the Water. At my request Captain Folger hath been so obliging as to mark for me on a Chart, the Dimentions Course and Swiftness of the Stream from its first coming out of the Gulph, where it is narrowest and strongest; till it turns away to go to the Southward of the Western Islands, where it is Broader and weaker, and to give me withall some Written directions whereby Ships bound from the Banks of Newfoundland to New York may avoid the said Stream, and yet be free of danger from the Banks and Shoals abovemention’d. As I apprehend that such Chart and directions may be of use to our Packets in Shortning their Voyages, I send them to you that if their Lordships should think fit, so much of the Chart as is contain’d within the red Lines may be engraved and printed, together with the remarks at the Charge of the Office; or at least that Manuscript Copies may be made of the Same for the use of the Packets. The expence of the former would not much exceed the latter, and would besides be of general Service, with much esteem I am &c

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The Franklin-Folger Charts Before 1769, charts of the Atlantic indicated only the most rudimentary and notable features, such as major surface currents crossing in mid-ocean or ending abruptly near the coast. Franklin’s and Folger’s chart is widely considered to be the first accurate depiction of the Gulf Stream, showing its path, average width of the stream in various locations, and typical speeds near its center. Though the original sketch no longer survives, three printed versions of the Franklin-Folger chart of the Gulf Stream were published in the late eighteenth century. The first version appeared as an overprint on a portion of a larger map titled, A new and exact chart of Mr. E. Wrights projection, rut. Mercators chart, con. ye sea coast of Europe, Africa & America, from ye Isles of Orkney to Cape Bona Esperance & Hudsons Bay to ye straits of Magellan, printed in London in 1769 by Mount and Page. On this chart, the Gulf Stream is depicted as a series of short dashed lines, perhaps the quick modification of an earlier plate, superimposed with arrows showing the direction and speeds of the current that generally match those listed in Franklin’s letter to Todd. In the letter, speed is given as miles per hour, while the chart gives speeds in minutes. (One minute of latitude is equal to one nautical mile.) The illustration of a sailing vessel taking advantage of the favorable current is also superimposed on the Gulf Stream. On a portion of the chart, just east of Newfoundland, are instructions on how to avoid it and the nearby banks and shoals when sailing westward, as mentioned in Franklin’s letter to Todd. Specific instructions for navigating around Nantucket were given thus: […]. in passing Nantucket, you may Sail in any Lattd between 38.30 & 40.45. [The] South part of Nantucket Shoals lies in Lattd 40.45. & [the] Northern Edge of the Gulf Stream lies in 38.30 So from Nantuckett […]

In March 1775, Franklin left London and sailed for home. The following year, he was sent as an envoy to Paris to negotiate a treaty with the French government. During those two crossings, Franklin measured the temperature of the Gulf Stream and discovered that it

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was warmer than the water on either side, rekindling his enthusiasm for the Gulf Stream chart. Sometime between September 1780 and April 1783, he had it copied and printed by Le Rouge in Paris. Research conducted by Ellen R. Cohn, chief editor of Yale University’s collaborative project, The Papers of Benjamin Franklin, concluded that this second version of the Gulf Stream chart was produced for French merchant and packet ships in the months following the end of the American War of Independence. The Le Rouge version is an exact copy of the northwestern part of the original Mount and Page chart, published more than a decade before. The two are on the same scale, and when overlaid, the main features— coastlines, islands, the Gulf Stream itself—coincide exactly. In fact, the details are identical down to the placement of arrows, current speeds, and decorative illustrations of ships. In addition, the “Remarks” on the Le Rouge chart are similar to those found on the Mount and Page chart, although translated into French. The only significant change is the elimination of the words “Gulf Stream” and their replacement by the French word “Courrant.” In 1785, Franklin, then seventy-nine years old, sailed back to America on the London packet. The following year, “A Letter from Dr. Benjamin Franklin, to Mr. Alphonsus le Roy, Member of Several Academies, at Paris. Containing Sundry Maritime Observations” (commonly referred to as “Maritime Observations”) was published in the Transactions of the American Philosophical Society in Philadelphia. Within “Maritime Observations,” a third version of the Franklin-Folger chart appeared as a figure engraved by James Poupard.


