Thomas Farel Heffernan
Mutiny on the Globe
The Fatal Voyage of Samuel Comstock
A bloody mutiny on a whaling journey, followed by an incredible tale of survival on land and sea.
Samuel Comstock knew he was born to do some great thing, but his only legacy
was a reign of terror. Two years out of Nantucket on a whaling voyage in
1824, he organized a mutiny and murdered the officers of the Globe.
It was a premeditated act; in his sea chest Comstock carried the seeds,
tools, and weapons with which he would found his own island kingdom. He had
often described these plans to one of his brothers, William. But the chief
witness and chronicler of the mutiny was young George Comstock, who neither
participated in nor approved of his brother's savage deed.
Within days of settling on Mili Atoll in the Marshall Islands, Comstock was
murdered by his fellow mutineers. Six innocent seamenGeorge among
themseized the Globe and escaped; most of the rest were killed
by natives. Two survivors lived for twenty-two months, half-prisoners and
half-adoptees of the natives, until they were rescued in a bold and
dangerous maneuver by a landing party from the U.S. schooner Dolphin.
The Globe's story is one of terror, adventure, endurance, and luck.
It is also the story of one of the most bizarre and frightening minds that
ever went to sea.
"Thomas Heffernan's Mutiny on the Globe is a searching, impeccably
researched account of one of the most horrifying and fascinating events
in Nantucket's whaling history."Nathaniel Philbrick, author of
In the Heart of the Sea
Thomas Farel Heffernan is the author of Stove by a Whale: Owen Chase and the Essex and former president of the Melville Society. He lives in
Garden City, New York.
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