Talk:Mary Celeste/Archive 1

Archive 1 Archive 2

Hi!

I took the liberty of re-organizing the information into a more coherant article. In addition, I removed the heading which seemed to be rather messy in such a brief article. Ganymead 04:02, 4 May 2004 (UTC)

I think you forgot to remove the things you rewrote?

Thanks - I think that you removed some stuff that wasn't duplicated - if I'm wrong please let me know. Mark Richards 17:37, 22 Sep 2004 (UTC)

Puritan

"However, Briggs, a New England Puritan, was known as a very religious, though just and fair, man." The use of the word "though" here is confusing and anti-religious to the reader.

  • I agree ... it confused me and I had to stop re-read that part, so it is being edited out now !!! DavidHumphreysSPEAK TO MEABOUTTHE THINGS I MESSED UP 06:15, 24 July 2006 (UTC)
It is meant to illustrate that Briggs was not a 'Jonathan Edwards-type' Puritan. If he were, he would have been like Capt. Bligh from the HMS Bounty. But he was NOT this type of fire and brimstone Puritan. He was very lovey-dovey.

Abel Fosdyk papers

For what it's worth, the Strand Magazine was a magazine that published fiction. --ForDorothy 00:01, 24 September 2006 (UTC)

right spelling of the names

Hi, ich found out, that the brothers Volkert and Boy came from the same Island like me. The right spelling of their name has to be "Lorenzen". In the german wiki, they wrote that the brothers were dutch. But I think it`s the old problem that deutsch (german) is frequently confused with dutch. Does anybody knows how the two brothers were classified in the log? EnkiduBn 18.03.2007

I've read a theory that the slour on the ship may have been infected with ergot causing ergotism that caused the crew to abandon the ship. // Liftarn

which is nor supported by the fact that the remainder of the voyage to Italy was uneventful with a new crew and existing ships stores. --Gibnews 20:54, 20 March 2007 (UTC)

In popular culture

Are there any articles about the Mary Celeste in popular culture, or is the list in this article someone's original work? If at all, I think this material belongs in the articles about the books/movies/songs, etc. and not here. Chances are, though, it's too trivial to appear even in those articles. In the mean time, we have an article about an historic event that is cluttered with contemporary references. It's just not necessary. Anyone wanting to know about the Mary Celeste in relationship to things that had nothing directly to do with the ship or event can simply click on the "what links here" link. Rklawton 01:53, 29 April 2007 (UTC)


The section on "The story in popular culture" seems to be erroneous in its statement on Doyle's short story "J. Habakuk Jephson's Statement" when it says "It was said that their tea was still warm and breakfast was cooking when the ship was discovered; these are fictional details from Doyle's story." I have skimmed through the story at http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/etext95/polst10.txt looking for these points and cannot find them, nor does a search show them. In fact the story says "They are of opinion that she had been abandoned several days, or perhaps weeks, before being picked up." and the whole plot of the story is contrary to it asserting that a meal was still cooking when the ship was found as in the story the ship is cast adrift off the coast of Africa after the passengers are murdered. Therefore it looks like this line about the origin of that myth is a myth itself and should be removed. Rab234 15:09, 13 June 2007 (UTC)

Nonsense

The temptation to re-write the bit about steaming mugs of tea was too much, after all the captain was from Massachusetts where they threw all the tea away rather than pay tax on it --Gibnews 18:09, 10 July 2007 (UTC)

Location

According to a source found on google earth http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showflat.php/Cat/0/Number/168176/an/0/page/0#168176 it was not found on the spanish coast but portuguese coast, and if you look at a map I believe its more accurate do say it was portuguese coast instead of spanish...

Iberian peninsula coast then? Chris Buttigieg 21:48, 5 July 2007 (UTC)
As a follow up, I have reverted your edit to appear as the Strait of Gibraltar which is more specific and as it appears in the article itself. Chris Buttigieg 22:05, 11 July 2007 (UTC)

Blood Stains?

I noticed something odd about the article. In one part it says there were blood stains along some rails and scratch marks but later it says no evidence of violence was found. Do we not count blood and scratch marks as hints/evidence of violence in this story?

Jaybrown27 10 October 2006

The blood stains are fictional. --Gibnews 09:44, 22 July 2007 (UTC)

Is it encyclopeic to call a ship "she"?

I notice the article uses the pronoun "she" to identify the ship. Should the pronoun "it" be used instead? I understand that nautical terms may refer to a ship in the feminine, but is it encyclopedic? I do not know the answer and am not being critical, just looking for clarity. Oh, and whatever is decided, it should be consistant within the article and with other articles. 208.203.4.140 18:44, 12 September 2007 (UTC)

Its correct English, and this is the English language wikipedia. --Gibnews 23:07, 12 September 2007 (UTC)


Plus if your willing to cope with a few splinters, a ship can be all the woman you need172.212.136.219 13:45, 8 October 2007 (UTC)


In all seriousness though, is 'she' in reference to a ship really valid english, as I thought it was sailor slang personally.172.212.136.219 13:45, 8 October 2007 (UTC)
I just checked my trusty 'paper' World Book Encyclopedia circa 1960 and it uses "she" as a pronoun when referring to ships. So it would seem to be correct English (at least up to 1960)Postmortemjapan 13:54, 8 October 2007 (UTC)

The nature of the cargo

There is some confusion on the nature of the cargo, however reliable sources say it was alcohol for the purposes of fortifying wine, the chemistry of alcohol would suggest that to be 95% ethanol with water.

That is consistent with the ships loading. Authors such as Hicks introduce the erroneous idea that it was Methanol, although there would be no sense in shipping that from America to Europe in 1872.

The term 'industrial alcohol' is ambiguous and is normally taken to mean denatured alcohol unsuitable for drinking. There is no evidence for this and again it would be pointless shipping alcohol like that.

95% ethanol with water can be drunk, its not a very inspiring drink and the voyage predates the invention of coca cola and there is no evidence of any other mixer being carried. The Captain was a non drinker and it was a commercial ship not a booze cruise. --Gibnews 09:07, 14 November 2007 (UTC)

The Bermuda Triangle

I think the line: "No reasonable inquiry includes "Bermuda Triangle" speculation, as the ship's course would not have taken it through that area."

Should be changed to: "No reasonable inquiry includes "Bermuda Triangle" speculation."

Or, even better: "No reasonable inquiry includes "Bermuda Triangle" speculation, because the Bermuda Triangle doesn't [expletive deleted] exist."

Why do we have to burden an encyclopedia entry with anything that even remotely supports "woo-woo" theories such as the so-called "Bermuda Triangle?"

Just my $0.02... —The preceding unsigned comment was added by 131.137.245.198 (talk) 12:12, 3 April 2007 (UTC). Oops... forgot to sign: Pinto66, Canada (accessing Wikipedia from work)


While both you and I disbelieve the whole 'a ghost did it, I saw 'im I did' line of theories, they must be included because of 2 reasons,
1) NPOV, while we disbelieve that the occult even exists, there are those who believe in it, and see it as a valid possibility, so removing it would be to them like removing all the rational info and making it into an occult article for us. Both sides need to be represented for it to be fair and NPOV.
2) We have no proof that casper didnt come aboard and strangulate the entire crew :D. There is no proof that the occult doesnt exist, just as there is no proof it does (other than 'paranormal experiences (AKA daydreams)') So we cant just discount this line of thought as we have no proof its false.172.212.136.219 13:40, 8 October 2007 (UTC)

IMHO, if many people think the MC was cruising the Bermuda Triangle, and if many people think this may bear any relevance, then it's reasonable to clarify facts in that case. --Syzygy 08:41, 4 December 2007 (UTC)

Two

It has been said that originally the Mary Celeste had two small boats, both of which could have been used as life-boats. It seems that one of them was destroyed when the ship was being loaded. The ship then set sail with only one life-boat. This fact seems to have helped send the crew to their deaths. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 87.194.4.21 (talk) 10:07, 25 February 2008 (UTC)

It's said wrong. The boat which was destroyed during loading cargo when a barrel was dropped on it was replaced with a new one. SOLAS regulations were different then. --Gibnews (talk) 23:42, 25 February 2008 (UTC)
Charles Lurd said "he could not state how many there should have been [but] he felt sure there had been a boat at the main hatch".
Lurd seems to have been a member of the crew of the Dei Gratia. He treats it as a definite possibility that there should have been
more than one life boat. See http://www.maryceleste.net/part3.htm
For the avoidance of doubt that is a reference to my website, so I am familiar with the content. There was a boat, and the Captain and perhaps the crew of the DG knew their counterparts on the MC and had met them at the docks in the US. --Gibnews (talk) 18:45, 26 February 2008 (UTC)

Ergot

The mention of ergotism says that the crew of the Dei Gratia didn't suffer from it - why would they? Erot poisoning is the result of ingesting food that has been contaminated by ergot mould - did they eat any food on board the deserted ship? Autarch (talk) 22:40, 18 March 2008 (UTC)

Yes, they most certainly did, and when the ship sailed on to deliver its cargo the crew ate the food on board without any strange effects. --Gibnews (talk) 21:56, 19 March 2008 (UTC)

Other fictional accounts

Way too long. Anyone feel like condensing it? --John (talk) 07:15, 24 January 2008 (UTC)

I have cut some unnecessary nonsense out, however an important feature of the story of the Mary Celeste is the myth that has been built up around the story by successive writers trying to answer 'the mystery' and inventing stories and events which are then repeated as fact by others. There is an industry on Mary Celeste books, which a search of Amazon reveals. --Gibnews (talk) 23:55, 25 February 2008 (UTC)
Can references to someone in a book about something else mentioned the Mary Celeste really be considered "other fictional account"? Seems more like "references in popular culture" to me, and we know that they aren't popular. Duggy 1138 (talk) 12:45, 23 April 2008 (UTC)

Mentions of the Mary Celeste

I suggest that its only worth including things that are substantive and notable. Plays and TV documentaries about the MC are reasonable, but unless there is some significant reference to the ship, a mere mention of it in something is not. Because it is the definitive 'mystery ship' it is naturally something that people refer to - Google shows 400k references and the article should not be bogged down in trivia.

