This image is the cover for the book Life and Times of Georgetown Sea Captain Abram Jones Slocum, 1861-1914

Life and Times of Georgetown Sea Captain Abram Jones Slocum, 1861-1914

Born at sea on his father's whaling ship in 1861, Captain Abram Jones Slocum learned the seafaring life in New Bedford, Massachusetts, as part of the last generation of iron men aboard commercial wooden sailing ships in the Atlantic. His voyages often took him around Cape Hatteras to Georgetown, South Carolina, to load lumber bound for northern cities. He sailed in all seasons, through storms and hurricanes, for twenty years as captain of two schooners, the Warren B. Potter and the City of Georgetown. He was respected in Georgetown, where he wooed his wife. His ship sank in a collision with an ocean liner in 1913, but he survived, only to be lost at sea a year later as captain of another schooner. Local author and wooden boat enthusiast Robert McAlister recounts Slocum's epic life through the end of the Age of Sail.

Robert McAlister

Mac and Mary McAlister live at Belle Isle Plantation in Georgetown South Carolina. They cruised on sailboats for thirty years and now participate in the activities of the South Carolina Maritime Museum. He previously wrote Cruising Through Life and Wooden Ships on Winyah Bay.

The History Press