Left: First version of the Franklin-Folger chart of the Gulf Stream, published in 1769 by Mount and Page, London Library of Congress, Prints & Photographs Collection

Bottom left: Detail of the first chart of the Gulf Stream, depicting the area around Nantucket Library of Congress, Prints & Photographs Collection

This version, often referred to simply as Franklin’s Gulf Stream chart, is the most widely known and reproduced of the three. Although at first glance the Gulf Stream has much the same appearance as in the two earlier versions, a close examination reveals some important differences. Most prominently, it is based on a different projection, and therefore the path of the Gulf Stream varies from that depicted on the 1769 and 1780–83 versions. Since the chart employs a different projection, meridians are not parallel, and in many places in North America they are several degrees in error, even after adding a 5.2° longitude offset to account for the location of the Prime Meridian. (For example, Bermuda is depicted

south of Long Island rather than south of Nova Scotia.) Due to the different projection, Poupard was not able to simply trace the Le Rouge chart of the Gulf Stream. Subsequently, in transferring the Gulf Stream to his own version of the chart, he made several changes. The stream is 400 km at its widest point, narrower than shown on the earlier versions, and it flows within 20–25 km of Georges Bank. This small passage between the shoals and the Gulf Stream may have discouraged navigators from trying to thread the needle between them.

Because of the modifications to the chart of the Gulf Stream made by Poupard, the first version, printed in London in 1769, is generally considered to be a better representation of Folger’s extensive knowledge of the Atlantic current and surrounding environment. nha.org / NANTUCKET HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION

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Another notable difference in the third version is the inclusion of additional information in the “Remarks” printed on the left side of the chart. Franklin repeats his description of how the map came into existence, much as in the letter to Todd and in the accompanying text in “Marine Observations,” mentioning for the first time an “eddy current, which moves contrary to the Gulf Stream,” located between the stream on the south and the shoals to the north. It should also be noted that the third version includes an inset in the upper left corner depicting the migration pattern of herring in the North Atlantic, an illustration for a paper by John Gilpin, which has frequently been misinterpreted as a large-scale illustration of the North Atlantic currents and has occasionally been superimposed on the Gulf Stream. Top: The third version of the Franklin-Folger Chart of the Gulf Stream, published in 1786 as part of Franklin’s “Maritime Observations” Right: “Remarks” accompanying the third version Library of Congress, Prints & Photographs Collection

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Hydrographic Map of the North Atlantic Ocean, John William Gerard De Brahm, 1772 Image Collections, The John Carter Brown Library, Brown University

Other Early Charts of the Gulf Stream he Franklin-Folger Gulf Stream chart was a major improvement in Atlantic navigation and served as the basis for all but one subsequent eighteenth-century chart. In his Hydraulic and Nautical Observations (1787), Thomas Pownall clearly acknowledged the contributions of Franklin, incorporating several of his notes and corrections in his own paper and chart. Pownall’s depiction of the Gulf Stream is similar to Franklin’s but continues southeastward, extending across the entire Atlantic toward the African coast. Current arrows show the main circulation of the Atlantic so as to almost vanish as it approaches northwest Africa. Jonathan Williams (grand-nephew to Franklin) and Captain Thomas Truxtun, both of whom accompanied Franklin on his last cruise in 1785 and worked under his direction, also published charts depicting the familiar Franklin-Folger Gulf Stream. The only Gulf Stream chart made independently of Franklin and Folger during this period was published by John William Gerard De Brahm in 1772. During a trip to England in 1771, De Brahm tracked the current from off the coast of Charleston, South Carolina, north to Delaware Bay (39°N), a distance of around 1,000 km. From 39°N, he extrapolated the stream northeastward until it joined another current flowing to the southeast near 46°N 35°W. De Brahm’s chart was the first recorded attempt to follow and plot the path of the stream

along the North American coast; however, his attempt at extrapolating the Gulf Stream incorrectly plotted the current too far to the north, where it is shown crossing Georges Bank and the Grand Banks of Newfoundland. De Brahm also mistakenly shows the Gulf Stream running along the southern edge of the Newfoundland Banks, which is plotted nearly 9° west and 1° north of its actual position. The inaccurate depiction of the Gulf Stream on De Brahm’s chart may have misled mariners and inadvertently caused those sailing westward to deviate their course too far to the south and into the real position of the current. The Franklin-Folger chart of the Gulf Stream was a major step forward in accurately recording and depicting a complicated ocean current and illustrates the vast collective knowledge Nantucket ship captains gained during their decades of experience in the Atlantic whale fishery. Even today, the chart continues to provide a good overview of the main features of the stream, although obviously we now have a much more detailed understanding of its movement, variability, and subsurface features. As our scientific knowledge of the stream has increased, however, it has become difficult to represent all of this detail in one printed schematic. Although created nearly two and a half centuries ago, the Franklin-Folger chart of the Gulf Stream remains relevant today.

