Firsthand glimpse of a late 18th-century Pacific voyage, with vivid scenes and real people.
This book from Ebenezer Townsend’s diary records a maritime journey to Hawaii in 1798. It presents day-to-day life aboard a sealing ship, including careful observations of local chiefs, customs, and the fruit of first contact. The writing offers concrete details about meals, trade, weather, and navigation, inviting readers to step onto the deck and imagine the challenges of long voyages and distant shores.
- Experience the tone and pace of a sailor’s record of encounters with native communities, taboos, and gifts.
- Learn about daily provisioning, shipboard routines, and the practical side of 18th‑century seamanship.
- See early impressions of Hawaiian landscapes, people, and social structure through a captain’s eye.
- Understand the human moments of exploration, alliance-building, and cultural exchange on long ocean passages.
Ideal for readers of maritime history, travel diaries, and primary-source narratives from the age of exploration.