The Real Robinson Crusoe
He was a pirate, a hothead and a lout, but castaway Alexander Selkirkthe author's ancestor inspired one of the greatest yarns in literature
- By Bruce Selcraig
- Smithsonian magazine, July 2005, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 9)
These days, the wide sandy beach beneath the inviting Crusoe Hotel is still perfect for dogs and long walks, but the herring boats that once choked the harbor are long departed, as are the fishermen, their net factories and the flaxen mills. There’s a tiny corner market, a railway pub and someone who offers “Reiki Indian head massage,” but a more powerful draw for many visitors is that Lower Largo is 15 minutes from Scotland’s cradle of golf, St. Andrews.
Were this the United States, you wouldn’t be able to see the ocean for all the billboards touting Crusoe Land Thrill Rides and Man Friday Burgers, but the Scots are a bit more restrained. Or perhaps it’s because, as a local drama critic put it to me over tea and scones: “Selkirk was a bit of a bastard, more respected in his absence than in his presence.”
Lower Largo’s tribute to its famous son consists of one bedroom-size exhibit room at the Crusoe Hotel, where there are some artifacts and photographs of the Juan Fernández Archipelago, site of his marooning, and a curious outdoor statue of Selcraig on Main Street, dressed in goatskins, looking out to sea as though he had lost a golf ball.
Even Scots seem perplexed by the statue. There’s no museum, no informational display. They stare at it, take a photograph and keep walking. “I think it’s absolute madness that the Crusoe connection is not promoted more,” says Stewart Dykes, owner with his wife, Lesley, of the Crusoe Hotel. “We’ve got something here every bit as big as the Loch Ness monster.”
Selcraig’s unseemly past in Lower Largo is not exactly a literary mystery. The limited amount of factual material about the spirited lad has been mined numerous times, from the early 1800s to 1939 and R. L. Megroz’s The Real Robinson Crusoe. The past four years have seen the publication of three distinct and well-researched books.
One of the oldest accounts, 1829’s The Life and Adventures of Alexander Selkirk, by John Howell, describes the mariner as “spoiled and wayward,” made only worse “by the indulgence of his mother, who concealed as much as she could his faults from his father.” Selcraig’s mother, Euphan Mackie, apparently believed that Alex, as the seventh son, was blessed with luck and should be encouraged in his dreams of going to sea. His father, John, wanted the lad to stay home and help with his tannery and shoemaking business, creating a simmering dispute that caused so much “domestic strife and bickering,” Howell writes, that John threatened to disinherit Alex.
Virtually all of these accounts lean heavily on one source, the records of the church (or kirk) elders at the Largo Kirk, known as the Kirk Session Minutes, which I found at the St. Andrews University Library.
On a spitting gray day, I went to the basement of the library, where two very proper women in the special collections department had me stow my bags, briefcases and ballpoint pens, and issued me a No. 2 pencil. I sat at a blond wood table with gooseneck reading lamps as a librarian placed before my incredulous eyes not rolls of microfilm, but the actual Kirk Session Minutes, marked 1691-1707, in a rebound brown cover about 13 inches long and 8 inches wide.
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Comments (9)
1 can always remember my gran said that we were related to robinson crusoe my gran was a sutherland,i think her maiden name was sekirk,i was brought up in fife scotland but don't know any more john
Posted by john mckechnie on February 6,2013 | 07:33 AM
Fascinating article. "Crusoe" film (1997) has Friday being shot by English slavers to add drama -- a major departure from the original book. Dafoe's book is a great meditation on man's place in the universe, his relationship with God, and the necessity for connections to other men/people. I recall that the Tom Hanks movie "Castaway" made reference to suicidal impulses, as exhibited by Selkirk due to his total isolation.
Posted by Lee on November 26,2011 | 09:22 PM
What is more incredible is that in 2005 a team of archaeologists (and national Geographic)found the ruins of Alexander Selkirk house in the Robinson Crusoe Island . A fragment of one nautical instrument was also found.
Wonderfull story!
Posted by R. Filipe on November 11,2011 | 10:28 AM
There is also a story about a Miskito indian who survived a shipwreck by Monkey Point, in the Caribbean Sea by Nicaragua
Posted by Julio Molina on March 14,2011 | 02:06 AM
I don't know why I am so fasinated by Alexander Selkirk but I am,I am thinking about trying to write a story about being alone on an island just like he was,except more earthy than Robinson Curuso,just something to do .
Posted by Anthony Whatley on September 14,2010 | 03:03 PM
My Mother discovered that we were descended from a brother of Alexander Selkirk but after she died her line of detective work was lost and now i can not seem to get anywhere tracing my great grandfather Robert Selkirk from Silloth back to his roots in Dumfries and further .
Any advise would be appreciated .
Regards to all who read this .
Posted by Shona Fozzard nee Selkirk on April 28,2010 | 02:26 PM
...I'd like to sail to that Island some day & stay awhile ...are there any photos of the Bay were those boats were anchored?
Posted by Del Ryan on January 21,2010 | 12:47 AM
I am currently doing some research on Alexander Selkirk. My family are from Fife (Cairns) and I understand we are decendents of Selkirk, my great aunt had all the paperwork stating this but lost it years ago, it is my mums 80th birthday soon and I am hoping to put all the records together of our family tree. If there is any additional info regarding other family of Selkirk or how to find it, any help would be appreciated.
Love the information on his life
Fiona Trumper Vancouver Canada
Posted by Fiona Trumper on August 21,2009 | 05:17 PM
Very interesting story. I enjoyed it. My grandchildren are discussing it in grade school. Any idea how to find what finally happened to Capt. Stradling after he escaped?
Posted by Phyllis Stradling Folsom on May 24,2009 | 09:00 PM