Introduction
British ships hunted Greenland right whales Balaena mysticetus in Arctic waters from the late 16th century onward, providing for growing industrial markets in whale oil and baleen (‘whale-bone’ or ‘bone’). Though Dutch and other European whalers operated effective industries through the 17th and 18th centuries, British efforts during this period proved spasmodic and barely profitable (Scoresby Reference Scoresby1820: ii: 18, 98 et seq.; see also Credland Reference Credland1995: 5–10). Despite the efforts of pamphleteers eager to promote an industry comparable with those on the continent (notably Elking Reference Elking1722), Britain's increasing demands for oil at this time were met mainly by imports from Holland and the American colonies (Jackson Reference Jackson1972: 157). To promote an indigenous industry that would provide (a) oil and baleen secured by British ships and (b) a reserve of ships and trained seamen for the Royal Navy and transport service, an Act of Parliament in 1733 offered a bounty of 20 shillings (£1) per ship-ton to owners willing to equip their vessels for Arctic voyages.
The bounty of £1 per ship ton proved ineffective, as did an increase in 1739 to 30 shillings per ton: whaling continued, but involving only a few ships from London. A further increase in 1749 to 40 shillings, guaranteed for five years, was more successful. British Arctic whaling began an immediate expansion, which accelerated during the early 1750s when a growing threat of war with France over the North American colonies seemed likely to restrict supplies of oil. In 1749 the whaling fleet had involved only 6 ships annually, sailing from London alone. By 1754 London's tally had increased to 36. By 1756, at the start of the Seven Years’ War, 67 ships were sailing from nine English ports, including seven from Hull (Stonehouse Reference Stonehouse2014). A further 16 sailed from Scotland, where whaling voyages had started contemporaneously in response to the increased bounty (Jackson Reference Jackson, Butt and Ward1976). Jackson's (Reference Jackson1978) survey of the British whaling industry (especially chapters 1–4) and Scoresby's first-hand accounts of shipboard life, hunting techniques and economics, provide details of an enterprise which, by the early years of the 19th century, had expanded to involve at least 35 British ports, employing hundreds of ships and thousands of men afloat and ashore.
Arctic whaling developed in each port independently, with no national organisation or central authority. Only the bounty scheme, administered by Customs and Excise, provided a degree of regulation, including record-keeping, annual reports to Parliament and periodic reviews to vary the value of the bounty and the conditions under which it was awarded. Today those records, though far from complete, provide the most reliable source of information on ships, masters and some 8000 individual voyages made during the 1733–1824 bounty period. (Stonehouse Reference Stonehouse2014).
Many port records have been destroyed or lost, and those that remain are patchy. Accounts of shore-side activities, including the economic impacts and consequences of whaling on individual ports, are particularly scarce. Hence the significance of a recently-discovered early balance sheet, reporting the finances of a small whaling company operating from the port of Hull during the years 1754–1757.
The Hull Whale Fishery Company
Whaling ships from Hull first operated around Jan Mayen and Svalbard in the early 17th century, but abandoned the trade in the face of fierce opposition from continental whalers. The mid-18th century revival, based on the 40-shilling bounty, proved more successful: Hull ultimately became a major British whaling port, second only to London in numbers of ships sent annually to the Arctic.
Jackson's (Reference Jackson1972) social and economic study of the port includes a brief history of the revival, compiled from port and customs letter books and contemporary commercial correspondence. In 1754 James Hamilton, an oil merchant, pioneered the resurgence of interest by sending his ship York to the Arctic. In the same year other merchants formed a company to buy, fit out and operate whalers. Jackson (Reference Jackson1972: 158) comments:
Little is known of the Hull Whale Fishery Company, the only company active between 1758 and the lapse of whaling after the 1762 season. Its leaders were almost certainly merchants with interests in American and Dutch oil. Peases [a prominent business family] imported whale oil and bone from Holland, Samuel Dewittt was a Dutch sea captain and merchant, and William Turner was the largest importer of whalebone in Hull, probably in the whole of Britain. . . .The company was divided into eighty transferable shares of £250, a total nominal capital of £20,000 – more than enough to cover the cost of putting four whalers to sea. A small profit was made in the first season and a dividend of £9. 7s. 6d. was declared. The following season was better, and £25 per share was paid – ten per cent on the nominal subscription.
