St Mary le Bow

St Mary le Bow
For whom the bells toll

Friday 15 November 2013

The Third American

Little is known about the third American aboard the Endeavour. 

John Thurman

It is assumed that John Thurman was from the colonies but nothing much is known except that he was impressed at Madeira when Cook put in for a supply of a few thousand gallons (not litres; gallons!) of fine Madeira wine, as this wine was known to travel well and would only improve as the journey progressed.

Young Mr. Thurman was around 20 years at the time, and it appears he was impressed from a sloop out of the colonies. Now the sloop, being a man-o-war had to be British, at that time the American colonials relied on the Royal Navy to protect their shores and them from any aggressor (read French) as they had no navy of their own until sometime after the revolution and the Declaration of Independence.

It's quite possible that Thurman was American by birth and had joined the navy voluntarily as did Lt. Gore and Midshipman Matra, but more likely I think to have been pressed into service when the sloop was in port in one of the colonies.

Thurman didn't have much of a life, he enjoyed 12 lashes, twice which wasn't bad considering, there was around 80 men aboard who were eligible for punishment by the cat-o-nine-tails, and for the entire 3 year voyage Cook ordered one of six lashes. 21 of 12 lashes and 3 of 24. This was pretty light for that period. Poor Thurman got a double dose!

And to top it all off he died from dysentry on the 3rd February 1791 whilst the ship was en route between Batavia and  the Cape of Good Hope. He was or course consigned to the deep.

It wasn't  much of a life for this young man; was it?


No comments:

Post a Comment