High Seas to High Stakes, or Around Cape Horn to the Gold Rush
by
Book Details
About the Book
Hail and sleet were so hard it pinned us down to the rigging. The bark plunged madly into a tremulous sea throwing sailors on the deck into water up to their necks. Fury of the wind defied efforts to haul down the sail.
Jared Coffin Nash and fifty five other men sailing on a 104 foot bark shared the hold full of lumber, machinery, tools, pigs, chickens and turkeys enough to last the six month journey from Maine to California around treacherous Cape Horn. The call of the gold rush in 1848 sent thousands of Argonauts on an inordinate chase, exciting though disappointing for most. For these journeymen, it was a life-threatening adventure that built or broke these men seeking their fortunes.
Jared Nash kept a diary while on this great adventure and sent letters home to his wife Leah. These papers were found a hundred years later and are the basis for this book. The author's late husband was Jared's great grandson.
About the Author
The author, a native New Englander, became a writer of children's books when she was a student at Florida Southern College taking a course in Creative Writing. She graduated at age 80 and has since taken a correspondence course in writing and has had several stories printed in newspapers. For years, she thought about publishing the diary and letters written by her husband's great grandfather who described his trip around Cape Horn. Her recent courses gave her the confidence to turn the writings into a non-fiction book combining history with biography, a true story mixed with imaginary dialogue, disasters and bravery.
Ruth S. Nash is now a resident of Harbour Heights, Florida, but spends three summer months at her seven-room log cabin overlooking Wolfeboro Bay, New Hampshire. She makes an annual pilgrimage way down east to her husband's ancester's summer cottage on Cape Split, Addison, on the Maine coast.