The company appears neither to have flourished immediately nor to have lasted long. Jackson reports that by 1758 the £250 shares were selling for £200, and that in 1762 two remaining company ships brought home only 1.5 tons of oil, 22 seal skins and nine sea-horse (walrus) skins between them, and did not return to Greenland. Jackson ascribes the company's demise to the war in Europe, which brought a general decline in trade, and to the ending of hostilities in North America, which enabled the revival of American whaling, and presumably a return to more reliable and substantial sources of oil and whalebone.
Customs records and muster rolls indicate that Pool continued whaling until 1760, Berry until 1762, and another, smaller Leviathan of only 341 tons sailed from Hull from 1759 to 1762. Thus Berry and the new Leviathan were probably the two company ships mentioned above. Thereafter no ships left Hull on whaling voyages for the following three years. Thus 1762 seems a likely year for the Company to have ceased whaling operations.
The Company's balance sheet
The balance sheet, folded into a small package, was discovered among a batch of papers bought at a car boot sale in 2012 by Mr Christopher Wilkinson of Knaresborough. Most of the papers, dated around the 1860s, appear to have been accounts in the keeping of John Maister, factor to the Swinton Castle (North Yorkshire) estate. Though the balance sheet bears no direct relation to the estate papers, the surname Maister suggests possible links with both Hull and the new whaling industry. Maisters were a family of merchants prominent in the town during the 18th century. While a history of the family (Ingram Reference Ingram1983) makes no mention of their being directly involved in whaling, Maisters are likely to have taken an interest in any new local business enterprise, and may indeed have held shares in the company. This could account for the presence of an early (and by then long-redundant) balance sheet in the possession of a later member of the family.
The document is hand-written in the form of two tables, covering both sides of a single sheet of paper measuring 37 × 47 cm. Clear and in remarkably sound condition, it has been repaired, stabilised and copied, and is lodged for safe-keeping in the archives of the Hull History Centre. The main table is headed ‘The ships belonging to the Hull Whale Fishery Co. for their Several Voyages to and from Greenland in 1754, 1755, 1756, 1757’. The reverse side bears a smaller table headed ‘Ballance Account of the Hull Whale Fishery Co. Books May 20 1757. Contra’. These are illustrated in Figs. 1, 2.
The two sides of the balance sheet are transcribed in Tables 1 and 2. In both tables, currency is shown in its original form of pounds sterling, shillings and pence (12 pence = 1 shilling, 20 shillings = 1 pound, symbolised by £1. Using the National Archives Currency Converter, the £1 of 1760 is approximately worth £75 in modern currency.) Similarly weights appear in their original form as imperial tons, hundredweights (cwt), quarters (q) and pounds avoirdupois (lb) (28 lb = 1 q, 4 q = 1 cwt, 20 cwt = 1 ton). In the text and in tables 3, 4 and 5 both currency and weights are decimalised (for example 1 lb = 0.454 kg).
NB. The amount of Stores belonging any of the Ships which have been sold or Charged from one ship to another are in 1757 deducted from the amount of Tradesmens bills for the Ship delivered from but in 1755, 1756 the Value of Ship and Stores were lessened by that Sum besides the Allowance Wear & Tear. 1755 the Berry and Elizabeth fished in Partnership & the Proceeds of their Cargoes are equally divided to each Ship as above. Hull July 4th 1757. Richd. Martson.
Table 1 lists the expenditure and income resulting from buying the company's ships, equipping them and sending them north. Three ships operated in 1754 and 1755, four in 1756, and three again in 1757. The document was drawn up in July 1757. As the ships of that year were still at sea, expenses were recorded up to 20 May, before the catches and resulting income were known. Table 2 records the financial results of the whaling over three seasons, and lists the Company's assets on 20 May 1757. Both sides of the document are signed and dated by Richard Martson – possibly the company's secretary or business manager. The document appears to represent a mid-season stock-taking, perhaps timely for decisions concerning the following season's activities – whether to continue with whaling or put the ships to other uses. A possible alternative use would be employment with the government transport service, following Britain's formal declaration of war against France in May 1756.
The columns in Table 1 are identified by numbers 1–17 added in square brackets. Column 1 contains the years and ships names. (In customs and other official documents relating to these voyages, Pool is spelt Poole and Ann Elizabeth is Ann and Elizabeth.) Column 2 gives the company's valuation of its ships at the start of each year. ‘Stores’ and ‘Cost’ are itemised separately in each ship's first year of sailing, but together in subsequent years.
