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WHEN
MOBY DICK CAME
TO PORT
ARTHUR:
200,000
VISITORS SAW
WHALE
By
W. T. Block
Reprinted
from Beaumont
ENTERPRISE,
February 21,
1978;
also from
TEXAS GULF
HISTORICAL AND
BIOGRAPHICAL
RECORD, Nov.,
1981.
Sources:
Galveston
DAILY NEWS,
March 9-20,
1910, also all
area papers of
March, 1910,
and photos and
pamphlets
belonging to
Ms. Julia
Plummer, now
deceased.
-
"When
Captain Cott
Plummer
succeeded in
lassoing a
live, 60-ton
whale and
towing it into
port, his feat
of derring-do
captured the
fancy of
Americans
everywhere."
In
the same
manner that
Herman
Melville's
great white
whale had a
symbolic
meaning, a
deep-sea
denizen of the
sperm variety
had a literal
significance
to the
Southeast
Texans living
in 1910. On
March 10 of
that year, a
live and
grayish Moby
Dick, 63 feet
long and 60
tons in
weight,
traveled
involuntarily
through the
new ship
channel to
Port Arthur,
spawning two
weeks of
unparalleled
excitement
throughout the
Southwest.
Unlike
the cows and
calves of that
breed, old
sperm whale
bulls
frequently
leave their
tropical
habitat to
explore the
North Atlantic
Ocean, and
this gray Moby
was making one
of the rare
appearances of
large whales
in Texas'
coastal
waters.
Apparently
pursuing a
school of
squid or
cuttlefish,
the whale
miscalculated
the water's
12-foot depth
and became
grounded in
the "oil
pond," a mass
of floating
seaweed, three
miles west of
the Sabine
estuary
jetties.
Although
hopelessly
mired, Gray
Moby intended
to die with
his boots on.
His giant,
18-foot fluke
slapped the
water
incessantly as
the whale
sought in vain
to extricate
himself. The
resulting
noise and
geysers of sea
water finally
attracted the
attention of
Cott Plummer,
who was
passing at
some distance
away on the
pilot boat
"Florida," and
whose
curiosity
caused him to
investigate
the cause of
the
disturbance.
Capt.
Plummer, a
member of a
long line of
Maine schooner
masters, had
heard the
sounds from
four miles
away and upon
reaching the
scene,
supposed that
a steamer had
capsized. Upon
discovering
that the
'steamer' was
alive, he
carefully
evaluated the
whale's
predicament,
his mind
immediately
hatching a
scheme as bold
and daring as
was his
family's
history.
Plummer
decided to try
to loop Gray
Moby's fluke
with a 5-inch
hawser and tow
the big mammal
into Sabine
Pass, Texas,
the port city
at the mouth
of the Sabine
inlet or
estuary where
the captain
lived. There
was reasonable
hope that the
pilot boat
might
accomplish
that feat, for
the "Florida"
was actually a
350-horsepower
steam tugboat.
Since
Gray Moby lay
perpendicular
to the beach,
each lash of
his tail
served only to
mire the big
mammal deeper
in the soft
mud, and to
generate a new
series of
ground swells.
This perpetual
motion made
any activity
near the
whale's fluke
impossible.
Realizing
this, Capt.
Plummer
signaled a
nearby
sailboat to
assist him in
the lassoing
of the
monster. He
moved both
vessels into
the lea waters
ahead of the
whale, and
passed a
5-inch hawser
between the
boats,
intending to
maneuver the
line through
the soft mud
underneath the
mammal and to
rig a loop
which could be
tightened
around Gray
Moby's
fan-shaped
fluke.
The
first attempt
failed because
the hawser did
not sink deep
enough,
lodging
instead in the
monster's
jaws, where it
was promptly
bitten in two.
On the second
attempt,
Plummer
attached a
kedge anchor
to sink the
line deeper.
Gradually the
two vessels
worked the
line under the
whale to a
point where
one end could
be threaded
through the
kedge anchor,
and a loop
formed which
was then
tightened
around Gray
Moby's fluke.
With
the
"Florida's"
horsepower
tugging at the
taut line,
Plummer's
best-laid
plans soon
went awry, for
the hawser
frayed and
snapped like a
bowstring.
