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American Merchant Ships and Sailors

Chapter 18: Transcriber's Notes
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About This Book

A survey traces the development of American shipbuilding and seafaring from colonial wooden craft through the age of sail to the rise of steam and steel. It describes commercial routes, packet lines, and the everyday skills, dangers, and responsibilities of sailors and captains. The narrative examines darker chapters including domestic complicity in the transatlantic slave trade and efforts to suppress it. Separate sections treat the whaling and sealing industries, the practice and effects of privateering, and the hardships of Arctic exploration. Regional maritime roles such as Great Lakes navigation, river steamers, and coastal fisheries are outlined alongside technological and economic change.

"Mind your own business and never go to sea,
And you'll come to be the ruler of the Queen's navee."

Perhaps a like situation confronts the American merchant marine in its new development.


Transcriber's Notes

  Varied hyphenation and spelling is retained except where noted.

  Inserted missing illustration on page 18 into list

  Page 238: Changed Illustration tag "AN ESQUIMAUX" to "AN ESQUIMAU" to fit text.

  Page 4: Removed extraneous ' after "Corsairs"

  Page 191: Punctuation in diary normalized.