Columns 3–9 concern expenditure. Columns 3 and 7 show payments made to the crews respectively at the start and end of each voyages, the amounts varying with the size of crew and length of voyage. Column 4 details annual costs incurred in fitting out the ships. Column 5 shows annual valuations of the ships and contents for insurance purposes, and column 6 shows the insurance premiums required to cover them. Column 8 lists amounts set aside for repairs, which varied considerably between seasons, according to damage inflicted by ice and heavy weather. Column 9 totals all the outgoings listed in columns 3 and 4, and 6 to 8.
Columns 10–17 concern income and balance. In column 10 the upper figures show the value of provisions returned after the voyage, which is treated as income for accounting purposes. The lower figures show the amount of government bounty received, at a rate of £2 per ship-ton, less a small ‘charge’ (presumably a handling fee). Their sum is the year's income from sources other than sales of oil and baleen.
Columns 11–14 list the number of whale caught, their yields and resulting income. In column 11 ‘Number of fish’ indicates the number of whales taken; ‘Sizeable’ and ‘Undersize’ refers to the length of whalebone recovered (see below). The ‘tun’ of oil in column 12 is a measure of volume: a tun was a standard wine cask of 216 imperial gallons. Column 14 shows the weight of baleen (also called whalebone or bone), in hundredweights, quarters and pounds avoirdupois. The amounts for which these items were sold appear in column 13.
The sums of columns 13 and 15 appear in column 16, and column 17 records whether each voyage yielded a profit, loss, or broke even. By this reckoning, of the 11 voyages completed, seven made small profits, two broke even and two resulted in losses. These assessments are examined further below.
Table 2 records the company's financial assets and liabilities up to 20 May 1757. The main assets were the three ships owned at the time with their working equipment, and a ‘Greenland house’ (a shoreside building with equipment for processing the blubber into oil and cleaning the rough baleen into a saleable product) with total value £14,983.00. Other stock included surplus casks and their components, unused ships stores, and office furniture, in total valued at £592.47. Three debtors owed the company a total of £9.62. Cash assets included a bank balance, notes and cash on hand, and sundries totalling £5,909.18. Outstanding debts of £1,485.73 were due mainly to unpaid insurance premiums – possibly still a subject of negotiation. To the original stock of £20,000 was added a small positive balance of £8.54. Though not specified as such, this represents the balance of profits remaining after payments of dividends to the shareholders in the first two years. Current reserves therefore amount to £20,008.54.
Ships and crews, voyages and catches
To help in interpreting the balance sheet, details of tonnages, masters, crews, lengths of voyages, catches and produce have been gathered from Customs and Excise records and Hull Trinity House muster rolls (Table 3). These include details of the three voyages of 1757 that were still at sea when the balance sheet was prepared.
Ships and crews
Table 3 presents the company's four ships in descending order of size. All would have been timber-built cargo vessels typical of their period, drawn from general cargo-carrying service, and ‘fortified’ – that is strengthened internally and externally – to counter pressure and abrasion from pack ice. Internal fortification would have reduced slightly their cargo space, but the ships would have remained fully employable for cargo runs between whaling voyages. Muster rolls show that, of the four ships, Ann and Elizabeth had previously sailed from Hull in 1748–1753 on non-whaling voyages to America and Europe. She had returned in early July 1754 from a trading voyage involving Virginia, Lisbon and London, commanded by Captain Robert Stephenson. In 1752 Pool had sailed from Hull with Captain James Davidson, though whether on a cargo run or whaling is not clear. In 1753 Berry had sailed with Captain Andrew Nicholson and a crew of 46 on what was clearly a whaling voyage, and was thus already a whaler when taken on by the company. I have found no records of earlier voyages from Hull by Leviathan.
The ships ranged in tonnage or burthen (an index of capacity based on external measurements) from 436 to 220 tons. On cargo runs all would have operated with crews of 10 to 24 men. On whaling voyages they carried larger crews, to man the whaleboats that were used in hunting, and also a surgeon: for details of manning see Evans (Reference Evans2005: 9). The muster rolls show Leviathan on her three voyages to have carried crews of 54–59. Based on tonnage, bounty regulations would have authorised her carrying six whale boats, each of which would have been crewed by of six or seven men including a harpooner, a line manager, a boat-steerer, and three or four oarsmen. Poole (359 tons) and Berry (315 tons) carried crews of 44–50, which could have manned five boats. Ann Elizabeth, crewed by 37–39, probably manned only four.