Undaunted,
however, the
captain
steamed to a
nearby
dredgeboat and
borrowed an
8-inch hawser.
The two
vessels then
repeated the
tedious
procedure, in
time securely
looping the
big line
around the sea
monster's tail
as well as to
the towboat's
stern.
As
the
"Florida's"
propeller
churned
vigorously
again among
the whitecaps,
Gray Moby
grudgingly
gave way and
slid from the
mudbank into
deeper water.
Nevetheless,
during spurts
of his
almost-spent
energy, the
ungrateful and
angered whale
managed to tow
the tugboat
rather than be
towed. Eight
hours ticked
away along the
five-mile
route into
port, and as
darkness
approached,
the "Florida"
arrived at
Sabine Pass,
where the
captain
securely
lashed his tow
to the pilings
in the
Southern
Pacific
Railroad's
docking slip.
Gray
Moby did not
appear to be
any worse off
as a result of
his ordeal,
remaining
"decidedly
lively at
times." With a
single swish
of his
fan-shaped
tail, the
penned monster
artificially
created high
or low tide in
the docking
slip at his
own
discretion.
However, the
big mammal's
constant
tugging at the
towline
indicated
that, if
granted his
singular
desire, Gray
Moby would
gladly
relinquish his
rent-free
berth to some
paying
customer and
head for safer
depths in the
Gulf of
Mexico.
News
of the whale's
arrival, the
biggest fish
story ever
hatched in the
tall-tale
state, spread
like windswept
wildfire
across the
salt grass
prairies.
Telegraph keys
sped the story
across the
nation, where
all newspapers
gave it
front-page
coverage. A
local editor
injected a
humorous note,
when he
retracted his
earlier
statement
that, upon
boarding Gray
Moby, customs
officials had
found Jonah at
the wheel
without a
validated
pilot's
license.
It
was necessary
to squelch
many of the
earlier
reports, for
few Texans
would admit to
being less
than
authorities on
whales. Some
reported the
monster as
being 90 feet
long and 300
tons in
weight. Those
who were less
informed on
the subject
found it
expedient to
consult the
encyclopedias,
which spawned
the usual
multitude of
questions:
"What kind and
how old is it?
Can it be kept
alive in
captivity?
Where did it
come from? Is
it a 'he' or a
'she'?"
Having
devoted the
entire day of
March 8 to the
whale's
capture, Capt.
Plummer had
given little
thought to its
effect, for
Gray Moby
immediately
became a
sensation and
lucrative
bonanza that
everyone
wanted to see.
On the next
day,
spectators
began arriving
long before
the captain
was prepared
to exhibit his
catch. Plummer
hastily sold
tickets for 50
cents, which
enabled the
purchaser to
view the whale
as long as
desired or to
return. Each
visitor
insisted on
seeing Gray
Moby exhaust
his breath
through his
single
blowhole. This
occurred at
intervals of
about 15
minutes, the
expulsion of
warm air
immediately
taking on the
appearance of
water due to
rapid
vaporization.
The
earliest
sightseers
came by rail,
automobile,
and boat from
the
neighboring
cities of Port
Arthur,
Beaumont and
Orange, and
each returned
to spread his
account of the
marvelous
monster at
Sabine Pass.
Some were bold
enough to
climb down on
the mammal's
back, and one
visitor, R. R.
Bowie of
Beaumont,
almost slid
overboard for
Gray Moby's
hide was still
moist and
slimy. At the
end of the
first day,
Capt. Plummer
had taken in
more than $200
in ticket
sales.
Port
Arthur's Board
of Trade
quickly sensed
the
possibilities
for promotion
that the big
whale offered,
and before the
day ended,
negotiated an
agreement with
Plummer to
exhibit the
monster fish
in their city.
A fledgling
but thriving
community as
of 1910, Port
Arthur was
founded 15
years earlier
as the
southern
terminus of
the Kansas
City Southern
Railroad. Its
promotors, the
railroad
entrepreneurs
Arthur
Stilwell and
John W. Gates,
had completed
a shipping
channel to the
sea, and aided
by the mammoth
oil discovery
at Spindletop
Hill near
Beaumont,
Texas, had
already built
Port Arthur
into a
principal
shipping and
oil refining
complex.
