The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Tales uncovered of Dundee father’s whaling adventures

mission: Family friend discovers evidence to support anecdotal accounts of expedition

- Jake Keith jkeith@thecourier.co.uk

An 89-year-old man whose Dundonian father was one of the last-ever British whalers has been presented with a stash of documents detailing his incredible tale.

Stanley Barrie, also born and raised in the city, knew only anecdotal accounts of his father’s arduous seven-month long expedition as a 20-year-old whaler in 1908.

This was just as the industry was dying out and six years before the last British ship set sail.

Family friend Frank Chalmers, 63, had also heard snippets of the tales and, believing Stanley’s father Robert to be deserving of a place in Dundee’s history books, launched a year-long mission to find out more.

He started with tracing the name of the ship his father sailed in. This he said was made all the more difficult as British whaling crew agreements had been dispersed all over the world in the 1950s.

After trawling the internet and speaking to dozens of researcher­s, he was aided by Canadian Matthew Ylitalo, a history PhD student specialisi­ng in 19th Century Dundee whaling at St Andrews University.

Mr Ylitalo used his connection­s with the Memorial University of Newfoundla­nd in Canada to access specialist archives.

With help from McManus history curator Julie McCombie, Robert Barrie was found on the crew list for an expedition to the Davis Strait, off the west coast of Greenland, on the legendary boat the Eclipse dated April 4 1908.

Robert, known as Bob, was paid 25 shillings per month for the trip – equivalent to just £1.25. Extras were paid such as for the number of catches and the first harpoon.

Frank, a retired civil servant now living in London, presented the documents to Stanley at Dundee’s Queen’s Hotel last night.

Stanley said his father often shared a story describing an incredible neardeath experience on the trip.

He said: “He had been travelling on a sled led by Arctic dogs after trading with the local Inuits.

“Unfortunat­ely the dogs smelled the carcase of a narwhal and suddenly veered off-course.

“He didn’t know how to control them and ended up falling through an area of freezing thin ice.

“He couldn’t even swim but somehow the local Inuits managed to pull him to safety from a distance.

“He said he’d never been so cold in his life. I’d imagine he was very, very lucky to survive.”

Stanley added: “People used to say it’s surprising he didn’t end up on a spaceship to Mars the mischief he got up to.

“It’s always been a very interestin­g part of his life and it’s great to know more.”

Frank said: “I honestly started to think that possibly the stories were not true. It was a torturous process.

“When I found out the right ship it was just an absolutely incredible feeling.

“It all paid off in the end. I think everyone would agree it’s important to make these links with the past.”

The Eclipse, which had a crew of around 40, was considered to be a relatively unsuccessf­ul expedition with just one small whale caught.

Whaling formed a huge part of Dundee’s history for over 160 years from about 1753 to 1914.

After the mid 1880s Dundee was the only remaining whaling port in the UK.

 ?? Picture: Mhairi Edwards. ?? At the handover of documents are, from left, Stanley Barrie, history student Matthew Ylitalo, family friend Frank Chalmers and researcher and McManus history curator Julie McCombie.
Picture: Mhairi Edwards. At the handover of documents are, from left, Stanley Barrie, history student Matthew Ylitalo, family friend Frank Chalmers and researcher and McManus history curator Julie McCombie.

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