Scoresby's discussion of size in whaling ships (Scoresby Reference Scoresby1820 II: 187–188), though written two generations later, is relevant in the present context:
A vessel of 250 tons requires nearly the same number of men, the same quantity of provisions and stores, and the same expence of outfit, as a ship of 350 tons burden; while the difference in the cargoes of the two vessels, when filled. . .is. . .more than a compensation for the difference in the first expence. . . .We, therefore, conclude that a ship of intermediate size between 300 and 400 tons, is best adapted for the fishery. And, on the whole, perhaps, a roomy ship of 330 or 340 tons, possesses more advantages, with fewer disadvantages, than a vessel of similar build of any other capacity.
By Scoresby's standards Leviathan (436) tons was considerably larger than optimal, Pool and Berry were closer to the ideal. Ann Elizabeth, at only half the burthen of Leviathan, was smaller than optimal for an independently-operating ship, but may have been bought on a narrow budget to act as consort to the larger ships – for example fishing in partnership with Berry on the first voyage in 1775.
Regulations required masters, harpooners and a proportion of other key crew members to be British, and to have qualified for their roles aboard by whaling service in other ships. Immediately before the revival of the industry in the early 1750s only a few ships had been whaling annually from Britain, and those only from London. After the bounty increase, ship-owners in other ports, deciding to start whaling, would have had difficulty in finding crews that satisfied not only the bounty requirements, but also the common-sense requirement of being as experienced and effective as possible in a difficult and occasionally dangerous trade.
At that time the flourishing Dutch whaling industry employed ‘. . .many thousands of the most necessary and skilful hands’ (Scoresby Reference Scoresby1820 II: 107) from foreign countries including Scotland. Few of the muster rolls for the 14 voyages from Hull show full details of the origins of the crew members, their roles on previous voyages, or even their roles in the newly-forming teams. However, some of the masters and mates were recruited from London, some of the boats’ crews had Dutch-sounding names, and crew members had been drawn in from England, Scotland, Scandinavia and America.
Duration of voyages
Whalers from Britain headed for either of two hunting grounds – ‘Greenland’, the sea area south and west of Svalbard (which at the time was thought to form an eastern extension of Greenland) and ‘Davis Strait’, the sea area between Greenland and North America. The Davis Strait ground was further from Britain, took longer to reach against prevailing westerly winds, and its ice conditions could prove more hazardous, but whales caught there were on average fatter (see below) and thus more valuable than those caught off Svalbard. There is no direct indication of where the Hull company ships hunted. Most British ships in early days of the bounty period favoured the Greenland ground. While Berry's long voyages and outstanding catches in 1755 and 1756 might suggest visits to Davis Strait, successful hunting by an experienced master on the Greenland ground seems more likely.
Table 3 shows also the duration of each voyage, calculated from muster roll records of the dates when crew members were signed on and off. In later years it was usual for all the crew to be signed on simultaneously one or two days before sailing, usually in February or March, in an event called by Scoresby ‘boiling the kettle’. In these early voyages, masters, mates and other key crew were taken on as early as November or December, and the rest were enlisted piecemeal before the voyages actually began. Thus the date when the ship actually left is not always clear. For the 14 voyages here considered, if not otherwise specified, the date of departure is taken as that on which the last crew-member signed on. The date of return is never in doubt: all signed off on the same day.
For these voyages the earliest starting date was 2 February, shared in 1756 by three of the four ships sailing together. This was almost certainly a defence against French privateers, which appear to have been operating in advance of the declaration of war. The shortest voyage was of 94 days (Berry in 1754). The mean length of all the voyages was 151 days, the longest 185 days by Leviathan and Ann Elizabeth, both in 1756. Crew received basic pay on a daily or weekly basis, with bonuses based on whales killed and blubber or oil returned. Regrettably the balance sheet provides no information on how or how much the crews were paid, but taking on members some weeks before sailing would inevitably have added to payroll costs. In the first year of sailing it might have allowed a period of preparation – for refitting ships and familiarising crews in their new roles.
In later years, whaling ships after their return from the north were often deployed in coastal or continental cargo-voyages of two or three months – a useful and profitable way of employing the ship and part of the crew in late summer, autumn and early winter. There is no indication either in the balance sheet or in the muster rolls that the company's ships were so deployed in the years under review: a possible reason is the activities of the North Sea privateers. However, after returning from whaling on 7 August 1757 Ann Elizabeth left on 10 September for a voyage to Newcastle and London, which returned on 1 November. The master was Captain William Thoms, with a crew of 18. Similarly Pool was employed on non-whaling voyages after the 1758 and 1759 whaling seasons.
