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 5 of 9)
In May the Cinque Portssplit off from the St. George and spent the summer pirating on its own. By September the ship was so leaky that men were pumping out water day and night; Selkirk believed that it was so riddled with worms that its masts and flooring needed immediate repair.That month the ship returned to the relative safety of the island, a secluded and uninhabited place where the men could regain their health and sanity. Soon Selkirk would look at the island and see salvation.
At a small suburban airport outside crowded Santiago, Chile, six of us stand anxiously beside a drafty hangar staring at an eight-passenger Piper Navajo prop plane. Mechanics are crawling over its dismantled left engine.
This is the twice-a-week flight one takes across 400 miles of frigid Pacific to reach the Juan Fernández Archipelago. A councilman from the island waits with me, joined by a history teacher, a young mother, and two Santiago policemen on a cushy work assignment. We’re all wondering if this three-hour delay might be one of those signs from the aviation gods.
“Don’t worry,” says our pilot, Ricardo Schaeffer, a former colonel in Chile’s federal police, with more than 3,000 flights over 20 years. “We only go when I know it is safe.”
Thus assured, I put my trust in a 1979 craft whose outer skin seems no thicker than a beer can. With surprisingly little turbulence, we finally climb over the city of six million humming past the jagged Andes and across the ocean at 6,000 feet, just above foamy white clouds. We also carry school textbooks and new diapers; returning, we’ll take lobsters and octopus to Santiago restaurants.
After two hours of hypnotic engine drone, Schaeffer points to a growing gray dot on the horizon. “CrusoeIsland,” he says. The Chilean government renamed it RobinsonCrusoeIsland in 1966.
As we bank high above the reddish moonscape on the extreme western promontory of the 29-square-mile island, rugged volcanic mountains are visible in the distance, with seemingly great spots for hiking or diving. A sailor in the 1700s, however, would have seen nothing but trouble— grim, sheer-faced coves rising 80 feet straight up, and not a sandy beach in sight. Yet perhaps Selkirk knew, because mariners had stayed on the island before, that to find anything life-sustaining, like forests and goats, he’d have to sail to the lush northeast end and the well-protected Cumberland Bay, a 90-minute boat ride from the airstrip. On a sunny spring afternoon, whales flirt with the fishing boat carrying us, and dozens of yelping fur seals—an endemic species, Arctocephalus phillippii, that Dampier’s men saw by the “thousands”—sun themselves on the smooth inland rocks. CumberlandBay’s beaches are gray volcanic rocks, but the cove is inviting enough that a half-dozen sloops from Europe and Canada are anchored there.
San Juan Bautista (John the Baptist) village (pop. 600), started in 1750 by the Spanish and still the only community on the island, is spread along the half-moon bay at the base of a 3,000-foot mountain that becomes a rain forest at its top. San Juan Bautista is part sleepy South Pacific fishing village, part eco-tourism hideaway.
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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