72 THE WHALEBONE WHALES OF THE WESTERN NORTH ATLANTIC. 
whales captured about Bermuda.) A number of the natural history observations 
appear to have been taken from Dudley, and paraphrased and much condensed, 
but the major part of the matter is original. 
Young’s Chronicles of the Pilgrim Fathers, published in 1841,* contains an 
interesting note by the author relative to whales occurring about Cape Cod, Mass., 
which has already been quoted on p. 22, foot-note. 
The second edition of Felt’s Annals of Salem, Mass., published in 1849,* has 
several pages devoted to statements regarding the American whale fishery (includ- 
ing a number of natural history notes) arranged chronologically. The following 
are the most important : 
Mch. 12, 1692. John Higginson and Timothy Lindall write to Nathaniel 
Thomas complaining that the whales were taken away from them, as follows: . 
“Ye first was when Woodbury and company, in our boates, in the winter of 1690, 
killed a large whale in Cape Cod harbour. . . . The second case is this last 
winter, 1691. William Edds and company, in one of our boates, struck a whale, 
which came ashore dead, and by ye evidence of the people of Cape Cod, was the 
very whale they killed.” (2, pp. 228, 4.) 
“1765, Aug—The whale fishery from Boston and the neighboring ports 
amounts to 100 sail, which have been successful this season in the Gulf of St. 
Lawrence and Straits of Belle Isle, having taken upwards of 9,000 barrels of oil.” 
(2, p. 225.)* 
Winsor’s History of Duxbury, Mass., has a few notes on the colonial whale 
fishery at that place, as follows: 
“1690. John Wadsworth was appointed to view whales, that may be cast 
ashore in the town.” 
“1712. Marshfield, Nov. 28: On Tuesday, the 25th current, six men going 
off the Gurnet Beach in a whale boat at Duxbury aftera whale . . . were all 
drowned.” 
“1724. Dec. 3d. A whale captured off the beach.” 
“1770. A dead whale was found a quarter of a mile from the beach. 
The whale washed ashore and made 15 barrels. 
Freeman’s History of Cape Cod, 1858,° contains a letter from Wm. Clapp to 
Squire Dudley, dated Cape Cod, July 13, 1705, which states : 
“T have very often every year seen that Her Majesty has been very much 
wronged of her dues by these country people and other whalemen as come here 
awhaling every year which take up drift whales which were never killed by any 
man,” ete. 
* Op. cit., 1, pp. 56-60 and 296-298. 
2 Younc, ALEx., Chronicles of the Pilgrim Fathers, 1602-25. Boston, 1841. 
* Fett, J. B., Annals of Salem, 2d ed., 1849, 2, pp. 223-226. I have not seen the rst edition. 
“The following note also occurs: 
“7808. Off the Brimbles, a whale sixty feet long, is found dead by some men from Marble- 
head.” (Op. cit., 2, p- 94.) 
* Winsor, J., History of Duxbury, 1849, p. 86. ° Vol. 1, p. 342. Spelling corrected. 
