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The ships and sailors of old Salem

Chapter 43: FOOTNOTES:
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About This Book

The work compiles ship logs, journals, and contemporary documents to chart Salem’s maritime ascendancy, detailing long-distance voyages, privateering, shipbuilding, and merchant ventures. It profiles notable captains and merchants, recounts early visits to distant ports and islands, and describes encounters with pirates, naval seizures, and wartime risks. Technical topics such as navigation, charting, and vessel construction are discussed alongside institutional life—marine societies, custom houses, and wharves—and illustrated by authentic records. Combining narrative episodes with economic and social context, it presents a rounded portrait of a vanished era of seafaring commerce and the practices that made a small port globally prominent.

FOOTNOTES:

[47] This sketch of the life of Frederick Townsend Ward is taken for the most part, from the Essex Institute Historical Collections, Vol. XLIV, Jan. 1908, to which Hon. Robert S. Rantoul contributed a most complete and authoritative account of General Ward’s family history and achievements. Mr. Rantoul included also the Chinese decrees, and other documentary material which are made use of as Chapter XXX of this book, and the author desires to make clear his obligations, both to the researches and literary labor of Mr. Rantoul and to the Essex Institute for permission to make use of this material as properly belonging in a record of the deeds of the Salem men of seafaring stock and training.

[48] The Middle Kingdom, by S. Wells Williams.