But that is only an opinion. --Gibnews (talk) 18:45, 3 November 2008 (UTC)

Origin of name?

Is there any information about the origin of the name "Mary Celeste"? Was the ship (re-)named after a real person, or is there a religious link? Jimbob muppet (talk) 22:37, 5 July 2008 (UTC)

"Mary of Heaven" maybe? EamonnPKeane (talk) 03:33, 25 November 2008 (UTC)

Pseudophysics

The offending pseudophysical explanations are the following:

  • Seaquake? At least there's nothing about anything that can be interpreted as "seaquakes" here on Wikipedia. The "article" seaquake is a redirect to earthquake that handles tsunamies but nothing like "seaquake" (imagine a slight tone of scorn here!). Tsunamies are almost not perceivable on the sea.
  • Tsunamis exist but are, as said previously, almost not perceivable on the sea.

The rest are mostly funny, but possible however unlikely. ... said: Rursus (bork²) 20:40, 22 March 2009 (UTC)

The seaquake theory is serious and the term is established, so its not 'pseudophysics' --Gibnews (talk) 23:50, 22 March 2009 (UTC)

Big changes a-comin'

There is a lot of uncited information in this article. Without a vast improvement, the uncited stuff is going to be culled from the article. I'll wait a few days before the trimming starts. - Arcayne (cast a spell) 06:56, 13 July 2009 (UTC)

Its a pretty comprehensive article, most of the material is cited, although its not necessary to find a citation for every sentence in an article - it really does not need someone who does not understand the subject in depth butchering it - so you might find creating new articles a more productive pastime. --Gibnews (talk) 09:06, 13 July 2009 (UTC)
Read my post again, Gibnews; I am not sure that the word "butchering" was ever used, and the characterization seems a bit unfair. As well, I am not sure that I stipulated that every sentence needed citation. In actuality, the article, while being well-formed for the most part, makes a lot of claims that do need citation. Those are what need to be addressed. Everywhere that a claim is made, it needs to be supported by a citation.
Wikipedia is constantly exposed to accusations from without that we are injecting our own points of view and beliefs into article; the only way to properly defend against those sorts of accusations is to ensure that everything we write is cited, and cited well. If one of the supposed theories states that the missing crew of the Mary Celeste joined Starfleet or was killed off by a vampire in the hold, that need as much citation (as to the claim) as would the claim that piracy was unlikely.
We don't get to add our own expertise to the article. We use whatever knowledge we have to evaluate what is intrinsic to the article, and what is extrinsic. The reader might want to follow up on a statement that really grabbed them. Offering them a citation gives them the chance to do so.
Lastly, I believe that nowhere in my post did I state that I did not "understand the subject in depth"; you might want to keep in mind that we write these articles for the general reader, and not for those specifically interested in the intricacies of the subject. That is why we offer sections for external links and further reading. Wikipedia doesn't offer added weight to "experts", any more than it does for fans. Also, such statements are another way of saying 'why don't you run along, little man, and let us smarter people work'; I am sure you can see how that isn't all that polite or conducive to professional interaction.
Therefore, you might want to spend your time following up on my call for citations; as you claim to "understand the subject in depth", it should be short work for you to provide the them, right? If you are unsure where they are needed, please feel free to ask. - Arcayne (cast a spell) 19:21, 13 July 2009 (UTC)
I think I made my points clearly, as regards your last suggestion of clearing up messes after you - if you are waiting for a Yes Bhwana you may be dissapointed. --Gibnews (talk) 20:37, 13 July 2009 (UTC)
I am going to suggest it yet again, Gibnews: could you perhaps find a wee bit more AGF? If you need to root through your closet for some, or nip off to the store to purchase some, I can wait. Either way, I think its clear that I have addressed each of your points, nullifying them when inaccurate, clarifying them when murky and agreeing with you when they are correct. If you insist on looking at this as a confrontation, you are going to be both sorely disappointed as well as on the losing end of policy/guideline discussions. I am trying to help you improve the article. Trating me as an interloper in your field of expertise is both unseemly and unfriendly.
You consider yourself - via your own statements - far more qualified to wrk the article than myself. Using that (defective and infectiously uncivil) reasoning for a moment, consider that an "outsider" has asked for citations, not being familiar with the topic. You job now is to supply those citations. Disposing of that reasoning, you are being presented with an opportunity to make the article and subject more accessible to the general reader while making it far more likely to evolve as an article into GA and eventually FA. Getting your dander up seems the incorrect response.
The article is going to be revised. If citations show up, great; the article is improved and strengthened. If they do not, the weak information will be removed, leaving only that which is cited and supported by external sources. You can lead this effort, follow the efforts of others, or simply get our of the way of those who will do the work. For my part, I hope you will lend yourself to the task of improving the article. - Arcayne (cast a spell) 20:54, 13 July 2009 (UTC)
I have been improving the article for some time - its not in bad shape and is unlikely to be 'strengthened' by being butchered as per your initial declaration of war. Its describes an event which occurred in 1872 about which little is actually known or well documented and although there is a large amount of written about it subsequently, most of which lacks any factual basis. I feel you may be wasting your time and that of others if you think that can be changed. --Gibnews (talk) 08:22, 14 July 2009 (UTC)
(ec)I would like to take a moment to remind you that Wikipedia is not a battleground; there has been no "declaration of war", no "fatwa" (as you suggested here). I would also like to suggest that as you have just admitted to having worked on the article for "some time", you might be too close to the article to notice its clear weaknesses. I am not attacking your efforts, Gibnews; I am suggesting that more improvement is necessary. If citations cannot be found for the majority of the uncited statements, those statements will have to go. I - once again - urge you to roll up your sleeves and put some of that self-claimed expertise to work. Find the citations to support the statements. I repeat that if you are unsure as to what statements need citation, just ask; I will be happy to provide you with a few (of the very, very many) examples.
I do understand that the article is somewhat like a great many Victorian era mysteries, like Jack the Ripper - long on legend and short on facts. Most of the information about the topic is going to be coming from books discussing the subject. That doesn't mean that we don't have to cite the statements of the article; to the contrary, we have books that we can cite from. If you are unclear how to use a citation template, I would be happy to help you.
The point I have been making is that the article is not some high schooler's term paper; the point is that the article needs a great deal of citation. As you have been working on this for some time, and claim extensive knowledge on the subject, you are better situated to find the sources for those statements needing them. If you aren't willing to do that, then the uncited information will be removed, and you shant have anyone to blame but yourself. If you want help, just ask. Don't attack, as that gets you nowhere except painted into a corner. - Arcayne (cast a spell) 08:46, 14 July 2009 (UTC)
Perhaps its my fault for reading your comments as being from an arrogant and condescending position. You might find a different less confrontational strategy more conducive to co-operation, and as I am here to edit articles that is the last word on that subject from me. --Gibnews (talk) 18:09, 14 July 2009 (UTC)
Well, I accept that you might have misunderstood my editing position; looking back over my comments, I see nothing ""arrogant and condescending" about them. I pointed out that citations were needed, 'ere the article be trimmed of the uncited statements, nothing more or less. I am glad that you are interested in working productively with me, and I fully accept your apology for having failed to assume good faith and being confrontational. Since you'd like to lay the matter to rest, so will I. :) - Arcayne (cast a spell) 20:39, 14 July 2009 (UTC)

Arbitrary break 1

This edit should provide some insight into the sorts of citations and copy-editing the article needs. Of course, there are likely more that I missed.
As an aside, I found it interesting that while no citation appears in the section noting Winchester's ownership of the ship, the owner who is listed in the citation, Richard Haines isn't listed anywhere in the article. - Arcayne (cast a spell) 09:17, 14 July 2009 (UTC)

Richard Haines was the first owner recorded of the Mary Celeste when the ship was registered under that name, but ownership changed within a few months. Ships generally have several owners over their lifetime and the owners at the time of the event and inquiry are the significant ones. --Gibnews (talk) 17:45, 14 July 2009 (UTC)
Okay, thanks for providing that information, but it doesn't appear, cited, within the article. As you consider me a novice on the topic and I caught the discrepancy, you can bet that others will as well. Cold you provide a citation for your assertion, please? - Arcayne (cast a spell) 20:29, 14 July 2009 (UTC)

How many owners?

