Archive for August, 2012

Aug 20 2012

South Shore’s Son with a Jaded Past

Life destroyed by Revolution, Robert Haswell chronicled America’s 1st voyage ’round the world

“He’s the exact opposite of Kendrick.” The 19 year-old Third Officer of the ship Columbia. A prisoner of war and refugee before he was ten, Robert Haswell was the son of a British Officer and Loyalist. HRH starts with his birth in Boston Harbor and wartime experiences during the American Revolution. Author of the log of the first Columbia Expedition, he’s maybe not the most reliable narrator.

Locations: Green Dragon Tavern, Boston; For Revere, Hull; Larry’s PX, Chatham, Massachusetts.

Interviews: Don Ritz, Hull Historic District Commission

Robert Haswell of the Columbia Expedition copyright 2012 Thunderball Entertainment Group all rights reservedIn this third installment of the new Hit and Run History series, Boston’s Shea Rose opens with a descritpion of the Cape’s Gumshoe Historians.
Creator and host Andrew Buckley and Assistant director Matthew Griffin contrast the success Captain John Kendrick found with the American Revolution with that of one of his junior officers. Robert Haswell’s dramatic fall would accompany that of his father, who refused to join the Patriot cause.
Not yet 10, Haswell witnesses the bloodshed and death firsthand in his own home situated in the quiet seaside town of Hull, near the entrance to Boston Harbor. Banishment to poverty in England soon follows.
But in doing research on Haswell, HRH turns up a record of a deed that raises more questions. Just as with Kendrick in the previous episode (The Commander), our crew heads to another registry of deeds, this time in Boston. Buckley’s experience in the nitty-gritty of historical research it put to the test as even the Suffolk Registry of Deeds seems stumped as to the document’s existence.
Curiouser and curioser, the formative years of Columbia’s Third Officer become. Hit and Run History raises doubts as to the objectivity of Robert Haswell as chronicler of this historic voyage.

Watch “The Loyalist” here or subscribe to the Hit and Run History video podcast on iTunes.

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Aug 13 2012

Cape Cod’s Greatest Sea Captain

Cape Cod’s Gumshoe Historians profile John Kendrick of the Columbia Expedition

O Captain! My Captain! The man picked to command the Columbia Expedition had a lifetime of experience. Militiaman. Whaler. Privateer. Gumshoe Historians Andrew Buckley and Matt Griffin track John Kendrick from the South Orleans/East Harwich shores of Pleasant Bay to Edgartown Harbor, then over to the house on Wareham Narrows bought with booty from the Revolution.

Locations: Cape Cod, Martha’s Vineyard & South Coast of Massachusetts.

Interviews: Alan McClennen, Nancy Cole, Thornton Gibbs, Benjamin Dunham

Captain John Kendrick of the Columbia Expedition copyright 2012 Thunderball Entertainment Group all rights reservedBoston rocker Shea Rose again introduces this episode, the second in this series from Hit and Run History. Creator and host Andrew Buckley and Assistant director Matthew Griffin start off in very familiar territory – just a couple towns over from their native Chatham. Sharing lineage with Columbia’s commander, the two start with an interview with Alan McClennen, Jr. of Friends of Pleasant Bay. The big question is what lessons would Kendrick have learned at an early age here, in this remote corner of New England, that would make him the man chosen to lead the first American voyage ’round the world?
Then it’s off to the Vineyard to hunt down any records of Kendrick’s young adulthood in the whaling port of Edgartown. A snow day greets the boys as they head off across Vineyard Sound and down the road to the Dukes County Registry of Deeds.
With a copy of an ancient record in hand, and with the help of Nancy COle of the Martha’s Vineyard Museum, they’re able to pinpoint the location of Kendrick’s house during the American Revolution.
Wrapping up, a tour of the John Kendrick Maritime Museum in Wareham reveals a house that has changed little since the captain left it to the care of his wife, Huldah, over two centuries ago. Kendrick bought it with the booty from privateering in the Revolution. Buckley and Griffin follow up with an interviews with Ben Dunham and Thornton Gibbs of the Wareham Historical Society. The latter was the last interview given before Gibbs died a few months later.
This is where the Hit and Run History style really starts coming together. Ranging from one location to another, getting the interview and moving on to the locations where our characters lived. Irreverent, curious, but well-informed, the Gumshoes help us get into the head of historical figures like John Kendrick.

Watch “The Commander” here or subscribe to the Hit and Run History video podcast on iTunes.

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