Despite the Salem marketing memo, Halloween is the time for ghosts, not witches, who already have their Walpurgis eve. I don’t think any ghost story could be more appropriate for a Salem Halloween than that of the legendary “Spectre Ship of Salem” which was supposedly reported by Cotton Mather in his Magnalia Christi Americana, according to all the internet “sources” and their sources. I can’t find the original reference, however, only one nineteenth-century gothic tale which asserts that it is embellishing Mather and indeed provides its readers with all sorts of romantic detail: a young couple bound for Old England set sail from Salem sometime in the later seventeenth century aboard the Noah’s Dove only to be presumably shipwrecked and perpetually cast adrift, their ship (and themselves) appearing periodically as an “apparition in the air” to the startled souls of Old Salem (always just before sunset, of course). The story of the “Spectre-Ship of Salem” first appears in print in Blackwoods Magazine in the spring of 1830, is transformed into one of the poetic Legends of New England by John Greenleaf Whittier, and then reappears in prose form in American periodicals over the next twenty years or so: with its repeated references to the elusive Mather, it is actually a ghost story about a ghost story! Mather does write about a ghost ship in his grand New England history, and cites a near-contemporary letter as evidence, but it is a ship out of New Haven rather than Salem, wrecked in 1647 and “perpetually sailing against the wind” thereafter.
Cotton Mather (including map embellished by me, 1702), John Greenleaf Whittier (1831) and Gleason’s Pictorial Drawing-Room Companion (1851).
Although his poem was penned early in his career, I suspect Whittier is responsible for the periodical popularity of the Salem spectre ship “legend” in the mid-nineteenth century, along with the fact that it could be linked to another spectral story increasing in appearances at the time, that of the Salem “witches”. It’s also so Hawthornesque. George Francis Dow commissioned the printing of a stand-alone edition of the Whittier poem in 1907, an act that was definitely in keeping with his other efforts to preserve/showcase/create colonial traditions. Ghost ships are the most global of eternal apparitions, so why shouldn’t Salem have one?
The Dow edition of the Spectre Ship of Salem, published in Salem in 1907; J. Flora illustration of a ghost ship from A Red Skelton in Your Closet: Ghost Stories Gay and Grim (1965).
October 29th, 2021 at 1:43 pm
You had better be careful lest Salem devote a whole museum/tour to the Spectre Ship of Salem! Happy Halloween!
October 29th, 2021 at 2:39 pm
Oh no doubt! You too, Anne!
October 30th, 2021 at 6:32 am
Arrgh! Just when I snagged a copy of The Ghost and Mrs. Muir to read (I have always adored the movie…and our library happened to have a copy of it published by an out-of-print book publisher!), you introduce me to yet another work of Whittier’s which I must have! Methinks if I took your course, Donna, I’d be madly dashing reading suggestions nonstop! (Thank you!)
October 30th, 2021 at 8:17 am
Oh my courses are a bit more disciplined, Nancy—-the blog is all over the place!
October 30th, 2021 at 6:33 am
P.S. That doesn’t look like Dow’s usual work!
October 30th, 2021 at 8:17 am
I know!
October 30th, 2021 at 7:55 pm
So it’s a Cotton Mather account that’s been so reworked as to barely resemble the original. Fascinating. I’ve just been running into another reworking, the Icelandic version of Dracula, which seems to be based on an earlier Stoker draft.
October 30th, 2021 at 10:38 pm
Digging up some dirt again, Donna. Nothing is as it seems. I love the illustrations.