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Philip L. Richardson is a Scientist Emeritus at the Woods Hole Ocean-

Nathan T.  Adams is a shipwright and historian at Mystic Seaport.

ographic Institution, where he has studied the physical characteris-

He completed a master’s degree in the environmental history of the

tics of the Gulf Stream and other ocean currents for many years. He

ocean at the University of British Columbia, writing his thesis on

became interested in oceanography in the 1960s when he worked in

eighteenth-century whalemen’s knowledge. At Mystic Seaport, he

the Coast and Geodetic Survey producing nautical charts.

took part in the restoration of the Charles W. Morgan, the last American whaleship still afloat, and is currently working on the restoration of the Mayflower II.

The Search for the “Lost” Franklin-Folger Chart In the 1970s, I wrote my doctoral dissertation on the Gulf

historical charts of the Atlantic in the off chance that

Stream. At the time, colleague and Gulf Stream expert Fritz

Franklin’s chart was among them. There followed an

Fuglister advised me that Benjamin Franklin’s 1786 chart

intense discussion with the librarians, but I was eventu-

of the Gulf Stream included in his “Maritime Observations”

ally permitted to examine the restricted holdings where

was still the best for showing the general location, speed,

I quickly found not one but two copies of the London

and overall width of the current. I was later astonished to

version. Even the librarians had been unaware of the

learn that there were actually three versions of Franklin’s

existence of the “lost” chart in their collection.

Gulf Stream chart printed sequentially in London, Paris,

After conducting additional research on Franklin, Fol-

and Philadelphia, with later versions being copies of the

ger, and the three different versions of their Gulf Stream

earlier, although with some notable differences. I surmised

chart, I published my findings in 1980. News of the dis-

that the 1786 version of the Franklin-Folger chart, depict-

covery, along with a copy of the chart, was published on

ed in many oceanography books, could be very different

the front page of The New York Times on February 6, 1980,

from the sketch of the Gulf Stream Franklin originally ob-

and replicas of the chart were printed and widely distrib-

tained from his cousin, Timothy Folger, in 1768. Although

uted. In 1979, a third copy of the 1769 chart was discov-

this chart was mentioned by Franklin in 1786, all copies of

ered by Louis de Vorsey in the Naval Library in London.

it had been “lost” for many years.

One of the two prints in the Bibliothèque Nationale was

Intrigued, I wrote letters of inquiry to various libraries and museums and discovered that although the Paris version was relatively well known and accessible,

obtained by the United States Library of Congress in 1988, although the copy held in Paris is in better condition. It is unclear why someone did not earlier find a copy

no surviving copies of the earlier London version were

of the first London chart. I suspect that before World War

known to exist. I remember thinking that if I ever found

II, the copies in France were in the naval library in Brest,

myself in Paris, I would search for a surviving copy of that

perhaps with limited accessibility. It seems possible that

earlier chart, assuming that the French, ardent admirers of

historical charts were transferred to the Bibliothèque Na-

Franklin, may have archived earlier copies.

tionale in Paris for safe keeping during the war; by then,

In 1978–79, I spent a sabbatical year in Paris working

24

By Philip L. Richardson

the few people who had known about the London version

at the Museum of Natural History. The director, Henri

had died, or forgotten about the chart, or given up looking

Lacombe, suggested that if a copy of the first chart was

for a copy. For me, the lucky find inspired me to pursue

anywhere to be found in that city, it would most likely

further research on the historical aspects of oceanogra-

be located in the Bibliothèque Nationale. After fruitlessly

phy and science. These projects have been rewarding and

scouring the library’s index, I asked the librarians if it

have deepened my appreciation and understanding of the

would be possible to look through a folder containing

significant discoveries made by scientists in the past.

HISTORIC NANTUCKET / SPRING 2018


Equal Suffrage booth in the shape of the Old Mill, ca. 1910 NHA Collections P6610

C. Rollin Manville III at the wheel of the family motor vessel, ca. 1928 NHA Collections SC914-41

NEW & UPCOMING

EXHIBITIONS variety of exhibitions and displays are in various stages of preparation at the NHA. Led by our chief curator, Michael Harrison, and working with working with the Collections and Exhibitions Committee, chaired by Patricia Anathan, we look forward to presenting a robust exhibition slate for 2018. Our goal is to provide a logical narrative arc as the visitor walks through the Whaling Museum and historic sites. Look to the museum for a deep immersion in the watery world, to Hadwen House and Greater Light for an exploration of other themes and topics, including the people of Nantucket, life on the island, and insights into Nantucket’s diverse communities, both past and present. Top Gale, Quaise by Anne Ramsdell Congdon, ca. 1940, oil on board NHA Collections 1982.111.3