Whaling ships’ crews, like all others in wartime, were subject to naval impressment. Masters, mates, harpooners, boat steerers and line managers were exempted, but deckhands were valued especially for their seamanship and indifference to bad weather, and were liable to be impressed either at sea or upon docking in their home port. Though providing a reserve of experienced seamen was one of the stated objectives of the bounty, the loss of trained deckhands into the navy must have added seriously to the problems of whaling ship masters in their efforts to maintain and increase efficiency. Masters sometimes managed to put at least some of their men ashore before reaching port. Jackson (Reference Jackson1972: 175) reports that in 1757 members of Pool's crew were set ashore at the Humberside hamlet of Paull, and some of Ann Elizabeth's crew were landed in Lincolnshire. In that year only Berry arrived in Hull with a full complement.
Catches and products
Table 3 summarises also the numbers of whales caught by each ship, and the amounts of oil and baleen brought home. To whalers, a whale was a ‘fish’, and a ‘sizeable’ or ‘size’ fish was one whose longest plates of baleen or whalebone exceeded 6 ft (1.83 m). Because long baleen plates were thicker and more valuable, size whales were listed separately for accounting purposes. The plates, cut from the roof of the mouth, were bundled and stacked to be cleaned ashore. Suckling or juvenile whales yielded little or no baleen, but blubber enough to make their killing worth-while.
Blubber (the thick layer of fat under the skin), was stripped from the carcase and ‘made-off’ (cut up and packed into barrels) for transport home. There, in the ‘Greenland house’ noted as a company asset in Table 2, the blubber was boiled to release the oil. Thickness of blubber and amounts of oil derived from it varied considerably in adult whales. Having fed very little during the winter, in spring they were heading into areas of open water to replenish their fat by feeding on the plankton that proliferated when the ice broke up. Some whales caught early in the season tended to be thinner than those caught later, and Davis Strait whales tended to be fatter and more profitable than those caught east of Greenland. The balance sheet gives no indications of when in the season or where the whales were caught, and no logbooks for these voyages are known. In 1754 Leviathan's three whales, though all recorded as ‘size’, clearly yielded far less oil and baleen than the three taken in the same season by Pool, and less again than the four taken by Berry.
The eleven voyages of 1754–1756 secured a total of 38 size whales (an average of 3.45 per voyage) and three undersize. In 1755 Berry and Ann Elizabeth hunted together. Little is known of the previous experience of masters other than Andrew Nicholson, but Berry's whaling voyage in the year before the company started suggests an experienced captain and practised crew, sailing in company with a ship and crew new to the trade. Though their catches and products were recorded separately, the financial returns appear to have been pooled and divided equally between them.
In the first three seasons none of the ships returned ‘clean’, that is without any profitable cargo of blubber, baleen or sealskins. The smallest catch was Ann Elizabeth's single undersize whale in 1756, yielding only 2.75 tuns of oil and a few pounds of baleen. Berry's seven size whales in 1755 formed numerically the highest catch, yielding 73 tuns of oil and over 4.5 tons of baleen. The five whales caught by Leviathan in the following year yielded less of both, but earned slightly more due to the higher price of oil (see below), and possibly an overall higher quality of baleen. In the three seasons collectively Berry took the greatest number of size whales – 16 compared with Leviathan’s eleven and Pool’s eight. Berry's consistent success, in both numbers of whales caught and yields of oil and baleen, again suggests a level of skill and experience above that of the other ships.
Leviathan disappeared from the balance sheet after 1756. From what little is known of the 1757 season, derived from other sources and included in Table 3, the three remaining ships showed poorer returns than in 1754–1756. Pool‘s two size whales are unlikely to have covered costs. True to form, Berry caught four, which may have returned a small profit. Ann Elizabeth for the first time returned clean.
Financial returns
Whaling voyages drew income from two sources – the guaranteed government bounty, paid at a rate of 40 shillings (£2) per ship ton on completion of the voyage, and cash paid on sales of oil and baleen. In this balance sheet a further source – ‘amount of provisions returned’ (upper figures, Table 1, column 10) was treated as income for accounting purposes. In 1756 the value of returned gunpowder made a small addition for each of the four ships. Table 4 summarises the company's income, expenditure and balance for the three years in which voyages were completed.
