The Wrecking Master


Book Description




The Wrecking Master


Book Description

The Wrecking Master by Ralph Delahaye Paine: Ralph Delahaye Paine's work may be an adventure novel that explores the daring and dangerous world of wreckers—individuals who salvage goods from shipwrecks along treacherous coastlines. Key Aspects of the Novel "The Wrecking Master": Maritime Adventures: The novel likely delves into the maritime world, focusing on the thrilling and perilous activities of wreckers. Character of the Wrecker: Ralph Delahaye Paine might provide insights into the motivations, skills, and moral dilemmas faced by the wrecking master. Danger and Suspense: "The Wrecking Master" could be filled with moments of danger, suspense, and high-stakes salvage operations. Ralph Delahaye Paine (1871-1925) was an American author known for his adventure and maritime novels. His works often captured the excitement and challenges of life at sea.




The Florida Keys: The wreckers


Book Description

Today, on the Keys between Key West and the mainland, some forty thousand residents and thousands of visitors fish, swim, sail and dive int he crystal clear waters off a tropical reef; relax in the sun adn cooling trade wind breezes; and sleep in the air-conditioned comfort of their homes and hotel rooms. On these same islands, as short a time as eighty years ago, fewer than three hundred inhabitants tried to eke out a living without benefit of electricity, running water, radios, or telephones. The stories of these hard pioneers and their predecessors, as far back as the Native Americans who lived on the Keys at least one thousand years ago, are told, many for the first time, in this book.




Tales of Yesterday's Florida Keys


Book Description

A collection of stories of people and events in the Florida Keys extending from the time the Keys were first occupied by humans, through the Second Seminole War, the coming of the Overseas Railway, and finally the opening of the first Overseas Highway in 1927. The tales tell of American Indians, Cubans, Bahamians, New Englanders, and of fishing, turtling, shipwreck salvaging, warring, and of course dealing with heat and mosquitoes. John Viele's three volumes, The Florida Keys, have been Keys bestsellers for years. Now he presents a fascinating new batch of historical vignettes.




The Wreckers


Book Description

In this third book in a series on the history of the Florida Keys, John Viele tells the true story of the Florida Keys wreckers, the daring seamen who sailed out in fair weather or foul to save lives and property from ships cast up on the unforgiving Florida Reef in the passage south of the Florida Keys, one of the most dangerous in the world, having claimed thousands of ships and lives. In the 1850s, the heyday of the wreckers, ships were piling up on the reef at the rate of nearly one a week. Salvaging these wrecks was a highly competitive and hazardous gamble of the lives, limbs, and vessels of the wreckers against an often elusive gain. From the archives of the federal court at Key West, or “wrecking court," and from contemporary letters, diaries, and newspaper articles, the author has captured the drama of the lives and times of the Florida Keys wreckers with accuracy and clarity. Richly illustrated with drawings from nineteenth-century magazines and newspapers, artists' concepts of wrecking scenes, and reproductions of old paintings and photographs, this book will fascinate sailors and landlubbers alike. See all of the books in this series










Oriental Engineer


Book Description