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At the Whaling Museum

Motorized catboat Louise B. converted for fishing, 1920s NHA Collections F996

The NHA’s major summer exhibition is titled Nantucketers and

With fewer than 500 surviving today, their very existence is in

Their Boats, which looks at the ways islanders rely on the wa-

jeopardy. They were the whales originally hunted by Nan-

ter for work, recreation, and connection to the broader world.

tucketers, and before that by the British, French, Dutch, and

Featuring stories from both year-round and seasonal resi-

Basques. In 1712, when a Nantucket captain named Hus-

dents, the exhibition will display models, fishing gear, racing

sey was purportedly blown off shore in a gale and captured a

trophies, summer souvenirs, and even a boat or two. A dial-up

sperm whale far out at sea, this great leviathan changed Nan-

to the exhibition starts this winter with film screenings of

tucket’s fortunes. This exhibition will metaphorically put flesh

John Stanton’s two documentaries on Nantucket yachting and

on the bones of our skeleton. How do these marine mammals

scalloping. Wood Sails Dreams and The Last Bay Scallop? ran

eat, breathe, and survive? Most importantly, what is our rela-

this winter in Gosnell Hall and were so well attended that

tionship to whales now that the harpoon has been replaced

they warrant presenting them again this summer.

by other equally threatening environmental and manmade

A new exhibition celebrating Maria Mitchell and her legacy

hazards? These and other facts and probing questions about

will open in April. The NHA is collaborating with the Maria

the current state of the whale populations in and around

Mitchell Association to present a celebration of the life and last-

Nantucket Sound are the subject of new displays produced in

ing influence of Mitchell, the first female astronomer in America

collaboration with Marine Mammal Alliance Nantucket and the

and first professor of astronomy at Vassar College. Opening

Center for Coastal Studies in Provincetown.

concurrently is an exhibition of underwater photography by Eric Savetsky. Eric has traveled widely to capture and share his stunning images of whales and other marine life.

and the many trades and pursuits that underpinned this thriving

PLEASE SEND US YOUR PHOTOS

whaling port. Prized paintings purchased for the Association

Send us a photograph or digital image and we will

by the Friends of the NHA will be on view in the mezzanine,

include it in a digital album in the gallery. Do you have

along with a selection of ship models and figureheads from the

interesting stories about working on the water? If so, let

permanent collection. The NHA holds all of the few surviving

us know, as we would like to record them. If you have

artifacts from the 1820 whaleship Essex disaster, and we are

objects or other contriburtions that might enhance this

enhancing that display as well.

exhibition, please contact Bridgette Hynes, Director of

The upper level of the Hadwen & Barney Oil and Candle Factory will showcase stories about early Nantucket industries

Whale ecology is a subject demanding urgent attention, and the plight of the North Atlantic right whale is extreme.

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HISTORIC NANTUCKET / SPRING 2018

Marketing, at bridgette@nha.org.


PLEASE SUPPORT NHA EXHIBITIONS We need your support to underwrite our exhibitions.

Top: Nantucket Harbor by Frank Swift Chase, ca.

Please contact Cristin Merck,

1925–30, oil on board

Director of Stewardship, at

NHA Collections 1981.73.1

cmerck@nha.org, or Stacey

The Bon-Ton Fish Market

Stuart, Director of Corporate

by Tony Sarg, 1927, oil on

Development, at sstuart@

canvas

nha.org, to learn about

NHA Collections 194.357.1

sponsorship and naming opportunities, or return the enclosed envelope

New Exhibitions at Hadwen House and Greater Light

to participate in these important projects.

Starting in May, Hadwen House will

it, an outdoor sculpture exhibition

open to the public daily through

will adorn the space. Working with

December. Initial work to upgrade

the Artists Association of Nantucket,

the HVAC system has already begun.

Quidley & Company, and Hostetler

Once completed, curators will begin

Gallery, sculptors will be invited to

to install exhibits that speak to

display their work in an intimate

non-whaling themes. An exploration

setting. The sculpture exhibition

of women’s suffrage and the role of

continues in the garden of Greater

women on the island, antislavery ef-

Light.

forts, and the remarkable pursuits of

Look to Greater Light to enjoy

African Americans such as Absalom

treasures from the NHA’s important

Boston will be explored in conjunc-

collection of Nantucket Art Colony

tion with the Museum of African

paintings. This includes objects on

American History. Throughout the

loan from the Artists Association of

summer, a lecture series will take

Nantucket, which also owns a signifi-

place at Hadwen House. In the beau-

cant body of work from this period.

tiful period garden recently complet-

Beverly Hall, aka Hanna Monaghan,

ed by NHA staff with generous grant

performs throughout the summer

support from the Nantucket Garden

and captures Hanna in her own

Hadwen House will reopen with

Club, whose members help maintain

amiable way.

new exhibitions in May

nha.org / NANTUCKET HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION

27


Front view NHA Collections 2017.23.1

RECENT ACQUISITIONS The NHA is pleased to announce a donation to the collections from Sara Jo Kobacker and the Kobacker family of two important scrimshawed teeth.

