Hidden History of Nantucket
By Frank Morral, Barbara Ann White and Mark White
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About this ebook
Frank Morral
Frank Morral was a professor of English at Carleton College for forty-two years. He and his wife now live on Nantucket. His interest in the island's history was sparked with the discovery that his wife's great-grandfather, George Allen Backus, had fought in Company I, Massachusetts 20th Infantry from Antietam to Cold Harbor and neither his wife nor her siblings, all born on the island, were aware of him. The discovery of this hidden history in her family led to his current research on the military experiences of Nantucket's Civil War soldiers and sailors. Barbara Ann White is a research fellow at the Nantucket Historical Association and a retired public school history teacher. Her previous books are A Line in the Sand: The Battle to Integrate Nantucket Public Schools, 1825-1847 and Live to the Truth: The Life and Times of Cyrus Peirce: Crusader for American Public Education, Founder of the First Public Teacher Training School in the Nation.
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Hidden History of Nantucket - Frank Morral
way.
1
Greasy Luck
Methoughts I saw a thousand fearful wrecks;
Ten thousand men that fishes gnaw’d upon;
Wedges of gold, great anchors, heaps of pearl,
Inestimable stones, unvalu’d jewels,
All scatter’d in the bottom of the sea.
—William Shakespeare, King Richard III
Shortly before his brother drowns him in a butt of sweet Malmsey wine, George, the Duke of Clarence, recounts his nightmare of drowning in a sea full of riches. No place on earth knew better the perils and wonders to be found in the sea than the island of Nantucket in its great days of whaling. Its riches lay not in gold or heaps of pearls but in the greasy luck to be found in hauling in the whales that made the candles and lamp oil that lit the nation in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.
But the luck ran out. Whale oil was displaced, and with it, the island’s prosperity shrank and the population dwindled from its high of nearly 10,000 in the 1840s to 2,797 in 1920. Just when it seemed greasy luck would never return to the island, a miracle happened in the sudden appearance of over four hundred tons of coconut oil moving across the waters and onto the beaches of Nantucket in early April 1921.
After a fifteen-thousand-mile journey from the coconut lands of Southeast Asia, the British cargo steamer Gaelic Prince stopped briefly in Boston to unload part of its cargo of fruit, sugar and coconuts. From Boston it was headed to Brooklyn and its soap factories with nine hundred tons of coconut oil in its hold. But it ran into trouble at four o’clock on Wednesday morning, March 30, 1921.
A little off course, the Gaelic Prince ran aground on a knuckle
or protrusion of the Great Round Shoal about eight miles east-northeast of Nantucket. Despite seven days of urgent effort by a fleet of tugs and lighters, and assistance from the coast guard cutter Acushnet, the Gaelic Prince could not be budged from where it lay stuck on the shoal.
When it came to saving the ship or the cargo, the choice was easy. Nine hundred tons of coconut oil heated to a liquid consistency sufficient to be pumped out of the ship’s hold was dumped into the cold April waters of the Atlantic, supposedly never to be seen again.
Wits on the mainland suggested so much oil would calm the restless waters of the Atlantic and be a boon to keeping mermaids well soaped and clean. One described it as the milky whey.
Coconut oil congeals at temperatures below seventy degrees Fahrenheit and melts at higher temperatures. When the Gaelic Prince’s cargo hit the cold waters of the Atlantic, the coconut oil became blobs, cakes and slaps of white stuff of all sizes from smaller than a pie to as large as a steamer trunk. Although no one realized it at first, greasy luck
had returned to Nantucket.
The oil was pumped out of the Gaelic Prince on Wednesday, April 6, freeing the ship from the shoal. By daylight the next day, white stuff had drifted toward the island from the east. The ocean resembled curdled milk,
and the beaches soon looked ice rimmed.
Enterprising islanders took to their boats to gather it up. As east winds blew it on shore, first on the beaches of Wauwinet and Quidnet and then, days later, more broadly across the island—to the Jetties, Brant Point, Children’s Beach, Polpis and Madaket—islanders brought their baskets, buckets, bags, wheelbarrows, baby carriages, horse-drawn carts, trucks and cars to the greasy work of bringing in the coconut oil harvest.
Almost at once, enterprising housewives of the island bought up all the lye and oil of lavender and sassafras in the local pharmacies and began making soap. Never had so much soap been made on the island or soap so fitting for the island, since among its properties was the ability to work up a good soapy lather even in the salt water of the sea. It was said that in the golden days of whaling, whalers would carry coconut soap for when freshwater bathing was not to be had.
Eddie Backus in the Nantucket Historical Association’s oral history collection tells how his mother made the soap: You had to first put it on the stove in a pot of water, the cakes, & let it melt. And then set it aside and let it congeal again—because there was so much salt water & seaweed & bits & pieces in it…[then] strain it out and get the oil pure back again. And then she proceeded to make soap.