I noticed your edit, Gibnews, good stuff. However, i wanted to address an apparent discrepancy: in one source, it states that the Amazon was purchased by two folk after the was blown aground. Your edit removes the mention of the second owner. Might I ask why? - Arcayne (cast a spell) 20:44, 14 July 2009 (UTC)

The article is about the Mary Celeste rather than the quite unremarkable Amazon, the sources are a bit vague about ownership prior to the ship being refitted and renamed with the one cited only saying 'two men from Glace Bay'. By way of contrast the source for the ownership of the vessel at the time of the incident I gave reproduces the certificate of registration and is meaningful. --Gibnews (talk) 12:59, 15 July 2009 (UTC)
Respectfully, the interpretation of the source being more "meaningful" is just that - an interpretation. If you are suggesting that the source you find more meaningful has more information to use than the one that notes the two owners? Considering the reliability of the source (being of governmental origin), we cannot ignore it. If we have lots of sources that do not mention/miss that ownership issue, we can note the discrepancy. We don't ignore it. - Arcayne (cast a spell) 20:49, 15 July 2009 (UTC)
The cite I give is a reproduction of the ships registration document which more reliable that a passing mention of two un-named owners on a website which does not give its source and is in itself meaningless. --Gibnews (talk) 08:31, 17 July 2009 (UTC)
Gibnews, I am unclear as to which reference you are referring to. The citation that notes two owners (one of which is in fact named as Haines) is from the Maritime Museum of the Atlantic, a government-sponsored website out of Halifax. Perhaps you are referring to the 1988 (and not 1942, as noted in the citation reference) book by Fay, which notes Haines as the single owner. I find the governmental source quite reliable - more so than the book - and think we need to mention the second owner, if for no other reason than to prevent it from being added by some other editor who read the same material. As the second owner is not named in either source, we are on safe ground. - Arcayne (cast a spell) 09:54, 17 July 2009 (UTC)

Benjamin Briggs's letter

I am wondering if we actually need the entire substance of Briggs' letter reproduced in the article. We could instead reproduce parts of it that are pertinent to the article, and paraphrase the rest. Thoughts? - Arcayne (cast a spell) 20:53, 15 July 2009 (UTC)

The point of inclusion of the letter is to establish the state of mind of the captain. It might be sufficient to include a link to the letter intact, as its on my website and will remain so. I'm strongly against rewriting it to 'improve' readability as some editors have attempted as its an original letter - however an excerpt would be OK. Space for text is cheap and we could easily use up more bytes arguing about it than it takes. --Gibnews (talk) 08:37, 17 July 2009 (UTC)
Wait, you maintain a website on the MC? What's the link? It might be useful, as it might point to other sources. - Arcayne (cast a spell) 09:40, 17 July 2009 (UTC)
I've rewritten the 'discovery' section which seemed to be lifted from a work of fiction. I will include references to the Admiralty inquiry, when I locate my copy as the section is based on that rather than the imagination of authors. I'll email you the url of my website so as not to be accused of self promotion, and also to frustrate the editor who takes delight in removing any of my links in Wikipedia he finds. --Gibnews (talk) 20:35, 17 July 2009 (UTC)
Okay, that was also a nice trim. Something like that is what I had in mind for the Briggs letter. I think we can maintain the spirit of the letter, but overlook those parts which are less than germane to the subject matter.
I look forward to the emailed url. - Arcayne (cast a spell) 23:43, 17 July 2009 (UTC)
I am sorry if I left the impression that I thought the article iwas now acceptable. It celarly is not, and more work is required. Since It's been well over a week since I warned that a lot of clean-was going to occur, it was commence forthwith. - Arcayne (cast a spell) 03:12, 26 July 2009 (UTC)

Trial of the crew of the Dei Gratia

This is absolute nonsense, there was no such trial. The Original court documents relate to an inquiry about the circumstances regarding the MC there was categorically NO TRIAL of the salvors. --Gibnews (talk) 20:34, 23 February 2009 (UTC)

While there may not have been a trial as such, the Crew of the Dei Gatia were without doubt objects of suspicion (for no other reason than the circumstances were so strange). The final Salvage money awarded to the crew was a fraction of what would normally be awarded on such a valuable cargo and is said to have reflected the suspicions of the Authorities at the time.Johnwrd (talk) 02:20, 8 August 2009 (UTC)

What was held was an inquiry into the circumstances which would include all things, but the crew of the 'Dei Gratia' were there as witnesses, nothing more. Yes, they got a bad deal on the salvage, thats the legal system. However, Gibraltar remains active in shipping matters as the admiralty court is recognised as being fast and efficient. --Gibnews (talk) 11:21, 8 August 2009 (UTC)

Tornado sucking up the water from the water-gauge

I'm really not much into physics (and by that I mean really really), and I didn't understood how the low pressure sucks the water up the tube, but anyway... If you're in the middle of the ocean with your wife and 2-year old daughter, very valuable cargo, the ship, and, you know -- you're alive -- would you pack up the lifeboat and grab the vessels without checking whether this gauge might have just fooled you?Diyan.boyanov (talk) 11:08, 21 December 2009 (UTC)

Log Book

The original ship's log of the Mary Celeste is (or was) held by the insurers, Lloyd's of London, as it was they who had insured the vessel when she was found abandoned. It has been shown by them on several TV programmes about this and other mysteries. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 86.112.45.233 (talk) 22:09, 19 November 2010 (UTC)

Inquiry

No evidence is adduced that John McCabe was English rather than Scottish, so I have deleted the attribution. Deipnosophista (talk) 08:42, 28 December 2010 (UTC)

vandalism

i reverted this edit The "Mary "BONER" Celeste was a boat for perverted people, but the people would never wear clothes. They would all have sex to toast the night off. She was built by Margrux "BJ" Magogo. With her crew. The Captain's name was Peter "Spooner" Martini. " has this been happening a lot? Killemall22 (talk) 02:48, 14 June 2011 (UTC)

Coherency

This article should be made coherent. We are told that the mistery resides in that the ship was found in order and without signs of violence. But letter we learn that Deveau, the first person to go onboard it, called it "a mess", and that later the investigators found blood in the captain's cabin... Againme (talk) 14:15, 18 July 2011 (UTC)

A tsunami?

Why is there discussion of a tsunami? Am I missing something? Out in the open, deep ocean, a tsunami is teeny.

dino (talk) 16:28, 8 August 2011 (UTC)

How many days?

"However, Morehouse was still waiting for his cargo to arrive when the Mary Celeste left port on November 5. Morehouse's cargo eventually arrived and on November 15, the Dei Gratia finally set off with 1,735 barrels of petroleum in her hold. The Dei Gratia left New York harbor seven days after the Mary Celeste (some sources say eight days later)."

The Mary Celeste left port on the fifth the Dei Gratia left New York harbour on or after the fifteenth but was only seven or eight days behind the Mary Celeste, does this mean the Mary Celeste spent two days collecting cargo or on Staten Island? — Preceding unsigned comment added by Owain meurig (talkcontribs) 19:46, 10 September 2011 (UTC)

citation needed: rogue waves

Its pretty meaningless putting in tags noting that Tsunamis were not reported at the time of the crew disappearance. This was 1872 and the infrastructure for recording seismic events was very limited and inaccurate at the time. --Gibnews (talk) 08:32, 14 July 2009 (UTC)

I don't think it's meaningless, because people still can report tremors, earthquakes, etc., without having precise technology for recording such events. They could have (and probably did, I don't know) sent people investigating the case, inquiring people, etc. If a tsunami had happen, then it would be felt in a large land area, where most probably fishermen would have noticed it; but they didn't, therefore it is more likely that a rogue wave had happen, rather than tsunami. So, it's not meaningless. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Diyan.boyanov (talkcontribs) 10:56, 21 December 2009 (UTC)


I am presuming you are referring to the edit wherein I removed the rather bold statement:
"A rogue wave would have caused much more damage, if not sinking the ship outright."
I was asking for a citation - relating to the therory that the MC was doomed by such a wave - from a book that explicitly makes that claim. Paraphrasing of sources is allowed in som cases, but you need to actually provide the sources. This is part of what I am talking about, Gibnews. - Arcayne (cast a spell) 08:51, 14 July 2009 (UTC)
Firstly it is not MY article or quote you removed. However in the hundred plus books about the Mary Celeste you can probably find a quote that says that and all sorts of other nonsense. The origin of the name 'Mary Sellars' is from an article published in 1926. Interestingly enough some of the unfounded rubbish about the ship has its origins in the story in the Gibraltar Chronicle published in 1873, and although it did not have an online edition, its preserved in the archives.
There has been a lot of speculation and there is little in the way of genuine source material to support it despite the large industry in writing books and making TV documentaries. --Gibnews (talk) 18:00, 14 July 2009 (UTC)
I am not sure where I contended that it was your quote I removed, Gibnews. Either way, removing your contributions is certainly not my intention, and if you feel threatened by that idea, worry not. I am simply trying to improve the article, and that is going to mean that we put together an article using those sources that are reliable, whilst at the same time addressing the mainstream fallacies of the subject. It's part of the reason we have the article in the first place, right?
The statement removed wasn't cited and, as the claim of the statement was significant, it requires citation to remain. - Arcayne (cast a spell) 20:34, 14 July 2009 (UTC)

I'm having a problem with the tsunami theory. Deep water tsunamis, having small amplitudes and long wavelengths[1], are barely noticeable on the surface and would have almost no effect on the ship. A rogue wave is a completely different phenomenon. 71.107.58.186 (talk) 07:46, 2 January 2012 (UTC)

References

Alcohol

The article states that the cargo was methanol. However, most sources claim, or imply, that it was ethanol. I would be most interested in knowing the source of the methanol claim as the nature of the cargo is of crucial importance in reconstructing what happened to the ship and her company. Thank you. Barend Vlaardingerbroek, Ph.D.