Back view NHA Collections 2017.23.1

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HISTORIC NANTUCKET / SPRING 2018

he first (2017.23.1) is a large tooth engraved on both sides with polychromed whaling scenes. It is attributed to the Welsh ship’s surgeon, William L. Roderick, who sailed on three voyages of the bark Adventure of London between 1847 and 1856. Roderick’s work is considered to be among the best pictorial scrimshaw. The second tooth (2017.23.2) is one of the famous Susan’s teeth by Frederick Myrick, the Nantucket whaler who created at least thirty-five similarly engraved teeth on the 1826–29 voyage of the ship Susan of Nantucket. Collectively, these are the earliest signed and dated pieces of scrimshaw (with the exception of a single piece from 1766 in the New Bedford Whaling Museum collection). The Kobacker Susan’s tooth is dated February 7, 1829, and joins two other Susan’s teeth in the NHA collection—one dated August 22, 1829, which the museum purchased in 1918, and another dated February 6, 1829, that was a gift of Winthrop Williams in 1964. Sara Jo Kobacker and her late husband, Arthur, were longtime summer residents of Nantucket. They assembled their collection of scrimshaw teeth, pie crimpers, canes, and swifts over many years. The gift of these two teeth to the NHA commemorates the Kobackers’ many years on island and their generosity to the NHA.


FROM THE ARCHIVES Recent donations

n island native, Bill Haddon (1928–2012) was a prolific twentieth-century photographer who documented many aspects of island life during a career that spanned five decades. From ice skating on Broad Street and aerial photographs of the island to Coffin family reunions and watermelon-eating contests, it seems that Haddon was everywhere, and now his work will be available to researchers at the NHA Research Library. The collection contains twenty boxes of prints and negatives as well as a number of oversized prints, all of which will be rehoused and stored in the library’s climatecontrolled vault. His Graflex Speed Graphic Camera, which he used throughout his career, and the quarterboard sign for his Main Street business, The Snap Shop, have also been added to the NHA’s artifact collection and at the Bartholomew Gosnold Collections Storage Center on Bartlett Road.

WANNACOMET WATER COMPANY RECORDS The Research Library has also acquired the first installment of the Wannacomet Water Company records. Founded in 1880 as a private enterprise, the Wannacomet Water Company provided water to the town and was investor-owned for more than a century before becoming a municipal resource in March 1988. The recent acquisition of records consists of five boxes of glass-plate and film negatives and photographic prints documenting distribution efforts and company facilities. Also included in the recent donation are a few bound items, such as service books, as well as digital copies of company day books dating from 1897 to 1953.

Top: Bill Haddon and his Graflex Speed Graphic Camera; and his image of ice skating near Steamboat Wharf NHA Collections, Bill Haddon Collection

Located at 7 Fair Street, the library is open to the public Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, and Friday from 10:30 a.m. to

Pulling cable through Federal Street pipe from Main Street, May 4, 1912

4:30 p.m.

NHA Collections, Wannacomet Water Company Collection

nha.org / NANTUCKET HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION

29


Please welcome our inaugural class of NHA mentees!

Mary Emery Lacoursiere with the NHA’s first group of Nantucket High School mentees.

These great students from Nantucket High School have self-identified and are eager to get going. Their engagement will be deep as each studies and learns about the NHA’s mission and programs. They look forward to learning life skills in a professional milieu while preparing for college. This paid, after-school program will run three times a year for eight weeks.

