hungry-hungry-hobbit:quartervirus:a-social-construct:themightyglamazon:gehayi:queenofeden:perplexing
hungry-hungry-hobbit:quartervirus:a-social-construct:themightyglamazon:gehayi:queenofeden:perplexingly:Daughter of a gun (ノ´ヮ´)ノ*:・゚✧ No idea if such a thing existed but surely there had to be girls born on board in the Age of Sail?*puts on obnoxious historian hat**clears throat*there were actually tons of women and girls on board ships during the age of sail and it’s really cool history that no one!!! ever!!! talks about!!! like captains of merchant ships used to bring their wives and children on board for long voyages all the time (and of course there were plenty of well known female pirate ship captains, and women cross-dressing as men, and prostitutes that more people seem to know of)there’s actually a really amazing story of one woman, Mary Ann Patten who was the wife of the captain of this ship called Neptune’s Car. Captain Patten decided that he wanted her onboard with him and she was super about this and learned all about navigation and sailing and everything. so this one voyage they’re going around the tip of south america when her husband gets sick and is bed ridden with a fever right as the ship sails into one of the worst storms any of the crew had ever seen and it looks like they might lose the ship or have to stopso you know who takes over??? the first mate??? no.MARYshe took over the whole crew and sailed that ship through freezing water and pack ice and had it coasting smoothly into the san francisco harbour like it was nothing. and she did this all at age 19. while pregnant.at one point the first mate tried to get the crew to mutiny against her but they all rallied with her and told him to shut the heck up because she obv knew what she was doing.there’s a great book about women in the age of sail called ‘female tars’ by suzanne stark that i cannot recommend enough and has way more amazing stories and insights about the myriad roles women and girls played aboard ship during that time period.(sorry i totally didn’t mean to hijack your post i love all of your art and this is gorgeous i just got over excited sorry sorry sorry)We need links!Female Tars: Women Aboard Ship in the Age of Sail by Suzanne StarkHen Frigates: Passion and Peril, Nineteenth-Century Women at Sea by Joan DruettHen Frigates: Wives of Merchant Captains Under Sail by Joan DruettIron Men, Wooden Women: Gender and Seafaring in the Atlantic World, 1700-1920 edited by Margaret S. Creighton and Lisa NorlingPetticoat Whalers: Whaling Wives at Sea, 1820-1920 by Joan DruettSea Queens: Women Pirates Around the World by Jane YolenSeafaring Women: Pirate Queens, Female Stowaways and Sailors’ Wives by David CordinglyThe Captain’s Best Mate: The Journal of Mary Chipman Lawrence on the Whaler Addison, 1856-1860 by Mary Chipman LawrenceWomen Sailors and Sailors’ Women: An Untold Maritime History by David CordinglyI’M GONNA GET A LIBRARY CARD AS SOON AS I GET AN APARTMENT AND READ LITERALLY ALL OF THESE AND WEEP TEARS OF PROUD SISTERHOODI personally know Lisa Norling and Suzanne Stark; they’re awesome women and their books are awesome.REBLOGGING FOR REFERENCE! Never enough research for my high-seas gals@charminglyantiquated @cyj70 @goingtoweather @focsle @thistleburrLook. At. This. -- source link