I'm going to remove the remark about methanol. The cargo was most likely ethanol, as methanol was much harder to produce back then. Even nowadays the "industrial alcohol" is just ethanol laced with some denaturant to stop people from drinking it. Methanol is usefull only when you use it as fuel and thus need the increased energy density. Fizzl 09:42, 7 November 2006 (UTC)
No, 'Industrial alcohol' is ethanol. It can be denatured by adding methanol and other substances, like pyridine in order to prevent people drinking it and to avoid paying excise duty. However if you want to use alcohol in a chemical process you don't want crap in it. As the purpose of the alcohol was to fortify wine in Italy its safe to assume it was 95% ethanol with water. --Gibnews 20:54, 20 March 2007 (UTC)

Speculating on whether or not the crew tried drinking the alcohol and the possible results of such an attempt is all well and fine for school papers, but without sources that discuss this possibility specifically with regard to the Mary Celeste's crew, it constitutes original research and does not belong here per policy. Rklawton 12:45, 1 May 2007 (UTC)

Everyhing I've read states the cargo was "commercial" alcohol which I took to mean rum or something. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 67.160.174.24 (talk) 15:16, 6 August 2008 (UTC)

As mentioned above, the cargo was drinkable alcohol, however there is no evidence that the crew drank any or were inclined to do so. Speculation about the subject is pointless and comments about toxicity are ill informed. Water is also toxic in sufficient quantities and a more likely explanation of the ultimate fate of the crew. --Gibnews (talk) 08:30, 15 October 2008 (UTC)

There are sources that relate the "drunken crew" theory; it should be mentioned no matter how silly we may regard it. What matters is that it forms part of the history of the legend and has appeared in print. (I think it is mentioned by Macdonald Hastings, for example.) --Michael C. Price talk 08:33, 15 October 2008 (UTC)

I agree, but not with the inclusion of material suggesting that the alcohol could not be drunk as it was toxic as that is obvious nonsense. --Gibnews (talk) 12:53, 15 October 2008 (UTC)
That you regard it as obvious nonsense is irrelevant and certainly is not a reason for deletion. If the theory has been debunked as obvious nonsense then we should mention the theory AND that it has been debunked. --Michael C. Price talk 13:02, 15 October 2008 (UTC)
A reliable source for this would be good. --John (talk) 13:10, 15 October 2008 (UTC)
Various theories that drinking the alcohol have indeed been proposed, including by Solly Flood; so its right to mention them, what is nonsense is the repeated claim that 95% alcohol cannot be consumed, indeed there is a commercial vodka which is 88% As for 'debunking' see Charles Fay's book page 124 The Drunken Crew Theory where it is concluded to be unsound. --Gibnews (talk) 23:23, 15 October 2008 (UTC)
Yes, I was just about to mention that the Drunken Crew Theory was first proposed by Solly Flood at the original inquiry. Please clarify what was the unsound conclusion in Charles Fay's book -- that the crew could drink the alcohol, or that they couldn't? --Michael C. Price talk 09:24, 17 October 2008 (UTC)
P125 "Neither John Austin who spent five hours examining the vessel, nor Oliver Deveau who sailed the vessel to Gibraltar remarked that the cargo had been tampered with. Deveau testified in the inquiry that no wine or spirits were found on board". Although Solly Flood believed that alcohol was the cause, there was no evidence whatsoever to support his view. --Gibnews (talk) 00:01, 23 October 2008 (UTC)
In the very silly 2006 TV doco they show that there could have been an explosion caused by alcohol vapor. That was OK so far as it went but it was a demonstration on a very small scale under controlled conditions. Strangely it seems that only one of the hold hatches was off as was that of the bosun's store. That hatch cover had it been blown upwards by an explosion it surely would have caused a lot of damage when it came back down. There seems to have been no evidence of that having been the case. The cover of the lazarette would have been much smaller and likely had been taken off then the ship was abandoned as the crew would have wanted some of the gear in the store to be in the ships boat.

Whilst the hold would have been pretty water tight I can't see it having been totally airtight and surely Briggs would have been fully aware of the nature and characteristics of his cargo and would have had it inspected regularly. Even if he hadn't sailed with alcohol as a cargo before he would have known all about it and if he didn't he would have looked it up in his stowage manual.

Note the atty-gen of Gibraltar's surname was Solly-Flood.

Albatross2147 (talk) 11:54, 13 November 2008 (UTC)

The hold represents a confined space, there is no evidence of a stowage manual, and IMCO regulations were not in force at the time. The AG was Mr Frederick Solly Flood without a hyphen. --Gibnews (talk) 16:08, 13 November 2008 (UTC)

1. That refuge of the pedantic "Notes and Queries" gives it with and without. The family history site gives it with the hyphen. The Irish Law Reports of the Chancery case give it as S Flood. However I am not going to die in a ditch on this especially if there is an authoritative reference as to how he rendered his name during his time there. 2. I am aware the IMCO regs were not in force but there were stowage guides around and Briggs and the mate would have been aware of them and have access to them in harbour at the very least. Briggs was an educated and stable family man it seems unthinkable that he would not have known what he was involved with. 3. The more I look the more the will o' the wisp style ignition that merely scared the crew seems rubbish. Ethanol explosions in confined spaces seem to be catastrophic see http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2008/01/18/2141180.htm for an image of what happens when someone is careless. However if it is a possibility it would be unlikely that the MC incident was the only event of this nature, Albatross2147 (talk) 00:11, 14 November 2008 (UTC)

The essence of the MC mystery is that whatever happened was something unexpected. Ethanol fires and explosions are unique because of the properties of the material. But because of the enduring nature of the mystery is guaranteed as we can never really KNOW what happened. --Gibnews (talk) 11:20, 14 November 2008 (UTC)

This article states that of the 1,701 barrels only 9 were empty. Thats 450 gallons of alcohol. The ship departed NY nov 7 and was found abandoned dec 4. While in theory that is enough time it is highly unlikey the people on the ship would be able to consume that much in that time. The captain and his family being teetotalers would also play a role, as well as that he probably discouraged the important members of his crew from 'drinking on the job' so to speak. That being said the issue remains that there is no way to know when the alcohol was extracted from the barrels. They could have been loaded onto the Mary Celeste empty for all we know. Assuming that is not true and everything was as it was supposed to be, where the hell did all that alcohol go? Unfortunately there is no way to know exactally how the barrels were stacked and location in relation to one another (ex. in the event of a seaquake it would be unlikely for 9 barrels, randomly scattered among 1701, to open. its more likely that they would all be touching or clustered together). The one thing i found interesting (if i read the article correctly) was that the 9 empty barrels were constructed of red oak while the rest of 1,698 barrels were made of white oak... why? It said red oak is more porus, which would deter me from using it if i were barreling liquids. SirHenryJosephBell (talk) 17:43, 11 January 2011 (UTC)

There are two serious flaws in this paragraph: "This theory's main flaw is that the boarding party found the main hatch secured.[12] Upon going into the hold they did not report smelling any fumes or vapor, which would have still smelled very powerful by that point if this theory were correct. Nor did people who came aboard at Gibraltar and Genoa report smelling any vapors.[citation needed] There was no evidence of alcohol outside the barrels in the hold. What happened to this missing alcohol from the nine empty barrels is as much a mystery as what happened to the crew, although it could have gone missing at any stage of the journey, from before being put on the ship in New York to after Gibraltar.[citation needed]" The first is that ethanol is highly volatile, and all trace of the leaked alcohol would have evaporated within hours, let alone the days before the Mary Celeste was discovered. The second is that pure ethanol is virtually odourless - there would have been no smell. Peter Bell (talk) 06:47, 6 January 2013 (UTC)

Occultists fools?

After reading this article, I fail to see where the great mystery lies as it seems pretty straight-forward. Is the article not neutral in it's POV or are the occultist simply fools? Kristian (sorry, no registration for me)

Kristian: Exactly what happened is still unknown, as there were no verified survivors to tell the tale, and occultist claim anything unknown is tied to the spiritual. It is worth noting (and the article does) that it happened nowhere near the so-called "Bermuda Triangle" (another myth).

dino 03:05, 29 May 2005 (UTC)

Re OCCULTISTS. Yes, Kristian, as Dino correctly points out, it is worth noting that it happened nowhere near the Bermuda Triangle. But while it is true that the article duly informs us about this fact, it is also true that it fails abysmally to tell us where else it did not happen. After all it

also happened nowhere near a lot of other places, among them very important and significant ones. Wouldn't these places deserve at least a mention in the article?