From left to right: Samir Banjara, Joan Guzman Duarte, Faith Hensley, and Maria Savaria

REIMAGINING EDUCATION Exploring opportunities for the Nantucket community and beyond

irected by Mary Emery Lacoursiere, the Peter M. and Bonnie J. Sacerdote Chair of Education and Community Relations, working with the Interpretation and Education Committee chaired by John Hilton, creative efforts are pouring into reimagining education at the NHA. How can the NHA provide meaningful educational opportunities for the entire Nantucket community and beyond? Our island presents unique challenges and opportunities. In addition to the in-school and on-site cyclical K–9 programming, new this year is a deep-immersion program for Nantucket High School students. College internships are expanded to year-round. Increasingly, faculty are opting to teach semester-long courses on topics of mutual interest. Adult and community learning is being framed in a matrix that matches our mission, which looks to classes, courses, lectures, and symposia that speak to multiple audiences. Our new winter hours offering free community access have been very well received. They will be extended through the end of April. Finally, our digital presence will be transformed so that our collections and stories provide a portal to deeper understanding and exploration. On our small island, collaboration is essential. By working together we can offer better programs, engage more people, and most importantly, satisfy our customers, because “a rising tide lifts all boats.” We will work

30

HISTORIC NANTUCKET / SPRING 2018

2018

CLASSES INSPIRED BY NANTUCKET HISTORY

REGISTER NOW FOR SUMMER 2018!

FULL COURSE CATALOG & REGISTRATION AT nha.org


with the Artists Association of Nantucket on companion workshops and two exhibitions, the Maria Mitchell Association on a shared exhibition and related programs, and the Egan Maritime Institute with collection sharing. We will offer joint programs with the African American Meeting House and Nantucket Preservation Trust (NPT). We’ll also partner with Nantucket Community Sailing (NCS) in a new “Sailors’ Scuttlebutt” summer lecture series and will work with NCS and the Cape Cod Maritime Museum in new boat-building classes. In other artistic realms, we will collaborate with the Nantucket Music Center and Theatre Workshop of Nantucket on performances and recitals, and with the White Heron Theatre Company on creative space sharing. Helping develop exhibits will be the Center for Coastal Studies (CCS), Marine Mammal Alliance Nantucket (MMAN), and the affiliated group, Marine Mammal Rescue Nantucket (which NOAA recently recognized as an authorized marine mammal stranding response team for Nantucket, Tuckernuck, and Muskeget Islands) to tell the whale ecology story. We are confident our collaborative efforts with other Nantucket Institutions will result in more robust, diversified, and compelling offerings.

Internships and Semester-Long Learning

On-island and class-based learning with select colleges is building strong momentum. Students and faculty from Boston University, Hobart and William Smith Colleges, the New York School of Interior Design, Princeton University, Roger Williams University, Salve Regina University, and Worcester Polytechnic Institute have signed on thus far in 2018. This initiative is important because it gives preference to students coming on island from Labor Day through Memorial Day, rather than during the congested summer months when accommodations are hard to come by. The challenge is to identify meaningful work that matches students’ interests and passions that then creates a force-multiplier effect. Read about NHA internships at nha.org/about/jobs.html

April Vacation Week Programming The Center for Coastal Studies will bring Delilah, its life-sized inflatable North Atlantic right whale, to the Whaling Museum on Wednesday, April 18 and Thursday, April 19. Children and adults can step inside Delilah and learn all about these amazing and endangered marine mammals. The NHA will also offer whale-related crafts and activities in the Discovery Room each day during Spring Break from 1­–4 p.m.

Boat Building Class

A collaboration with Cape Cod Maritime Museum & Nantucket Community Sailing Build your own Child’s Rowing Punt. A punt is a flat-bottomed boat with a square-cut bow, designed for use in shallow water. Your punt will take the lines off a George B. Kelley punt, built in his boat shop on Hyannis Harbor. Bruce Colvin of CCMM is our boatwright and will teach this 2two-day class. This is a great family or team-building project.

Members First

Professor Robert J. Dermody, AIA, NCARB from Roger Williams University’s School

Do you know of a student who might want to intern at the

of Architecture, Art, and Historic Preservation, with students in his Advanced

NHA? Contact Rebecca Miller for more information: rmill-

Architectural Design Studio course. During this semester-long course, students

er@nha.org

conceive and design architectural solutions for the 4 Whalers Lane property.

nha.org / NANTUCKET HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION

31


PUBLICATIONS

New Books from the NHA he NHA will be publishing two significant books this summer. The first is Collecting Nantucket: Artifacts from an Island Community, by Michael R. Harrison, Robyn & John Davis Chief Curator, a copiously illustrated work that explores a hundred fascinating artifacts and documents from the collection—including fine and decorative arts, furniture, costumes and textiles, whalecraft, technology, scrimshaw, manuscripts, and photographs. Ranging from famous treasures to obscure gems, but always telling interesting stories of Nantucket, the content will be drawn exclusively from the NHA’s permanent collection. This 216-page, 11- by 10-inch hardcover book will be an essential addition to your library. We thank Dennis L. and Susan R. Shapiro for generously providing the lead support for this important publication. “Sometimes Think of Me”: Notable Nantucket Women through the Centuries, features embroidered narratives by island

needlework artist Susan Boardman with text by Betsy Tyler, NHA Research Fellow. This long sought-after, out-of-print book, will be expanded and produced in a 12-by 10-inch format in hardcover. The new edition will contain additional content, including new narratives of several historic and contemporary women. The book will showcase exemplary Nantucket women whose lives are the subjects of exquisite embroidered narratives and thoroughly researched biographies.

