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 4 of 9)
Consequently, when commercial shipowners or governments captured pirates, they were rarely shown mercy. Pirate expert David Cordingly, former curator of the National Maritime Museum in Greenwich, England, writes in Under the Black Flag that it was common practice in the British colonies to place the body of a captured pirate in a steel cage shaped like a man’s body and suspend it near the entrance to a port as a grisly warning to seamen.
It’s doubtful any of this weighed much on Selkirk’s mind in September 1703 as Dampier’s two ships, the 320-ton St. George and the 120-ton Cinque Ports, prepared to leave the harbor of Kinsale, Ireland, for South America. The ships were small by Royal Navy standards and full of desperate men who perhaps noticed that even the staffing of the ships foretold the danger they faced. The St. George, Souhami writes, was supplied for eight months of travel and carried five anchors, two sets of sails, 22 cannons, 100 small arms, 30 barrels of gunpowder and five times more men (120) than it could comfortably accommodate—a testament to the numbers needed to crew captured ships, but also a morbid acknowledgment that dozens would be lost to disease, battle and desertion.
The voyage started out badly and got only worse, according to an account by Dampier’s second mate, William Funnell.
After two weeks, with 50 miles being a good day’s travel under Selkirk’s navigation, the ships had reached the Portuguese island of Madeira, 350 miles west of Morocco, then the Cape Verde Islands, a major slave port west of Senegal, and on across the Atlantic to Brazil. But literally on the first night, while still in Ireland, a drunken Dampier had a violent argument with one officer, and dissension quickly spread.
By October the men were sick of brick-hard sea biscuits, dried peas and salt meat. They longed for fresh meat and vegetables, but settled for an occasional shark, dolphin or weary bird. As on most ships of the day, the men often slept in wet clothes and mildewed bedding. The ships were incubators for typhus, dysentery and cholera. Amonth later, 15 men had fever, and others were wracked by scurvy, caused by a vitamin C deficiency, which Souhami says claimed more lives than contagious disease, gunfire or shipwreck.
Things got only worse when Capt. Charles Pickering died of a fever in late November and command of the Cinque Portswas given to his lieutenant, Thomas Stradling, a young upperclass seaman the crew disliked. There were fights and nearmutinies as the ship cruised the coast of Brazil. The meat and grain were filled with roaches and rat droppings.
In February 1704, both ships were finally west of Cape Horn’s foul storms and headed north along the coast of Chile, though by now they had lost sight of each other. The Cinque Ports holed up at a rendezvous point on one of the islands in the archipelago west of Valparaiso, but the crew was threatening mutiny against Stradling. Dampier showed up just in time to put down the rebellion by promising a tighter rein on cocky Stradling. But shortly he, too, faced dissent among his sailors, who wanted him to attack more ships.
The St. George and Cinque Ports left the island in March 1704 to continue their plundering along the coasts of Peru and Mexico, where tempers continued to flare. “Stradling,” writes biographer Souhami, “rounded on Dampier, called him a drunk who marooned his officers, stole treasure, hid behind blankets and beds when it came time to fight, took bribes, boasted of impossible prizes and when there was plunder to hand, let it go.”
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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