Fine homemade soap was all well and good. But in the knowledge that this unexpected harvest had traveled fifteen thousand miles on its trip to the island, those who drew the white stuff to themselves by bucket load, fishing boat and truck knew in their hearts there must be money to be found in the greasy stuff somewhere, a belief confirmed on April 9 when John Killen, agent for the Board of Marine Underwriters, placed a large notice in the Inquirer and Mirror ordering, "All parties having, or finding, any of the cargo from the steamer Gaelic Prince to deliver the same to him." The coast guard cutter Acushnet had also been ordered to remain in the Nantucket harbor until the following Tuesday, which seemed ominous. Was the government looking to collect duty on all this oil?
Rumors were rife. Some believed soap factories in New Bedford and elsewhere would pay five cents a pound for the white stuff. Word from Lloyd’s of London suggested that the cargo had been valued at $400,000, the equivalent today of about $5,500,000, but only once it reached the New York area’s soap factories. The urgent questions now became what was it worth in Nantucket and to whom did it belong?
USCGC Acushnet operated from Woods Hole, with cruising grounds of Buzzards Bay, the Nantucket Shoals and adjacent waters. Naval History and Heritage Command.
Never, it seemed, was there a better chance of getting something for nothing, even though most did not consider hauling in tons of greasy stuff from beaches and the ocean exactly nothing.
Time, however, was of the essence. All present knew by now that their harvest was at the mercy of the weather. A warm spell would transform the cakes of congealed oil into a liquid that all too quickly would melt into the streets, byways and beaches of the island and then flow back into the sea.
E.H. Hicks in his poem Beautiful Ile of the Sea,
published in the New Bedford Mercury and reprinted by the Inquirer and Mirror, tells the story up to the point where turning the oil to money and identifying who owned it required deciding:
"Pour oil upon the troubled wave,
And let the ship go free,"
So spake the stranded Gaelic Prince;
And oily was the lee.
Those tons of oleaginous
Ex-freight solidified:
And then they drifted down upon
Nantucket, far and wide.
The canny island folk were dumb
At sight of whitened shore.
But soon, recovered from amaze,
They scooped it up galore.
For While there’s oil, there’s soap,
said they,
And shipped it to the main,
And then went back unto the beach
And scooped some in again.
Nan-tucket!
then the owners cried,
And called up the police,
So now the salvage question looms,
Of who shall have the grease.
According to the Inquirer and Mirror, the island’s paper of record, not since the sewer controversy thirty-seven years before or the arguments over allowing automobiles on the island had there been so much interest in a town meeting as there was for the coconut oil harvest and what was to be done with it.
At the initial meeting on Friday, April 15, full delegations were on hand from Wauwinet, Polpis, Quidnet, Madaket, ’Sconset and elsewhere on the island. It was standing room only in the town hall, and many could not squeeze in at all.
The main question at hand: who could be trusted? From the beginning, it was clear that no trust could be put in anyone representing a shipping line or insurance company. According to George Harral, who later would become a key player, an insurance man told the Islanders if they sold any of the oil they would be arrested. The natives laughed long and loud at this threat, as their jail would only hold two.
Although it was suggested repeatedly that negotiations be put in the hands of a committee, the suggestion did not meet with favor. Everyone present wanted to be involved.
The claim by Mr. Koehler, representing the Prince Steamship Company, that the islanders did not own the oil and only had a half interest as salvors
also did not meet with favor. Nor did his saying the steamship’s agents would sell it for two cents a pound on the mainland. When the meeting asked how much he would pay for it on the island, the answer was nothing.
Only after it was transported and purchased would a half interest come back to the island.
John Garland said he would rather leave his oil in his barn and let it melt
than take a paltry two cents a pound.
Albert L. Coffin suggested hiring a lawyer. James H. Wood countered that the further away the meeting kept from a lawyer the better off it would be.
Again the suggestion to form a committee was ignored. Everyone had a stake in the action; everyone wanted to be involved. All that could be decided was to meet the next day, Saturday, when an oil buyer would be present.
The news was not good. At the next meeting, the price seemed to have fallen to one cent a pound. On hearing this, the overflow group laughed, and more threatened to let the oil melt back into the sea.
When a formal motion for a committee was introduced, only sixteen of the three or four hundred attending the meeting even voted. Ten were in favor, six against. But that was enough for the motion to pass and a committee to be formed. On Wednesday, April 20, the committee report was delivered to a meeting as large as the previous two had been.
The key to the solution was George S. Harral, a summer resident and the owner of the Harral Soap Company in New York. Harral told his story in a May 1949 Inquirer and Mirror column. His involvement, he wrote, had begun with James A. Backus of Wauwinet, one of the true-blue of the Island,
calling him at his home and asking him to come to the island and help with the coconut oil problem.