SUPPORT NHA PUBLICATIONS 32

Contribute to the success of these new books by making a gift. Leadership donors of $1,000 or more will be listed on the recognition page of the particular book and will receive a complimentary signed and numbered limitededition copy. To be included in the book, pledges must be received by April 4. Gifts of all sizes, however, will be greatly appreciated and will help advance the NHA’s publications programs. You can contribute by using the enclosed envelope. To learn more, please contact Cristin Merck, Director of Stewardship, at cmerck@nha.org, or Stacey Stuart, Director of Corporate Development, at sstuart@nha.org.

HISTORIC NANTUCKET / SPRING 2018


DIGITAL INITIATIVES

Thanks to a lead gift from the Judy Family Foundation

Thinking big with bytes

the NHA is fifty percent along the way to expanding its collection of ’ Sconset oral and video histories,

he NHA is thinking expansively, constructively, and strategically about digital initiatives within the context of our mission and vision as we embark on a multiyear plan to substantially upgrade our digital presence. The NHA can benefit enormously by leveraging digital technologies throughout its campus and across its fields of interest. Through smart application of software and hardware and commensurate investment in qualified personnel, the NHA can increase its audience, strengthen ties with the community, provide greater value to online and on-location visitors, broaden and deepen opportunities for scholarship, and reinvigorate the study of Nantucket and its continuing seminal place in American history. In September 2017, Board President Kelly Williams established an ad hoc committee of the board with the purpose of developing a strategic plan pertaining to digital initiatives. The committee agreed to “think big” and imagine a comprehensive global solution. Concurrently, staff and the NHA’s media consultants researched and interviewed experts in related fields. The committee is grateful to Connie and Tom Cigarran for conceptualization, Nan Geschke and C. Jason Reimer for input on exhibitions, Charles Polachi and Amanda Cross for critical review, Al Novissimo and Mary Novissimo of Novation Media for articulation and ground-truthing, and Amelia Holmes, NHA Library and Archives Manager, for strategic content.

and making these accessible on our new website by June 2018.

GOALS Leverage digital and web-based technology such that: •

The visitor experience (on-site and digital) is exemplary;

The collections are protected, accessible, searchable, and showcased;

Educational opportunities (web-based and on-site) are expanded and deepened;

Community engagement increases;

Wayfinding (i.e. digital signage) across the NHA’s campus is improved;

Barriers to access are reduced (rural location, language barriers, age bias, etc.);

Earned-income opportunities increase;

Scholarship is celebrated; and,

The NHA brand is strengthened.

To accomplish these goals over the next three years, the NHA will execute the following five projects, and expand those already in process: •

Digitize and Document the NHA Collections

Expand Community Outreach and

Improve Wayfinding

Leverage Digital Assets and

Technology in Exhibitions

Leverage Digital Assets and

Technology in Education

Construct a Web-based

Infrastructure

nha.org / NANTUCKET HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION

33


2018 CALENDAR EXHIBITIONS

LECTURES & PROGRAMS

APRIL Celebrating Maria Mitchell and Her Legacy exhibition opens in partnership with the Maria Mitchell Association (MMA) Eric Savetsky photography exhibition opens New exhibitions exploring Nantucket’s working waterfront open in the Candle Factory

Check nha.org for details FAMILY ACTIVITIES

Discovery Room family activities daily (May–September) Olana Institute Members’ Trip

EVENTS

“Extraordinary Women of Nantucket” presentations at Hadwen House (July– August) Sailors’ Scuttlebutt lecture series with Alfie Sanford, Gary Jobson, John Burnham, & Nat Philbrick, in partnership with NCS (July–August)

JUNE Sculpture exhibition in the gardens of Hadwen House and Greater Light, in partnership with AAN & local galleries

Hannah at Greater Light (July–August)

Nantucketers & Their Boats exhibition opens in the McCausland Gallery

Oil, Business, and Blubber Symposium, with Dr. Jerry W. Dauterive of Roger Williams University and Jonas Peter Akins