But I must say I am appalled to hear you compare occultists to simple fools. Fools? How can you only consider such a possibility? How can you only say such a thing? Where is your NPOV? I'm not surprised at all that you choose to remain anonymous. A wise choice indeed, if I may say so.--BZ(Bruno Zollinger) 09:14, 12 January 2006 (UTC)
While I will not defend anonymity, I will to a certain extent defend Kristian's post. He does not claim that occultists are fools, he just expresses the view that if the article is NPOV, he, as a reader, must conclude that occultists are fools. --- Anyway, the subject of this article is in itself unnotable; its notability comes from its impact on the imagination of Doyle (incidentally an occultist), and others.--Niels Ø 13:13, 21 April 2006 (UTC)
Niels, I hate to point it out, but you did a logical mistake. Kristian claims that either the article is not neutral in its point of view, or the occultist are fools, and he's asking which one is true. So, your assumption that he's not claiming they're fool can't be verified :). Kristian either thinks the occultist are fools, or the article is not neutral. Anyway, I really don't find a straightforward explanation for the accident. What happened?
They just found the ship deserted, no human on board. Water in the hold, missing alcohol, no life boat... OK, obviously they took the lifeboat along with some pumps and navigational equipment, the crew of Celeste. Why? Why would you go out of a ship, using a small vessel that doesn't even has sails? If the ship's sinking, then this desperate act could (on theory) prolong your life, but the ship wasn't sinking! What about the alcohol? OK, sb stole it in the docks (9 barrels's a lot!). And... then? Diyan.boyanov (talk) 10:41, 21 December 2009 (UTC)

Well considering it, a ship found in perfect condition - with no damage except a slight rip in the sails - and looking as if the crew just died, would be strange. If they left, there would be things cleaned up and the ship would have stopped. But everythting was in posistion and the ship was still moving,meaning that they did not disembark. Vpitt5 (talk) 03:45, 2 June 2014 (UTC)

Alcohol Theory Questioned

The article states that "The idea was put forth by the ship's major shareholder, James Winchester, and is the most widely accepted explanation for the crew's disappearance." There is no citation given to support the idea that this is the "most widely accepted" explanation for the crew's disappearance yet that statement gives weight to one specific theory. I suggest either providing a citation for that or remove it. Mychair (talk) 20:37, 3 June 2014 (UTC)mychair

Agree. Salmanazar (talk) 19:54, 5 June 2014 (UTC)

Life boats

In 1873 two life boats reportedly landed on the Spanish coast with 6 corpses and an American flag on board. Should this be included in the article? --92.232.49.38 (talk) 10:22, 17 June 2014 (UTC)

No, not without references and identification of MC relevance. Chienlit (talk) 12:46, 17 June 2014 (UTC)

Of course it's merely speculation but then again everything about this mystery is. It wouldn't be a mystery otherwise. There are several websites that report the lifeboats. However, I'm unfamiliar as to whether these websites are reliable or far flung conspiracy theorist havens. A google search of "1873 2 lifeboats spain" turns up plenty of results, if someone could see if any of these are of use it'd be greatly appreciated. --92.232.49.38 (talk) 21:30, 18 June 2014 (UTC)

The story was reported on May 16th 1873 in the Liverpool Daily Albion as follows:
A sad story of the sea - a telegram from Madrid says 'Some fishermen at Baudus, in Asturias, have found two rafts, the first with a corpse lashed to it and an Agrican [American?] flag flying and the second raft with five decomposed bodies. It is not known to what vessel they belonged.
It wasn't until much later as far can be made out that anyone theorised that the rafts belonged to the Mary Celeste.
Salmanazar (talk) 19:51, 19 June 2014 (UTC)

Interesting, but how does this fit with the Marie Celeste? How would the crew leave the ship in the lifeboat and then later turn up without the lifeboat but on two rafts? Where would they get the materials? no matching damage to the ship was reported. Also, they seemed to leave all dear and/or important goods on the ship, but they would take the trouble to fly an American flag? — Preceding unsigned comment added by 50.156.57.52 (talk) 06:41, 1 December 2014 (UTC)

Who presided over the inquiry?

A minor quibble discussed in the past is the spelling of the name of the Gibraltar Attorney General. One editor on this page has said that he won't "die in a ditch" if we've spelt his name wrong, but that's not the issue I am raising. Every occurance of the name is linked to an article on Major Gen. Sir Frederick Richard Solly-Flood. The "protector" (I hesitate to call him an "edit-warring turf dictator" because I think he believes he is acting in good faith) of that article is quick to remove any contribution that mentions the Mary Celeste or the inquiry. He believes they are not the same person; his assertion is that it is "unlikely" because "one is an attorney, the other is a soldier", although the two professions are not mutually exclusive and he cites no sources to support his claim. So we'll have to do it for him, and doing so requires that we verify the correct spelling of the name. If the Gib. AG has a compound surname that is not hyphenated, then they are certainly not the same person. If we can find a source that confirms that they are the same person, then the source can be cited in both articles. If they are different persons, we should not be linking to that article. Certainly the Who's Who citation in that article makes no mention of the MC inquiry and only references his military career. 73.180.197.201 (talk) 17:10, 1 August 2014 (UTC)

Confusion of the Gibraltar Advocate-General with a much younger army officer of a similar name is mentioned in my "Problems" note, below. Frederick Solly Flood, born 1801, was a quite different person from Major Gen. Sir Frederick Richard Solly-Flood, born 1829 – although undoubtedly they were from the same Irish family. Brianboulton (talk) 12:09, 8 February 2015 (UTC)

Departure

I am just reading this article and find something does not add up about the departure of the two ships. In the last paragraph of that section it says the Mary Celeste left port on 5 November. The cargo for the Dei Gratia did no arrive until 15 November. That is 10 days later. At that point it would take some time to load the cargo. So, how could the Dei Gratia have set sail seven or eight days after the Mary Celeste? — Preceding unsigned comment added by 50.156.57.52 (talk) 04:29, 30 November 2014 (UTC)

The article at this point in time (9 February 2015) is inadequately sourced and contains planty of errors. When the article is revised, questions of departure times etc. will be fully examined. Brianboulton (talk) 12:21, 8 February 2015 (UTC)

Problems with this article

There are numerous problems with the article as it stands. It gives information that is factually wrong, and generally over-relies on internet sources many of which are not reliable (some of them are dead links). A large number of statements in the article are not cited at all, and bear citation tags. The article makes far too little use of the major reliable histories of the Mary Celeste, in particular Charles Edey Fay's The Story of the Mary Celeste (1988 edition) and Paul Begg's Mary Celeste: The Greatest Mystery of the Sea (2005). In addition to these, MacDonald Hastings's 1972 book Mary Celeste is a useful guide to some of the myths and false assumptions that have bedevilled this story. There are also some very interesting contemporary newspaper accounts. These sources, collectively, will help to resolve many of the queries raised on this talkpage.

I have long been interested in this story, and think that the article desperately needs a rewrite based on reliable sources. I am planning to begin this soon, and in the meantime here are a few examples of wrong or dubious information presently in the article:

  • The collision in the English Channel supposedly took place on the ship's resumed maiden voyage. The story is possibly, though not certainly true, but the assertion that the captain, John W. Parker, was dismissed as a result is certainly untrue.
  • Although Briggs had captained several ships before Mary Celeste, the statement that he had "owned many more" is nonsense.
  • There is no reliable evidence that supports the story that the Briggses and the Moorhouses dined together on the eve of Marie Celeste's departure, or even that they knew each other beyond a nodding acquaintance.
  • The "Frederick Solly Flood" (unhyphenated) who was Advocate General in Gibraltar in 1873 was by no means the same person as the Army Major-General (hyphenated) to whom his name is wikilinked in the text. He was a 72-year-old lawyer, for whom Begg provides detailed biographical information. I will remove the false link.
  • There were not "at least 13 changes of ownership" after 1873. Four or five, and some of these were simply changes in consortium membership. There were just two owning consortiums between February 1874 and the ship's demise in 1885.
  • Gilman C. Parker was not the final owner. He was the final captain.

I hope to begin work on the update shortly. Brianboulton (talk) 23:43, 6 February 2015 (UTC)


Can I suggest that, after the editing dust has settled, large portions of this talk page be archived per WP:ARCHIVE? This page is really long, and many of the entries have been overcome by events. Thanks for your hard work. —Molly-in-md (talk) 20:37, 17 February 2015 (UTC)

I've added an auto archive.Richard-of-Earth (talk) 09:16, 19 February 2015 (UTC)

Hurricane in the Atlantic Nov 22nd-26th

After a friend, Chris Hood (see Books), pointed out a Japanese boat appeared off B.C. Coast, he suggested the Mary Celeste might have had the same fate. I did a search for tsunamis, hurricanes, volcanoes and so on around the week of November 24th - 30th 1872 in the online collection of UK Newspapers and there are dozens of reports of hurricanes beating against south-west England and ships running aground on Monday 25th November.

SEVERE STORM AND LOSS OF LIFE . The Derby Mercury (Derby, England), Wednesday, November 27, 1872; Issue 8262.

Snippets: "Today a week's rough weather has culminated in a hurricane which in intensity and destruction of life and property has not been equalled since 1865. From Scilly, on the westward, to Exmouth, on the east, records of disaster and death are received, while steamers driven back hundreds of miles in the Atlantic bear testimony to the wide range of the storm....", "Not so happy was a large barque drifting unmanageable towards the shore. When a mile off, the crew were seen to take to the boats, and pull towards one of the most dreadful spots on the coast, where they were drowned.... ", "A steamer coming into Falmouth harbour during the height of the gale drove in among the ships at anchor and three or four broke loose. Three went ashore, the fate of the crew is not known yet.", "Early this morning a French schooner went ashore on Batten Reef.", "A Norwegian boat was capsized in the harbour, the body of one of the crew washed ashore"


SEVERE GALES AND LOSS OF LIFE . The Morning Post (London, England), Wednesday, November 27, 1872; pg. 6; Issue 31328. 19th Century British Library Newspapers: Part II.