The
Board of Trade
arranged with
Southern
Pacific,
Missouri
Pacific,
Kansas City
Southern,
Santa Fe, and
other
railroads to
run lengthy
advertisements
and excursion
trains at all
feasible
points in
Texas and
Louisiana.
Before the
whale arrived,
100 carpenters
began the
construction
of a fence and
platform
around one of
the city's
docking slips.
The promoters
hoped to
exhibit Gray
Moby alive,
but realized
that his death
was immiment
upon his
reaching fresh
water, and
that the
ordeal had
already sapped
the monster of
most of his
strength.
On
the afternoon
of March 10,
Capt. Plummer
cut Gray Moby
loose from his
pilings at
Sabine Pass
and began the
eight-mile
journey to
Port Arthur.
Again at
first, the
whale showed
an inclination
to tow rather
than be towed,
but soon
quieted, the
second trip,
which was both
uneventful and
accomplished
without
mishap,
arriving at 11
o'clock at
night. While
the "Florida"
towed the
mammal, a
second
towboat, with
a line
attached,
followed close
behind to
steady the
whale and
prevent him
from
'jackknifing'
in the ship
channel. While
it is not
known exactly
when the whale
expired, it
was soon
discernible
that Gray Moby
no longer
breathed.
Since
his spouting
performance
had been
widely
publicized,
the whale's
death came as
a great
disappointment,
but was
somewhat
counterbalanced
by the fact
that Gray Moby
could be
exhibited much
better on
shore than
afloat. Early
on March 11,
several
hundred
workmen began
the digging
and flooring
of an angular
slope down to
water level
over which the
whale could be
winched. The
necessary
hoisting
engines and
equipment were
set in place,
and an
elaborate
lighting
system was
installed so
that Gray Moby
could be
viewed at
night.
On
the same day,
more than
1,500 tickets
were sold to
persons who
were content
to see only
the visible
portion of a
largely
submerged
whale. There
was standing
room only on
the arriving
trains, and
the shelled
road (West
Port Arthur)
to Beaumont
was dotted
with incoming
autos. At
Orange and
Beaumont,
available
yachts and
motor launches
were busy
carrying
passengers to
Port Arthur,
where private
autos were
pressed into
service as
taxicabs. The
railroads
quickly moved
extra coaches
and
locomotives to
those distant
points where
excursion
trains had
been
scheduled. In
the interest
of science,
the Board of
Trade invited
Dr. H. H.
Newman, the
chief
zoologist at
the University
of Texas in
Austin, to
come to Port
Arthur and
make a
thorough study
of the dead
mammal.
At
noon on
Friday, March
11, the steam
winches
hoisted Gray
Moby from the
ship channel,
and for the
first time,
the entire
bulk of the
sea monster
became
visible. Up
until then,
90% of his
bulk had lain
submerged in
the water. A
team of 20
butchers
hurried to
remove the
whale's vital
organs, his
stomach,
liver,
intestines,
heart, lungs,
etc., so that
the abdominal
cavity could
be packed with
ice in an
effort to
retard
putrefaction
as long as
possible.
Except for
their mammoth
size, the
organs were
found to be
very similar
to those of
smaller
mammals, the
heart alone
weighing
almost a
half-ton.
Throughout the
afternoon,
there was a
steady stream
of wagons,
filled with
ice, which was
stacked on the
big monster's
external
parts. Barrels
of embalming
fluid,
potassium
permanganate,
and other
preservatives
were pumped
into the huge
carcass.
While
the
disembowelment
of the whale
was in
progress, the
state
zoologist, Dr.
Newman,
arrived to
complete his
study of Gray
Moby. The
mammal's
measurements
were: length
overall, 63
1/2 feet;
circumference
of head, 37
feet; and
length of
lower jaw, 11
feet. The
whale's lungs
and stomach
were filled
with tons of
sea weed and
silty mud from
the 'oil
pond,' which
the zoologist
believed had
strangled the
whale. Newman
also confirmed
that Gray Moby
was probably
the ex-king of
some tropical
sperm whale
herd, defeated
and driven
into exile by
a younger
bull.
On
Saturday, the
first
excursion
train to
arrive carried
2,000 Beaumont
school
children.
