The Sea Shall Embrace Them: The Tragic Story of the Steamship Arctic

! Read * The Sea Shall Embrace Them: The Tragic Story of the Steamship Arctic by David W. Shaw ¹ eBook or Kindle ePUB. The Sea Shall Embrace Them: The Tragic Story of the Steamship Arctic She reported back that she enjoyed it. FrequentFlyer72 This book was a gift for my daughter. She reported back that she enjoyed it.. Aussie Reader said Gripping but Sad Account of Maritime Disaster. This new book by David Shaw tells the story of the tragic sinking of the United States Steamship `Arctic in 185Gripping but Sad Account of Maritime Disaster Aussie Reader This new book by David Shaw tells the story of the tragic sinking of the United States Steamship `Arctic in 1854. The `Arctic w

The Sea Shall Embrace Them: The Tragic Story of the Steamship Arctic

Author :
Rating : 4.61 (787 Votes)
Asin : 0743235037
Format Type : paperback
Number of Pages : 256 Pages
Publish Date : 2017-03-05
Language : English

DESCRIPTION:

Utterly compelling, The Sea Shall Embrace Them is a stirring slice of heretofore little-known American history. Shaw has based this fascinating account on the firsthand testimony of the few who survived the wreck, including the Arctic's heroic captain, James C. The 1854 collision at sea between the American ship Arctic and the Vesta, a much smaller French steamship, set in motion one of the most harrowing events in maritime history. Beautifully written, it puts the reader on deck as a ship full of men, women, and children do battle both with a mighty ocean and with their own baser instincts.. Not only did 400 people -- including Luce's own frail son -- die by daybreak,

She reported back that she enjoyed it. FrequentFlyer72 This book was a gift for my daughter. She reported back that she enjoyed it.. Aussie Reader said Gripping but Sad Account of Maritime Disaster. This new book by David Shaw tells the story of the tragic sinking of the United States Steamship `Arctic' in 185Gripping but Sad Account of Maritime Disaster Aussie Reader This new book by David Shaw tells the story of the tragic sinking of the United States Steamship `Arctic' in 1854. The `Arctic' was one of the new generation of ocean travelling boats offering the paying public comfort and speed whilst crossing the Atlantic. Involved in a race against the liners of the British owned and operated Cunard Company the `Arctic' was set to break all records, travelling full steam ahead regardless of weather or any other considerations.Sadly on September 27, 1854, the `Arctic' collided with a new ironclad vessel, the `Vesta', off . . The `Arctic' was one of the new generation of ocean travelling boats offering the paying public comfort and speed whilst crossing the Atlantic. Involved in a race against the liners of the British owned and operated Cunard Company the `Arctic' was set to break all records, travelling full steam ahead regardless of weather or any other considerations.Sadly on September "Gripping but Sad Account of Maritime Disaster" according to Aussie Reader. This new book by David Shaw tells the story of the tragic sinking of the United States Steamship `Arctic' in 185Gripping but Sad Account of Maritime Disaster Aussie Reader This new book by David Shaw tells the story of the tragic sinking of the United States Steamship `Arctic' in 1854. The `Arctic' was one of the new generation of ocean travelling boats offering the paying public comfort and speed whilst crossing the Atlantic. Involved in a race against the liners of the British owned and operated Cunard Company the `Arctic' was set to break all records, travelling full steam ahead regardless of weather or any other considerations.Sadly on September 27, 1854, the `Arctic' collided with a new ironclad vessel, the `Vesta', off . . The `Arctic' was one of the new generation of ocean travelling boats offering the paying public comfort and speed whilst crossing the Atlantic. Involved in a race against the liners of the British owned and operated Cunard Company the `Arctic' was set to break all records, travelling full steam ahead regardless of weather or any other considerations.Sadly on September 27, 185Gripping but Sad Account of Maritime Disaster Aussie Reader This new book by David Shaw tells the story of the tragic sinking of the United States Steamship `Arctic' in 1854. The `Arctic' was one of the new generation of ocean travelling boats offering the paying public comfort and speed whilst crossing the Atlantic. Involved in a race against the liners of the British owned and operated Cunard Company the `Arctic' was set to break all records, travelling full steam ahead regardless of weather or any other considerations.Sadly on September 27, 1854, the `Arctic' collided with a new ironclad vessel, the `Vesta', off . , the `Arctic' collided with a new ironclad vessel, the `Vesta', off . 7, 185Gripping but Sad Account of Maritime Disaster Aussie Reader This new book by David Shaw tells the story of the tragic sinking of the United States Steamship `Arctic' in 1854. The `Arctic' was one of the new generation of ocean travelling boats offering the paying public comfort and speed whilst crossing the Atlantic. Involved in a race against the liners of the British owned and operated Cunard Company the `Arctic' was set to break all records, travelling full steam ahead regardless of weather or any other considerations.Sadly on September 27, 1854, the `Arctic' collided with a new ironclad vessel, the `Vesta', off . , the `Arctic' collided with a new ironclad vessel, the `Vesta', off . "Oh Captain! My Captain!" Amazon Customer This book is evocative of the sorrow and loss at sea of which Walt Whitman wrote so emotionally. In contrast to Whitman's poem however, here the vessel - the steamship Arctic - did not make it to port, and rather than a son mourning for his lost father it was the other way around. The Captain of the Arctic, James C Luce, was grief-struck as he helplessly watched his son and the vast majority of the passengers drown in the frigid north Atlantic some fifty miles off Cape Race, Newfoundland.The story has its origins in competition between the UK and the US. In

Shaw lays out the immediate and secondary causes of the disaster: bad weather, no established shipping lanes, the ship's owners' preference for speed rather than prudence, and an appalling lack of safety precautions. By the mid-19th century, steamships were eclipsing traditional sailing ships in the lucrative transatlantic trade. David W. The largest of these, the American Arctic, collided with a smaller vessel in 1854 with a frightful, and unnecessary, loss of life. The writing for the most part is vivid and effective, though the physical layout of the ship is somewhat murky. --H. As well, he describes the suffering and grotesque deaths of many aboard and dozens of acts of pure cowardice on the part of the crew. Shaw's The Sea Shall Embrace Them tells the story of this disaster, eerily similar i