There is a telling of a ship on the Monday 25th Nov that came close to the coast battling against the strong gales.. eventually the captain made a beeline to the coast, ran aground, but the crew and passengers could not get clear of the waters... one man lost his life.. then the ship swung out again.. Finally they could get off... women and children were rescued... the boat was the Royal Adelaide (1865) travelling from London to Australia. As they were brought to shore the sea crashed around them... "During the whole of this time the sea was dashing with the wildest fury against the vessel, threatening to sweep off the remainder of the people, who were seen anxiously awaiting their turn to come in the cradle, but afraid to venture. One by one the masts fell with a terrific crash, whilst the sea began to pour through the sides of the ship, and it was evident that she was breaking up." The last three to cross (leaving 4 or 5 still on the boat) got snapped away by waves and drowned.


So it's not quite hard to account for the Mary Celeste... if the last entry in the log was November 25th.. and there was water on-board... I am very surprised to find this with a 'Paranormal' classification.

Zorgster (talk) 16:11, 26 March 2012 (UTC)

There was indeed a storm then, according to records, and not just near England (wrong part of the Atlantic) but in the Azores, with gale force winds (62 km/h is the minimum for a "gale" and just at the top range for "tropical depression" but not quite high enough for "tropical storm"), although this seems to be the only recorded observation: http://www.maryceleste.net/met.htm The pressure, 752 mm (=29.6 inHg), isn't a record-breaker by any stretch, but it's a bad storm.
Further, it's hard to imagine a cyclone (hurricane) between the Azores and Portugal not making landfall on the Iberian peninsula, but the NHC declared upon the landfall of Hurricane Vince in 2005 that it was the only tropical cyclone to make landfall there; still, there's also record of an hurricane making landfall in Spain in 1842, so the NHC records may be incomplete.
As noted in the European windstorm, cyclones in Europe do form and do so in clusters. The 1872 Baltic Sea flood was devastating: a major November storm blew from the southwest up across the Baltic towards Finland, became a cyclone (not technically a hurricane, but the press used and still uses the terms interchangeably), reversed direction, and bore down back across Europe, wiping out the Baltic coast on November 13; the "Mary Celeste" was at sea then, but the "Dei Gratia" was still in port in NY waiting for cargo. Another one (″The Great Storm of 1872″) hit Britain on December 8 ( http://www.guardian.co.uk/news/2010/dec/04/weatherwatch0414 ). — Preceding unsigned comment added by 98.180.55.167 (talk) 01:13, 18 March 2013 (UTC)
If the vessel had been abandoned due to a severe storm or hurricane the resultant damage to the ship would have been obvious to the crew of the Dei Gtatia, and without a crew to sail her through any such storm she is more likely to have been sunk rather than being discovered in such good condition. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 2.31.130.20 (talk) 02:54, 5 October 2015 (UTC)

One more theory to the list

Here is a new theory, similar to others but with a significant twist. First, I must state, I am not an expert in the Mary Celeste, nor am I a seasoned seaman, etc. I have not spent years studying the hearings. I am just applying a little common sense to what is already said here and a couple other published places. So feel free to rip this to pieces.

On the cargo, I note that only the red oak barrels were empty. What are the odds that crew members or other people would have randomly picked those 9 barrel? If they had drank that much, there would have been other signs of damage by drunken crews. I also note that there is no report that the barrels had been tapped, broken or otherwise violated. That gives strong support to the theories about the alcohol seeping out either through the porous red oak, the seams, or in some other manner. Perhaps the sloshing by the rolling of the ship, it had been a rough crossing with several storms and/or the heat in the hold causing the alcohol boil off more etc. aggravated the situation.

(Today, a company shipping alcohol would have various experts on packaging, etc. But in late 1800’s, it was common laborers with little or no education who filled the barrels with little thought about the difference in red oak and white oak, and when they ran out of one, they just grabbed the red oak barrels. After all they held water, so what’s the difference.)

I have not heard of any effort to prove or disprove these theories. Get one red oak barrel as close as possible to those on the Mar Celeste, fill with alcohol, place in a sealed up shack or container obviously in a remote location, kept at the temperature in a ships hold of that time, a mechanism to keep it rocking, and see what happens in a couple months.

For now, I will accept that the fumes eventually started seeping out and finally, the crew realized they had an explosive situation. The caption did not have access to a modern chemist to let him know exactly what he was dealing with, but he clearly knew enough to know that fumes like this built up in the hold were not good. So he did what we all would do. If you go home tonight and find the strong order of gas in your house, do you just start fixing dinner and ignore it? You probably open the windows, and get everyone out, call 911 or the gas co. You hope the gas man gets there quickly turns off the gas, and then wait for the house to air out until it is safe to go inside, find and fix the leak. You then go on with your life.

My guess is they did just that. Open the hatches, a few port windows, etc., got into the boat tied a safe distance behind hopefully until the hold had time to air out. They then planned to come back on board, find what they assumed to be the broken barrel(s) dispose of it(them) and continue their trip as planned. Unfortunately, something went horribly wrong. Perhaps, a large wave capsized the little boat, maybe a wind shift as they were trying to re-board caused the Mary Celeste to shift over them, etc. Dealing with the two year old may have contributed and many sailors back then could not swim. In any case, they all ended in the water watching the Mary Celeste still towing the little boat sail off. Eventually, the little boat, likely swamped or capsized, broke away. The rope trailing in the water provides evidence for this.

The key here is they never intended to abandon the Mary Celeste, just get off until the hold had time to air out, then planned to re-board, correct the problem and continue their trip. Possessions left on board support this theory. Navigation gear would help them know if they were getting close to land and had to quickly get back on board to change course.

Clark G — Preceding unsigned comment added by 108.235.32.35 (talk) 23:20, 20 August 2014 (UTC)

The theory espoused here is not new, though it is basically as plausible as many others. In 2006 Dr Andrea Sella of University College, London, carried out tests using a replica of Mary Celeste's hold, to examine the "fear of an explosion" theory. His findings will be incorporated into the article, in my proposed expansion/rewrite (see "Problems" note, below. Brianboulton (talk) 12:18, 8 February 2015 (UTC)
Whilst the theory has some merit one would question the wisdom of every passenger and crew member going into the lifeboat, one or two of the crew should have remained aboard the Mary Celeste for reasons that must now be all-too obvious and I doubt if Capt. Briggs was so foolish as to have ordered this. You don't completely abandon an otherwise seaworthy ship alone in the middle of an ocean under any circumstances, risk of explosion or not. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 2.31.130.20 (talk) 03:11, 5 October 2015 (UTC)

Marie Celeste Problem, November 10, 2015

For reasons that go beyond Wikipedia, it's important that the ref to the Marie Celeste misnomer goes in the lead. Almost everyone thinks Marie Celeste was the name of the ship. They bring that misconception with them when they visit the page. In fact, some people will be genuinely surprised to learn that the ship wasn't called Marie Celeste. Some might well assume that Wikipedia has got it wrong (Wikipedia does get things wrong). The ref shows that the statement is authoritative. It helpfully explains the whole thing in a nutshell. And this article should go hand-in-hand with the article on Marie Celeste, which I'm working on. Wikipedia has the opportunity, and, some might say, the responsibility to correct this widespread misunderstanding. The explanation further down the page doesn't make this point early, prominently, and forcefully enough. This is a case of thinking from the point of view of the person using Wikipedia rather than the person editing it. Does removing the reference improve the article? Hengistmate (talk) 21:59, 10 November 2015 (UTC)

Link to Mary Celeste (Album) . . .

After due consideration, this has got to go. The link takes you not to the album, but to the band Huron. The band aren't really notable, and the album less so. I think it's clear from recent editing activity that there's some manipulation here. It looks as if someone wants to use the Mary Celeste site to steer people towards the Huron site, where there album is mentioned briefly in the copy. If they want to do that, then let them at least go to the trouble of creating an article. As for the Huron article, it's mostly a huge puff for the band, with no NPOV. Three of the references are to their own website. This isn't an encyclopaedic article, it's sleeve notes. There's even an album track called Mary Celeste by a band called Gazpacho (which is actually quite a nice, lyrical song). How long can this go on?

Anyway, irrespective of the fact that this track is utterly frightful, I'm removing the link because it isn't a link to the subject. That's completely legit. If anyone's misguided enough to want to find information on this racket, the perpetrators will have to accommodate them by coming up with a Wikipedia article that meets some of the criteria. The Huron site is another matter; it's such a travesty that I don't think it would survive serious scrutiny. It would be nice if someone were to do that. Hengistmate (talk) 23:32, 13 November 2015 (UTC)

@Hengistmate: I disagree. If you think the article on the band should not exist, take it to AfD. While it exists, it is appropriate for there to be a redirect (or dab entry, or hatnote) for each non-notable album, leading to the band. In this case, as there's a Primary Topic (the ship) and no dab page, a hatnote is correct. It's not uncommon for an editor to feel that a hatnote to a minor topic disfigures an article in which they have an interest, but this hatnote complies with Wikipedia's policieis/guidelines (not sure which exactly, not going to dig out chapter and verse) and needs to stay. PamD 09:44, 14 November 2015 (UTC)
@Hengistmate:Re-pinging because I mistyped yr name first time round!PamD 09:45, 14 November 2015 (UTC)
had a quick look at huron site, seems a small band, even smaller album. how many people are going to type Mary Cedleste expecting to find the album - which is clearly not even notable enough for an article. Awaiting further comments, but that link is clearly there to promote the band and should go IdreamofJeanie (talk) 09:53, 14 November 2015 (UTC)
The link is there so that someone looking for an album called "Mary Celeste" can find information about it, which is in the article on the band Huron (UK band). It's a perfectly legitimate link to be included in the hatnote on this article. @IdreamofJeanie: where did you mean to say the link should go to? Looks as if you lost the last part of your sentence. PamD 11:02, 14 November 2015 (UTC)
Sorry, misread the sentence - I thought it was going to say "should go to ...". Missing full stop may have distracted me. And at first I misread it a different way, thought it was Hengistmate replying and saying that the link should go to you, in an unsigned but dated comment. I've got a cold, not thinking too straight. But I still think it's a legitimate hatnote. And I have no connection with the group and no interest in heavy metal music. PamD 11:06, 14 November 2015 (UTC)

