Title: Sailing the
Graveyard Sea: The Deathly Voyage of the
Somers, the U.S. Navy's Only Mutiny, and the Trial That Gripped the Nation
Author: Richard Snow
Narrated by: Jacques Roy
Publisher: Simon
& Schuster Audio
Length:
Approximately 8 hours and 4 minutes
Source: Review
Copy from Simon & Schuster Audio. Thank
you @simonandschuster #BookClubFavorites for the free books!
Do you like to listen to audiobooks in the car on long
trips? If you are traveling with
someone, how do you decide what book to listen to? We traveled to Michigan over Thanksgiving
weekend. My daughter enjoys watching
movies on trips and opts out of audiobooks.
I read the descriptions of several non-fiction audiobooks to my husband
and two sons and they all voted to listen to Sailing the Graveyard Sea by
Richard Snow.
Sailing the Graveyard Sea introduced us to a new part
of history that we had never heard before.
In 1842, the US brig-of-war Somers was being used a training vessel for
many 14- to 18-year-olds and was captained by Commander Alexander
Mackenzie. When the ship arrived in
Boston, Mackenzie announced that he had narrowly prevented a mutiny and had
hanged the three mutineers at sea. One
of the mutineers was 18-year-old acting Midshipman Philip Spencer, the son of
the Secretary of War, John Spencer.
As officials look more into the case, they could not
find any evidence that a mutiny did indeed take place. Everything was based on the testimony of one
crew man who stated that Spencer had talked about taking over the ship and
becoming a pirate. After Mackenzie heard
this, he locked up Spencer and two other men and through paranoia started to believe
that everyone was against him and that mutiny was imminent. He decided to hang the three men without a
trial before arriving back at port. For
this decision, he was put on trial. The
trial was riveting and did not end as we all expected it would.
This was a fascinating story that kept us enthralled through
our voyage. Jacques Roy was a good
narrator. I enjoyed hearing the back story of Philip
Spencer, the ne’er-do-well son of the Secretary of War. Spencer loved reading pirate stories and
talking about pirates. Was he just
entertaining himself and the other sailor with pirate stories or did he indeed
want to take over the ship? One thing
was for certain, the training of officers had to change. After this trial, the Naval Academy was started
in Annapolis.
Overall, Sailing the Graveyard Sea is a fascinating
look into a forgotten episode of naval history.
Sounds like an excellent story
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