Crew banking snow around whaling schooner Era, Cape Fullerton, Hudson Bay, Canada

Crew members wearing caribou clothing pose alongside the whaling schooner Era, Cape Fullerton, Hudson Bay, Canada, November 17, 1900. The men are engaged in banking the vessel with snow. Environment Infrastructure Livelihood Title supplied by cataloger. Information from original envelope identifies...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Comer, George (Creator)
Format: Still Image
Language:unknown
Published: Ownership Statement: Mystic Seaport 1900
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11134/70002:5376
Description
Summary:Crew members wearing caribou clothing pose alongside the whaling schooner Era, Cape Fullerton, Hudson Bay, Canada, November 17, 1900. The men are engaged in banking the vessel with snow. Environment Infrastructure Livelihood Title supplied by cataloger. Information from original envelope identifies this as # 57. Snow was used to bank the vessel during the winter. It provided insulation and protection from the wind. The schooner Era was built in 1847 at Boston, Massachusetts. She was a New London whaling vessel until her last voyage out of that port in 1892; her masters included James Monroe Buddington, John O. Spicer, and George Comer. She was wrecked off Miquelon Island, July 27, 1906. Taken by Captain George Comer (1858-1937), a sealer and whaling captain from East Haddam. He went to sea while still in his teens and was later master of vessels from both New London and New Bedford. Comer participated in voyages involved in polar expeditions and was noted for his studies of Arctic peoples and their environment. Comer's original caption for the image was "Banking the ERA for winter."