Sea of Glory: America's Voyage of Discovery: The U.S. Exploring Expedition, 1838-1842
by Nathaniel Philbrick ISBN: 067003231X
Post Your Opinion | | A Review of: Sea of Glory: AmericaÆs Voyage of Discovery-The U.S. Exploring Expedition, 1838-1842 by George FetherlingCaroline Alexander's book Endurance became a surprise bestseller
six years ago and started a revival of interest in the Antarctic
explorer Sir Ernest Shackleton-one that grew to include books about
the leadership lessons that executives can supposedly gain by
studying him. In fact, the success of Endurance launched the
publishing craze for books about the age of exploration generally.
Alexander herself now returns to the field with The Bounty, a much
more impressive work that will have a different effect. No one is
ever going to write a book called Management Secrets of Captain
Bligh.
Except that he seems not to have been much of a sailor, Charles
Wilkes (1798-1877) was a Bligh-like figure-a music-hall version of
Bligh almost. That's one reason his circumnavigation of the globe
at the head of a small flotilla of American warships, frantically
making both charts and enemies, isn't well remembered today. In
fact, it's barely been remembered at all until now, with publication
of Nathaniel Philbrick's Sea of Glory.
Although scientists travelling with Wilkes brought back a fortune
in knowledge, helping to seed the planned Smithsonian Institution,
the voyage, like all voyages of exploration, had commercial
underpinnings: to make charts for the American whaling fleet, the
world's largest at the time. Hence the main regions covered were
Antarctica, the central South Pacific and the northwest coast of
North America. The last of these was problematical. American politics
made the expedition years late in getting underway. By the time it
returned, a different mob was in the White House and Britain and
the U.S. were in the midst of the Oregon boundary crisis, when
questions about ownership of the northwest coast almost led to war.
To top it off, the cruel, buffoonish and self-important Wilkes was
put through a series of courts martial on various charges, such as
massacring Fijians, though he was found guilty only of relatively
minor offences, such as flogging a 16-year-old who had the temerity
to visit his mother while in port in Boston.
Philbrick, whose previous book, In the Heart of the Sea, about the
whaling ship that helped inspire Herman Melville to write Moby-Dick,
is another beneficiary of the way Caroline Alexander has reignited
interest in such topics. Compared to hers, however, his prose is
obvious and sometimes a bit laboured. Also, many Canadians are
likely to find it a trifle more patriotically American than they're
comfortable with. Of course, national and even regional differences
of this sort often figure in the new literature of exploration.
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