Pam's argument doesn't hold water for a second, I'm afraid. The purpose of hatnotes is quite clear; to send people to articles. There isn't an article on the album Mary Celeste. It's not notable, but if somebody wants to create an article on it, they're welcome to do so, as someone has done with another of the band's albums. It's not our job to direct people to something not notable hidden in the text of another article. If they create an article, it can go in a hatnote or on a disambiguation page. Put it this way: the Wikipedia article on the shirt doesn't have a hatnote to Adolf Hitler because it says in that article that some of his supporters wore brown ones. Or, more specifically, the article on former British cabinet minister Chris Smith doesn't have a hatnote to Chris Smith, guitarist with Huron. The latter is not notable, either, and there's no article on him. Quite apart from the fact that Huron don't deserve to benefit from the commercial nature of their article, the hatnote has to go. Hengistmate (talk) 14:21, 19 November 2015 (UTC)

The purpose of hatnotes is to send people to information in the encyclopedia. We have information about the album. The hatnote should stay. MOS:DABMENTION is explicit about the case where there is a dab page; here there is no dab page, but the hatnote fulfils the same function. PamD 17:26, 19 November 2015 (UTC)

"The purpose of hatnotes is to send people to information in the encyclopaedia."? Then quite soon everything will link to everything else, and Wikipedia will become a very busy place. Should we therefore add "For the other album, see Salt Marie Celeste"? The criteria seem to be exactly the same, and the music just as dreadful. The only way to decontaminate the article would appear to be to create a disambiguation page, to which both these abominable and unnotable albums may be consigned, along with Gazpacho. I don't know what a dab is. Not in this context, anyway.

"Commoner" is a word, and a natural one: See "Origin." That's what the source says.

There is still a need to expand the Conan Doyle section. His spelling of the ship's name can be found in reliable newspapers well before the 1960s, as early as 1901, in fact, and throughout the first half of the 20th century, along with fanciful claims about the presence of lifeboats and serious suggestions that his short story is a genuine attempt to explain the mystery. Doyle changed the whole significance of the episode, to an extent that is not yet reflected. Time is slipping by. We need to get this Featured Article presentable in time for the awards ceremony. Hengistmate (talk) 02:15, 2 December 2015 (UTC)

Petroleum

Why does one paragraph say the ship carried petroleum? That's not alcohol.76.105.131.18 (talk) 12:15, 4 December 2015 (UTC)

No, the Dei Gratia was the one carrying the petroleum.MidlandLinda (talk) 17:48, 4 December 2015 (UTC)

Combination of alcohol vapours and general poor quality of ship

The most likely explanation for the abandonment of the vessel is often said to be a combination of both alcohol vapours and poor maintanance of the Mary Celeste. The Mary Celeste was found with its equipment damaged, as well as with disturbed alcohol. It is said by some of the sources on this page that Briggs realized the alcohol was leaking and that a stove-pipe had come loose. Fearing his boat was about to violently explode, he tied an unusually long line to his ship and put his crew and family on board. Then the rope came loose and Briggs and his family perished trying to rescue their valuable cargo.--77.96.223.251 (talk) 03:26, 4 February 2015 (UTC)

So how would you chamnge the article? Any such change needs to be supported by a reliably sourced citation. See Wikipedia:Verifiability. Richard-of-Earth (talk) 09:48, 4 February 2015 (UTC)
The fumes/fear-of-explosion theory is raised by an earlier contributor to this page (see above). It is one of the more durable theories relating to the abandonment and will be fully consiered along with others, when the article is revised – see my note below. Brianboulton (talk) 12:24, 8 February 2015 (UTC)
If the theory is "one of the more durable" (and from what I know of this incident, it is), why does the article still say "The lack of damage from an explosion and the generally sound state of the cargo upon discovery, tend to weaken this case"? I don't know if it's in the source or one of us is paraphrasing, but the logic is unsound: Just because there was no evidence of an explosion does not mean the captain and crew didn't have reason to fear one would occur and evacuate the ship. Daniel Case (talk) 00:23, 13 November 2015 (UTC)
I think you're right, Daniel. I don't see the need for the {{dubious}} tag that was placed on that sentence, and I've removed it. It's got two citations anyway, and it seems to be based on a misunderstanding. The crew only needed to think an explosion was likely, and whether or not one occurred doesn't matter here. --BDD (talk) 16:39, 4 December 2015 (UTC)
Someone should go look at the source and see what it says (can't do that on Google Books). A quote in the footnote might help. Daniel Case (talk) 22:52, 5 December 2015 (UTC)

Ship

A brigantine is not a ship. Nyttend (talk) 14:28, 4 December 2015 (UTC)

Then you had better go and modify the Brigantine article, which, though usually using the term vessel, refers to such a vessel as a ship at least once. {The poster formerly known as 87.81.230.195} 185.74.232.130 (talk) 15:03, 4 December 2015 (UTC)
perhaps, but it is a ship IdreamofJeanie (talk) 15:53, 4 December 2015 (UTC)
Nyttend is relying on a rather formal, outdated definition of what constituted a "ship", using a criterion of size (three or more masts). So technically he's correct. But we are less nit-picky these days in our definitions; the Oxford dictionary defines a brigantine as a two-masted ship. Brianboulton (talk) 20:20, 8 December 2015 (UTC)

Mary Celeste/Marie Celeste in Popular Culture

Probably it should be noted that the Al Stewart song "Life in Dark Waters" from the album Time Passages is an extended allegory about the M.C. Anyone who takes regular interest in this wiki entry can verify and add text to the main article if you think it is worth it. My role here is just a "heads up" about this bit of trivia. MikeDiehl 17:22, 20 July 2016 (UTC)

Mary's a Grand Old Name

I think it has to be acknowledged that a great many people, perhaps even a majority, still think that the name of the ship was Marie Celeste. Even one of the contributors to this talk page refers to it as such. Is it enough to simply redirect people who search for Marie Celeste to Mary Celeste, especially since the origin of the confusion isn't explained until a long way down the current article? I found that confusing, and I suspect that people holding the deeply ingrained belief the the ship's name was Marie will not understand why they are redirected, with no explanation, to what is apparently an article about something else.

I would suggest that the page on Marie be expanded to explain briefly that it is a fictional ship, often confused with Mary, and linked to, rather than redirected to, the article on the real thing. The latter ought to contain an early explanation of the Mary/Marie confusion, perhaps in a footnote.

I am not sure that the album by a thrash metal band (who also seem not to be aware of the ship's real name) is notable, nor that the link to and existence of the most blatant plug should be retained. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 86.141.113.235 (talk) 08:10, 21 October 2015 (UTC)

I have added a hatnote to this article which explains the redirection and offers a link to the article about the story of the fictional ship. I think this should avoid confusion. As for the album: if there were no article "Mary Celeste" there would be an uncontroversial redirect from album to band; as there is an article at the title, there's a hatnote. (Though actually I now see there's another album mentioned at Mandrake (band), so a Mary Celeste (disambiguation) page could be justified). There's also a ship the Marie Celeste, which sank in 1864, which features in the article Crenshaw Company! PamD 23:32, 21 October 2015 (UTC)

This collaborative approach is most welcome. I would, though, tackle it slightly differently, of which: more in a moment. First, though, the Marie Celeste that sank in 1864 was a sidewheel paddle steamer. It's wrongly linked to the Mary Celeste. In any case, sources call this vessel both Marie and Mary. That's somebody else's problem. I've removed the link.

I'm all in favour of a disambiguation page. Then the link to what is an obvious promotion for a not very noteworthy and, I suspect, terrible album can be shunted off there, and the article doesn't have to be cluttered up with it. It's the least encyclopaedic bit of writing I've ever seen. There's a strong case for deleting it altogether, but let's settle for kicking it into the long grass.

Now: with respect, I don't think your alteration does the job. All this "redirect" stuff is Wikipediaspeak. It's not user friendly. If Wikipedia needs to redirect something, the punter doesn't need to know. All he's interested in is the information. Also, the note doesn't explain the connection between Mary and Marie. The punter will think "Why should I be interested in a fictional ship in an obscure short story? That's not what I came here for. " I wouldn't have that link. I would explain in the lead or in a note or even in a short section that the name is often confused with Doyle's fictional one. That point is, at the moment, much too far down the article. What say you?