Table 4's first three items for each of the three ships summarise income from the bounty and returned provisions (column 10 of Table 1) and from sales of products (column 13). Bounty payments varied only in pence from year to year. Income from returned provisions varied more widely, and income from oil and baleen was highly variable, depending not only on the size of catch, but also on supply and demand in the home port at the time of landing.
Writing of a slightly later period, Jackson (Reference Jackson1972: 168) noted:
The costs of whaling were heavy, but the profits were sometimes immense, though always unpredictable. A ship had to bring home at least thirty tons of oil and one and a half tons of bone (at £21 and £245 per ton respectively) to make a saving voyage. Since a small whale yielded about 19 tons of oil and a middling one about 22 tons, a whaler began to show a profit with two whales.
The balance sheet gives no indication of where the company found markets for its oil and bone. The company's figures show that oil earned about £16.30 per tun in 1754 and 1755, and slightly more at £18.75 in 1756, an increase possibly due to rising demand during the war. Baleen during the same period reached prices between £12 and £17 per cwt according to length and quality.
Table 4's fourth, fifth and sixth items provide the total income for each voyage, followed by the expenditure (column 9 of Table 1) and balance. Of the 11 voyages represented, two show negative balances and one breaks even, as recorded in the final column of the balance sheet. The seventh items in Table 4 indicate the balance for each voyage had the bounty not been available; without the bounty only two voyages in 1755 and one in 1756 would have shown profits.
Total values for all the ships appear in the final column of the table. The overall profits (including bounty payments) of £775.19 in 1754 and £2,051.28 in 1755, divided among 80 shares, respectively yielded the company's first and second dividends of £9.38 and £25.00 per share. There is no indication of a dividend arising from the smaller profit achieved in 1756, which was probably banked and included in the Table 2 balance held by Sill Bridges & Blount.
For all the 11 voyages completed, income from oil and baleen amounted to £13,398.58. Total expenditure amounted to £18,221.16, resulting in an overall deficit of £4,822.58. From this deficit may be subtracted £817.14, the total for ‘provisions returned’, leaving an accounting deficit of £4005.44. During the same period the bounty paid to all the ships totalled £7,447.33, enough to cover the deficit and provide a balance of £3441.89. From this sum was derived the first two years’ dividends.
Data from Tables 3 and 4 combine to illustrate the variations in value of size whales, making clear the point that the number of whales caught, though often appearing as an indicator of success in whaling, is a poor indicator of catch value. The mean value of oil and bone from the 38 size whales taken in the three seasons was £348.55. However, Leviathan's three whales caught in 1754 yielded on average only £202.57 each, while the three taken by the same ship in the following year yielded on average £497.76. For 1756, assuming that Leviathan's single undersize whale matched the one caught by Ann Elizabeth, the five size whales making up the catch brought in £402.30 each.
Insurance
Among the items listed as expenses in Table 1, insurance was clearly a matter of special concern, meriting two columns to itself. Table 5 lists for each voyage the value of ships and stores (from Table 1, column 2), together with their insured values and the premiums paid (columns 5 and 6). In 1754 and 1755 insured values were set on average 16.9% and 20.6% higher than nominal values: in 1756 they were 12.6% lower, and in 1757 they were again raised, this time 39.2% higher. The second and third items reveal that premiums rose from 5% of insured value in 1754 to 7.3% in 1756, and 10.5% in 1757. In 1754 insurance costs took up 33.6% of the bounty, rising to absorb 82.2% in 1757.
There are no indications in the balance sheet of why premiums should have fallen in 1756 or risen substantially in the following year. In the early years of expansion underwriters would have had little information on which to base their risk estimates. Despite the possible hazards of taking ships into ice, there had as yet been no conspicuous losses, and the fall in 1756 might have indicated reassurance based on the safe return of increasing numbers of ships each year. The substantial increases in 1757 are likely to have reflected an overall rise in risks to shipping from enemy action, following the formal declaration of war.
Whaling from Bristol, Exeter and Dunbar
Almost at the same time as the Hull company started, similar enterprises began in the southwestern ports of Bristol and Exeter, and in several Scottish ports. Jones (Reference Jones and Jones1992: 115) gives a brief account of ‘A Company for promoting the Greenland Whale Fishery’ established by Bristol merchants in 1750. Though none of its records has survived, references in local newspapers indicate that the company sent two or three ships annually to the Arctic during the 1750s, bringing home enough blubber and bone to maintain operations, supply local markets and provide small dividends to shareholders. In wartime they were quick to take up privateering as a more profitable alternative. Bristol's last Arctic whaling ship sailed in 1760.
