FAMILY BALANID2. 127 
ANG OSS Ss Pe Fas See $6,168,997 00 
Inv SS6j 52.55 2S BA ete eeck 5,689,814 00 
in USS 7iaeks te Sas BES Ae a ae 7,357,553 00 
Inc I SSB ya ee rr See ee aera 6,156,038 00 
In this State, the whale fishery has been successfully pursued. From returns obligingly 
communicated to me by the Collector of the Port of New-York, it appears that within the past 
year (1838) sixteen vessels of 5538 tons and 320 men, were employed from that port in the 
whale fishery. The produce was, 
Sperm oil, .. 177,346 galls. Value, $181,421 00 
Whale oil, -. 605,497 galls. ee 209,438 00 
Whalebone,. 186,448 lbs. se 32,124 00 
Total value, $422,983 00 
From the Collector at Sag-Harbor for the same period, I have received the following state- 
ment : 
Sperm oil, -. 125,240 galls. Value, $125,240 00 
Whale oil, .. 959,295 galls. wy 319,760 00 
Whalebone,. 236,000 lbs. sé 42,480 00 
Total value, $487,485 00 
From another source, we gather the following information connected with the whale fishery 
from one district alone in this State. It is the district which comprises the three counties of 
Kings, Queens and Suffolk, on Long Island. 
During the year ending December 31, 1840, there arrived within that district, between the 
second of May and the twelfth of October, nineteen vessels, with the following gross amount : 
Spermi oles Secs maetescsine anes 109,588 galls. 
Wihal ey oil cic seme iaisieclsialacattaiite 937,234 galls. 
Wihalebone’s-2 secnc cans caieceneeteeeects 232,182 lbs., 
valued at something over half a million of dollars. 
During the year 1840, between June 16 and December 20, there sailed from the same dis- 
trict twenty vessels. Their destinations were, fourteen for the South Atlantic Ocean ; two 
for the Indian Ocean; and for New-Holland, New-Zealand, Crozett Islands and the North- 
west Coast, one each. On the first of January, 1841, there were still absent, in addition to 
the foregoing, nineteen vessels, all on voyages to the Indian Ocean and New-Zealand. These 
had departed between the twelfth of June, 1838, and the twenty-sixth of August, 1839. Se- 
veral of them, however, arrived within the present year. The average duration of those 
whalers which returned in 1840, was short of sixteen months. 
Those vessels employed in the right whale fishery, are absent on an average twelve months. 
In pursuit of the spermaceti whale, the duration of the voyage often extends to three years. 