And I note that, so far, the person who objects to the proposed alterations to the Marie Celeste article has yet to respond to the invitation to explain his reasons for declaring the alterations unconstructive. Hengistmate (talk) 15:07, 23 October 2015 (UTC)

The name "Mary Celeste" roughly translated means "Heavenly Mary" or "Mary of the Heavens" and is likely a reference to The Virgin Mary and not to Galileo's daughter, illegitimate or not, nor to some nun.
Similarly the name of other ship, the "Dei Gratia", means "Thanks Be to God" or "By the Grace of God". — Preceding unsigned comment added by 95.144.50.223 (talk) 10:15, 4 December 2016 (UTC)

The True Story of Mary Celeste television program

Why exactly is this program given so much space in the article? The section's content can be summarized in a few sentences in the Legacy section, if it merits inclusion at all. Seems self-promotional and undue. 23 editor (talk) 14:03, 11 August 2017 (UTC)

Agree -- I've been bold and removed it. The article as promoted to FA only included a brief reference that I've retained, so I see no consensus for giving such weight to one TV program. If anyone wants to create an article on the show with the deleted info and link to it from this article I think that'd be fine. Cheers, Ian Rose (talk) 00:22, 12 August 2017 (UTC)

The Wreck of the Mary Deare

I find the plot of The Wreck of the Mary Deare (book and movie) by Hammond Innes very similar to the Mary Celeste story. Jay 14:05, 9 Nov 2004 (UTC)

Old sailors

Does anybody besides me feel that the following sentence is unencyclopedical? "Old sailors sometimes claimed that they had been aboard the Mary Celeste. Little credence is given to these stories." BJS 01 August 2006

Doctor Who and Mary Celeste, October 14, 2017.

"I don't think this section is intended to be a grab-bag of every appearance in media." I don't see it as that at all. Doctor Who is culturally significant, not to say iconic, at least in the UK. The episode in question is an imagined account of the fate of the crew, as is J. Habakuk Jephson's Statement, and I suspect many more people have watched the former than have read the latter. The Doctor Who adventure is every bit a "myth or false history", and the notion of an entity that can dematerialise and thereby explainn the mystery is entertaining and pleasingly obvious. I think this reference should be reinstated. Hengistmate (talk) 12:46, 16 October 2017 (UTC)

Doyle's Legacy.

A "celebrity", or at least "distinguished alumni" edition on TV tonight of University Challenge (a quiz between teams representing their current or former university or university college).

One question went (broadly speaking, but correct in the relevant details): "Name the two famous ships, both called 'Mary', that were launched in 1511 and 1861." One of the contestants, Paul Ross, answered, "The Mary Rose and the Marie Celeste."

This was a most illuminating incident. It indicates how pervasive is Conan Doyle's incorrect rendition of the ship's name. Ross was told, and it was essential to the structure of the question, that both ships were called "Mary", yet he still chose to call one of them "Marie".

I mention this because it is a problem that has spread throughout Wikipedia. It will play a part in some future editing of this article and others. Hengistmate (talk) 21:42, 12 December 2017 (UTC)

Some observations.

The reference to the appearance of the Mary Celeste in an episode of Doctor Who has been reinstated. We now have, as far as we know, two "editors" who believe it should be included, and one who, the last time we heard, doesn't. As I've said, Doctor Who is an iconic and globally recognised tv show. Actually, I'd hazard a guess that interest in Doctor Who is probably higher amongst Wikipedia "editors" than amongst the public at large. Just a hunch. So I don't really see why the reference can't stay there.

Staying with the subject, the BBC website's synopsis of this episode contains a fascinating error that illustrates how lamentably this article fails to reflect the impact of Conan Doyle's influence in the Mary/Marie matter.

The synopsis says, "In episode three, Flight Through Eternity, the TARDIS takes the Doctor and his friends to a 19th Century sailing ship. When the Daleks arrive in pursuit, the crew are terrorised and all jump overboard. The Doctor and the Daleks then depart, leaving the ship empty and its name is revealed to be the Marie Celeste. In real history, the Mary (not Marie) Celeste was found abandoned at sea in 1872. It is unknown what happened to the crew and remains a great maritime mystery."

The episode in question is available to watch on Dailymotion. https://www.dailymotion.com/video/x19rkzn The remarkable thing is that just before the end, after about 23 minutes, the ship's name is in fact revealed to be Mary Celeste - not Marie Celeste. The camera holds on a plaque, fixed to the wheelhouse, that says "Mary Celeste", and two of the cast members utter the name "Mary Celeste" in a dialogue.

Whoever wrote the synopsis has committed the very mistake they were warning against, a further example of how Conan Doyle's small alteration renders people incapable of correctly interpreting the evidence of their own eyes and ears.

Talking of which, the small section on radio plays omits mention of, amongst others, a drama by American script- and screenwriter Gil Doud. It offers a not very ingenious explanation for the disappearance of the crew but is instructive in other ways. The play was broadcst on CBS radio twice: on June the 8th, 1953, narrated by Van Heflin, and on December the 27th, 1955, narrated by John Dehner. In the 1953 version both the announcer and Heflin refer to the ship as "Marie" (mə'ree) Celeste, whereas in the later version the announcer and Rehner refer to it as something between "Mary" and "merry". In the absence of the original scripts we don't know how it was spelt by the author. Not, as we have seen, is that necessarily a guide to anything - in various writings about the subject the terms Marie and Mary are often used quite indiscriminately, sometimes in the same paragraph.

All of which confirms that the Doctor Who reference is fine here, and that much, much more needs to be done to this article to reveal the full consequences of Conan Doyle's tinkering. Hengistmate (talk) 18:26, 1 June 2018 (UTC)

Inclusion of this article in the "people lost at sea" category

Another user and myself have found ourselves at a disagreement as to whether this article should be placed in the people lost at sea category. The other user has suggested while undoing my edits that the category "...is for people, not ships. check Titanic, Luisitania, Muritania, Mary Rose, et. there are no ships in this catagory"[1]. Fundamentally, I would agree here. The category is intended for biographical articles. However, there are no appropriate categories or lists for this article, for this situation.

Personally, I think that this article should be included in the category for a few reasons. This article is relevant for a single reason — the ship, Mary Celeste, was found abandoned at sea, with its cargo still onboard. It's a ghost ship. The whereabouts of the crew are unknown; they were never heard from again. The fate of the crew, ultimately, a mystery. Thus the article is relevant purely because its crew vanished without a trace. There is a section in the article for the missing crew, Mary Celeste/Archive 1#Captain Briggs and crew. There are no other articles for these people on ENWP. This is the only article where they are to be found, to my knowledge.

Therefore, I would like to have the "people lost at sea" category added to this article, for ease of navigation. This is one of the primary functions of a category, found at WP:AOAC. While a list would be more appropriate in this case, there is no list of people lost at sea. The fates of the crews of the other four ships (RMS Titanic, RMS Lusitania, RMS Mauretania, and the Mary Rose) used by the other user as examples are all known. The first sunk in an accident, and the latter three were lost in battle. I couldn't really find anything on the third ship but I will give the benefit of the doubt on that example. In fact, the RMS Titanic incident has its own category for its victims. So do the victims of the RMS Lusitania. They would not belong in the "people lost at sea category" anyway, as none of those four incidents involved a ghost ship.

I would also like to mention one other anomalous article in the "people lost at sea" category — Not Without Hope. The article is about a biographical novel regarding a fatal maritime incident. I actually think the article is miscategorised, but that is beyond the point; the article itself also contains mini-biographies for the victims. Out of the deceased victims, two have WP articles already; but one does not, and his only biographical entry on this encyclopaedia resides at that article. The article itself is of the book and the accident, and not the victims; and yet, they are placed in that category as well. This is simply an observation.

Ultimately, the Mary Celeste incident is totally different from the other four listed incidents. I am no expert on maritime incidents or missing persons, and as such express no interest in creating a new category or list for "mass disappearances at sea". For ease of access, to anyone researching on this encyclopaedia people lost at sea, the only manner in which they would find this article is through the "people lost at sea" category.

I've pinged the other user in hopes that they can also give their fleshed–out opinion so that there can be be some consensus here. Ian Rose, you are invited to participate in the discussion as well if you like. --ElKabong888 (talk) 11:05, 2 March 2019 (UTC)

Section Myths and false histories

There is a difference of opinion taking place between me and User:Dilidor. I feel the wording in the section on should be "In this version, all on board except Fosdyk were drowned or eaten by sharks after a temporary platform on which they had crowded to watch a swimming contest collapsed into the sea." They feel that the wording "In this version, all on board except Fosdyk were drowned or eaten by sharks after a temporary platform collapsed into the sea on which they had crowded to watch a swimming contest. " is better, as my version "means that the contest collapsed into the sea; better to keep the predicate unruptured". I think my version flows better and is more natural English, and their version has them crowded on the sea and a platform collapsing into it. .Third party opinions are sought. Britmax (talk) 11:43, 6 December 2019 (UTC)

The clause "on which they had crowded to watch a swimming contest" is extraneous information and completely unnecessary to the main clause: "a temporary platform collapsed into the sea". Note that the main clause is a complete sentence, while the extraneous information is merely a dependent clause. A purist would insist that your construction requires commas setting off the dependent clause from the ruptured main clause. However, to resolve this dispute, I simply reworded what was a bad sentence to begin with. I trust this will resolve the hardship. —Dilidor (talk) 12:04, 6 December 2019 (UTC)
In this version, people on board had crowded onto a temporary platform to watch a swimming contest. As the platform collapsed into the sea, all on board except Fosdyk drowned or were eaten by sharks.-- (talk) 14:17, 6 December 2019 (UTC)
That's essentially what I rewrote it to. —Dilidor (talk) 17:47, 6 December 2019 (UTC)