Dixon (Reference Dixon1976: 225) examined a set of accounts of an ‘Exeter Whale Fishery Company’ that allow for more direct comparisons with the Hull record. He points out that, although Exeter had no previous experience of whaling, no trained personnel, and was a river port with difficult access and few facilities, nevertheless in 1754 a group of 32 Exeter merchants subscribed a total of £5,235 to found the Exeter Whale Fishery Company and engage in the Greenland trade. The company paid £2,150 in London for a second-hand ship of 346 tons, which they registered as Exeter, and acquired an experienced, mainly Scottish crew whose coach-fares had to be paid from London. Exeter sailed alone to the fishery in each year 1755–1758. In 1757 she was taken by a French privateer but later recovered. In that season she caught no whales, and brought home only 2.5 hogsheads of oil (about 0.5 of a ton, valued at £14.25) from a whale shared with another ship. In 1759 she sailed with a company-owned consort, Worthy Shepherd of 170 tons, which was lost in the ice of Davis Strait. Exeter stood by to save the men and recover what she could from the wreck, again catching no whales.
Dixon does not say where the ships hunted in years other than 1759. He records that six whales were taken in the first season, yielding on average 10.67 tuns of oil and 56.7 cwt of bone, with value per whale of £332.55 – comparable with Hull's overall mean of £348.55. Numbers of whales caught in other successful years are not known, though from yields of oil and bone Dixon assumes that five or six were caught in both the second and the fourth years. Oil sold for £17.36 per tun in 1755, £17.00 in 1756, and £24.50 in 1758; bone sold at prices between £15.50 and £18.00 per cwt. All figures were slightly higher than those of Hull, and like Hull’s, showed a sharp wartime rise.
The total value of bone and oil for the three successful seasons was £6266.82, indicating mean values per whale of between £350 and £390. Exeter received a bounty of £693.18 in each of the four years 1755–1758, and £686.00 in 1758, bringing her total income for the five voyages to £9739.79. No figure for total expenses is given, but assuming Exeter's costs to be similar to those of Hull's Pool or Berry, that is about £1650 per year, there would remain a profit of about £1490.
This amount was achieved by a single ship operating through five seasons, of which two provided virtually no financial return beyond the bounty. Yet Dixon reports that the Exeter Whale Fishery Company issued six dividend payments to its shareholders, amounting to a mean annual return of 24.45% on their investment. Little else appears to be known about the Company, but Exeter continued to send one ship to the arctic almost every year until 1785, and two ships in each of 1786–1788. A single ship made the final arctic whaling voyage from Exeter in 1789 (Stonehouse Reference Stonehouse2014).
Barrow (Reference Barrow1989: Appendix 4), provides facsimilies of accounts of the expenses incurred by the East Lothian and Merse Whale Fishing Company of Dunbar, Scotland, in fitting out its ship North Star for a first whaling voyage in 1752. Expenses including buying, fortifying and part-provisioning the ship in London amounted to over £2340. Provisioning and equipment for the arctic voyage cost just over £1500. The number of whales caught does not appear, but oil and bone together yielded £1200, to which was added the bounty of £577 17 0d. This suggests a successful season with the bounty ensuring a moderate profit on the first year's hunting.
Discussion and conclusions
The Hull Whale Fishery Company balance sheet, together with background information on the creation of the company, gives strong indications of why Hull and several other ports simultaneously took up arctic whaling in the early 1750s. In the absence of an indigenous industry from ports other than London, most of Britain's needs of whale oil and baleen had for some time been imported from Europe and America. Supplies from both sources were threatened by the impending war, and all indications pointed to the need for a more substantial British industry, based on the provincial ports. Hull was already established as a flourishing port with a considerable continental trade and access to a substantial hinterland based on the navigable rivers flowing into the Humber estuary. Significantly, the prime movers in Hull were not ship-owners and master mariners seeking business opportunities, though both would no doubt have been involved as shareholders at an early stage. The initiative appears to have come from oil and bone merchants who foresaw trade shortages and were seeking remedies that would keep their own businesses viable.