Elsewhere,
scheduled
trains
prepared to
depart from
such distant
points as
Corpus
Christi,
Dallas, San
Antonio, Fort
Worth, Lufkin,
Shreveport,
Texarkana,
Baton Rouge,
and New
Orleans. On
Sunday, March
14, fourteen
trains,
carrying
11,000
persons,
arrived; and
to that figure
must be added
those arriving
by boat, auto,
buggy, or
other
conveyance,
which swelled
the daily
multitude of
sightseers
beyond the
20,000 mark.
Each train was
quickly packed
like sardines,
and although
additional
coaches were
added to each
while en
route, crowds
estimated at
100,000 were
left stranded
in the depots
of two states.
On Monday,
preachers
everywhere
were lamenting
the fact that
a single whale
could empty
the church
pews
throughout the
Southwest.
Despite
the Board of
Trade's
extensive
preparations
to feed
throngs of
people,
including
temporary
street
concession
stands, Port
Arthur
exhausted its
food supply on
Sunday
afternoon, and
telegraph
orders for
additional
stocks were
immediately
shipped by
boat and rail
from Houston
and Galveston.
Between
March 14 and
17, the daily
torrent of
sightseers
remained
constant at
about 20,000.
The visitors
bore the
hardships
without
grumbling,
regarding them
as a necessary
price to pay
for the
opportunity to
view Gray
Moby. Since
the few hotels
were soon
booked to
capacity in
advance, a
visit for most
persons might
include from
36 to 40 hours
without sleep,
two-thirds of
that time
while standing
aboard a
packed train.
By
Wednesday,
March 16, the
whale's state
of
decomposition
caused the
carcass to
emit
considerable
stench, but
that factor
did not impede
the endless
procession of
visitors. A
handkerchief
soon covered
every nose,
and one
account noted
that "a
stinking good
time was had
by all." Most
of the smell
was created by
oil that
leaked from
Gray Moby's
blubbery
exterior.
Eventually,
the site was
adjudged a
hazard to
public health,
and the
odorous whale
and his
platform were
winched aboard
a large barge
in the ship
channel, where
the public
exhibition
continued
through the
next Sunday.
The
whale display
resulted in a
$1,000,000
gratuity for
the merchants
of Port Arthur
and added
another
million to the
coffers of the
Texas and
Louisiana
railroads.
Gray Moby's
owners,
Captains Cott
and Fred
Plummer, also
profited
handsomely,
receiving
$1,000 for
bringing the
mammal to Port
Arthur and a
percentage of
ticket sales.
Believing
further that
Gray Moby
could be
exhibited
indefinitely
if mounted and
stuffed, the
brothers
organized the
Mammoth Whale
Company in
pursuance of
that goal.
The
smelly barge
was anchored
downstream,
where the
tedious
process of
cutting away
the decaying
flesh and
blubber from
the inside was
begun. Gray
Moby's head
yielded 26
barrels of
sperm oil in
addition to
300 barrels of
whale oil
rendered from
the blubber.
The skeleton
and hide were
cleaned and
preserved, and
the barge was
then towed to
Harrisburg,
Texas, where a
leading
taxidermist
was engaged to
restore the
whale. Fifty
men worked 7
1/2 months to
give Gray Moby
a lifelike
appearance at
a cost of
$5,000.
Special
derricks and
equipment were
required to
handle the
huge bones.
And
eventually,
the preserved
whale hide was
stuffed with
hay, and when
latter mounted
on the power
boat "Olga,"
began a tour
"of all the
principal port
cities of the
United
States."
The
Mammoth Whale
Company,
however,
proved to be a
financial
debacle for
the Plummer
brothers. Gray
Moby no longer
attracted the
vast throngs
that he had at
Port Arthur,
and those who
did come to
view the whale
were
incredulous,
believing that
the hide had
been stretched
and stuffed
far beyond the
original size.
The brothers
were greatly
relieved when
a Memphis,
Tennessee,
amusement park
operator
offered to buy
the whale and
leave him on
permanent
display in a
tent near the
banks of the
Mississippi
River.
But
Gray Moby's
stay in
Memphis was to
prove of short
duration. One
night, the
tent caught
fire, and
whale hide,
bones, and hay
went up in
smoke, an
ignominious
demise indeed
for the old
sperm denizen
that had
provided a
moment of
relaxation and
excitement for
thousands of
Americans in
Texas and
Louisiana.
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