by PeterStevens (Author)
Fast-paced, compelling and meticulously researched, this saga of American, Irish, British and Australian history is the first full telling of the voyage of the Catalpa. Setting out from New Bedford Mass., on April 29, 1875, the American whaling ship undertook a secret year-long mission of international rescue. American captain George Anthony risked his career - and his life - to liberate a group of Irishmen known as 'The Fremantle Six' from an Australian prison. They had been soldiers in the British army and each had taken the secret Fenian oath to fight for Irish independence. The Fremantle Six overcame British armed vessels and furious sea storms to make their miraculous escape with Anthony. The rescue was made without a chronometer and is considered a remarkable feat of navigation, as well as being a legendary symbol of defiance against British imperial authority.
Format: Hardcover
Pages: 400
Edition: First Edition
Publisher: Weidenfeld & Nicolson
Published: 09 Jan 2003
ISBN 10: 1842126512
ISBN 13: 9781842126516
Book Overview: Reads like a thriller In the same league as BATAVIA'S GRAVEYARD - a gripping true story with huge commercial potential 'Truth may routinely be stranger than fiction, but seldom is it as suspenseful as this story of the 1876 rescue of six Irish rebels from Britain's infamous prison colony in Fremantle, Australia, by the American whaling ship CATALPA...the action-packed international intrigue - and Stevens' keen sense of pacing - carry the book' PUBLISHERS WEEKLY Hardback lead for January - to be published under the new W & N History imprint