Requiring facts more than the opinions of pamphleteers, they would have had available for reference the annual returns of the few British whalers currently operating from London. They would have known that whaling ships were heavily manned and required fortification against ice. The ships demanded also costly equipment including, boats, harpoons, whale-lines and casks, and undertook long voyages into hazardous waters where risks of damage and loss were considered likely to be high. Above all they required experienced crews, which were not immediately available in Britain, and would therefore require a period of learning, during which catches were unlikely to be profitable.
The entrepreneurs would have calculated that average catches of two or three whales – all that could be expected from ships in the first few years of their new enterprise – would barely cover the costs of the voyages. Nor would the initial bounty offer of 20 shillings per ship ton be enough to cover the deficit. The balance sheet shows them to have been wise in waiting. Bounties of 20 or 30 shillings per ship ton would have resulted in substantial losses. The bounty of 40 shillings, guaranteed initially for five years from 1749, would not cushion them completely against losses, but would quite possibly be sufficient to cover their investment against four or five initial seasons of low returns. In fact, at the end of the first five-year period, the 40 shilling bounty was renewed for a further five years, continuing to cushion losses through the pioneering decade of the new industry. This allowed time for the special skills of whaling to develop among masters and crews, and for expectations of profitable catches to increase season by season.
For reasons outlined by Jackson (Reference Jackson1972) whaling from Hull remained on a small scale until 1770, but thereafter grew and flourished, outstripping London in the early 19th century. The early voyages may well have provided for local markets, with any annual surplus easily shipped for ready sale in London. By the 19th century Hull had developed its own industries, plus an extensive economic hinterland of river and canal ports in the industrial midlands, which kept the much larger and more effective whaling fleet in operation. Demand was sustained until the 1840s and 1850s, when coal gas and cheap vegetable oils priced whale oil out of the market. Hull's last Arctic whaler sailed in 1869 (Credland Reference Credland1995: 97).
Concerning ship size: greater burthen and more boats imply increased capacity and hunting efficiency. However, the balance sheet shows that Leviathan, the largest ship (initially the most expensive to buy and seasonally the most costly to re-equip and operate) was neither the most successful nor the most profitable. Though John Greenshaw caught three size whales in each of the first two seasons, only in the third season did the ship return a substantial profit. Most crippling of its expenses were the high insurance premiums, which increased dramatically in wartime: a well-founded ship of 436 tons would have made an attractive prize for privateers.
The smallest ship, Ann Elizabeth, was also a financial failure, cheaper to buy and maintain but unable to operate profitably on its own with a relatively inexperienced crew. Leviathan's disappearance from the balance sheet at the end of 1756, and Ann Elizabeth’s disappearance a year later suggests that either or both may have been sold, or perhaps diverted to more profitable employment in the transport service.
The two most successful ships, Berry and Pool, were nearest to Scoresby's optimal size, but one at least held a more positive advantage. Berry, bought as a whaler with an experienced master and crew, returned with the greatest value of products overall, and was most consistently profitable. Pool, which may have been a whaler in 1753, was less successful throughout. While it may be unwise to base further comparisons on the records of four years’ hunting, it is clear that in all these cases the 40 shilling bounty cushioned the losses and kept the Hull company from bankruptcy. In Exeter the newly-formed company's single ship – a well-equipped whaler with experienced crew – brought immediate profit to its shareholders; indeed it brought more profit than the four operating from Hull. However, Exeter too would not have enabled its own company to survive without the support of the 40 shilling bounty – its sole source of income during the two seasons in which it was unable to catch whales.
This early balance sheet of the Hull Whale Fishery Company thus illustrates some of the issues encountered by a group of 18th century businessmen during the first three-and-a-half years of their venture into arctic whaling. It underlines in particular the significance of the 40 shilling bounty in underwriting their enterprise, and providing the foundation from which a major industry developed.
Acknowledgements
My warmest thanks and congratulations are due to Mr Wilkinson, who discovered the balance sheet and immediately recognised its significance. His interest and generosity have secured the future of a valuable document, and made this account possible. Ms Rachel Greenwood, conservation officer of the North Yorkshire County Records Office, Northallerton, kindly conserved the document. The staff of the Hull History Centre have been most helpful in facilitating my studies of the muster rolls and other documents in their care. I thank Mr Arthur Credland for his interest and helpful comments, Dr Tony Barrow for drawing my attention to the Dunbar record, and two anonymous referees for their thoughtful suggestions. I particularly thank Mr John Owen, whose professional accountancy skills underlie much of this report. Any errors remaining are my own.