Juried Artisans exhibition at the 1800 House

“Drawn to Whales” activities and musical presentation with Don Sineti

Food For Thought lecture series continues every Thursday

Whales Tales lecture series with Eric Savetsky, MMAN, and Rich Delaney of CCS

NHA Annual Members Meeting

Concert by songwriter Joe Flood at Greater Light

1800 House Decorative Arts Programs continue

Nantucket Music Center performance

Book launch: Collecting Nantucket: Artifacts from an Island Community

Spring Break Activities at the Whaling Museum, in partnership with CCS

Boat Building with Cape Cod Maritime Museum (CCMM) and Nantucket Community Sailing (NCS)

Book launch: “Sometimes Think of Me”: Notable Nantucket Women through the Centuries

1800 House Decorative Arts Programs begin

Hands-On History activities at NHA sites (June–August)

Whaling Museum open free to the Nantucket community (February–April)

Island Educators recognition event

AUGUST

Jazz Performance with Anne Martindale and Richard Busch

Hadwen House Fireside Chats begin

Whale Ecology exhibition opens in partnership with the Center for Coastal Studies (CCS) and Marine Mammal Alliance Nantucket (MMAN)

The Flower Power Party with N Magazine

Nantucket Book Festival

MAY Nantucket Art Colony exhibition opens at Greater Light in partnership with the Artists Association of Nantucket (AAN) Rights & Race exhibition opens at Hadwen House Candle Factory lecture series with historians Mark Foster, Matthew Stackpole, Michael Dyer, and author Philip Hoare Historic Sites open for the season Walking Tours commence Four Centuries Walking Tour with the Nantucket Preservation Trust (NPT)

Member Mornings: Behind the Scenes Tours of the Collections (June–August) Research Library extends hours to the first Saturday of the month (June– August) “Best of Nantucket” with the Inquirer & Mirror

Summer Sunset Series with live music on the Rooftop Deck (July–August)

“The Life and Work of Addison Mizner” talk by author Richard Rene Silvin, in partnership with NPT “Scrimshaw in the NHA Collection” by Dr. Stuart Frank, in conjunction with the Summer Antiques Show Moby-Dick Rehearsed, presented in partnership with the Theatre Workshop of Nantucket Wood Sails Dreams film by John Stanton

JULY

The Plastic Ocean film presented in partnership with the Inquirer & Mirror

Maria Mitchell’s 200th Birthday Speaker Series presents Dava Sobel, in partnership with the Maria Mitchell Association

NANTUCKET BY DESIGN, major summer fundraiser celebrating Nantucket’s influence on American design

All activities at the Whaling Museum unless otherwise noted

34

HISTORIC NANTUCKET / SPRING 2018


to benefit the nantucket historical association

@ackhistory


P.O. BOX 1016, NANTUCKET, MA 02554–1016

PERIODICAL POSTAGE PAID AT NANTUCKET, MA AND ADDITIONAL ENTRY OFFICES

A Promised Gift Swain Collection to Come Home to Nantucket Even as a child on Nantucket, Jonathan Swain was aware of his family’s prominent connection to island history. A direct descendant of John Swain, one of the ten original purchasers of Nantucket in 1659, Jonathan grew up in homes filled with Swain artifacts and the stories of island life, past and present. It was there that he developed his passion for Nantucket history and a lifelong commitment to collecting and preserving island artifacts. Jonathan’s penchant for collecting began with gifts from his parents. A few pieces of scrimshaw led to gifts of two early lightship baskets, historic documents, a mantle clock, family silver, and more. Today, his collection comprises dozens of artifacts and books, and he has an entire room in his Chicago home dedicated to it. “The Nantucket Room is my piece of the island,” says Jonathan, who left to pursue his education and a career in advertising and now returns every summer. “When I go into the room, I feel immediately connected to Nantucket and to my memories of growing up on island in the 1950s and 1960s.” Intent that his Nantucket Room collection should “come home to Nantucket,” Jonathan has made it a promised gift to the NHA in his will, in addition to designating a monetary bequest. In recognition of his generous bequest, the NHA named Jonathan a member of the Heritage Society. “It’s important that we maintain ties with the island’s past,” says Jonathan. “With this bequest, the Swain family history will be kept alive and accessible to future generations through the Nantucket Historical Association.” To learn more about the Swain family and Jonathan Swain’s recollections of growing up on Nantucket, visit his oral history at nha.org/library.

The Heritage Society Planning Today for the NHA’s Tomorrow For information about how you can become a member of the Heritage Society by including the Nantucket Historical Association in your estate plan, please contact the Development Department at (508) 228–1894 or email plannedgiving@nha.org.


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