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  • A brief and remarkable narrative of the life and extreme sufferings of Barnabas Downs, Jun. : Who was among the number of those who escaped death on board the privateer brig Arnold, James Magee, commander, which was cast away near Plymouth-Harbour, in a most terrible snow-storm, December 26, 1778, when more than sixty persons were frozen to death. Containing also a particular account of said shipwreck
A brief and remarkable narrative of the life and extreme sufferings of Barnabas Downs, Jun. : Who was among the number of those who escaped death on board the privateer brig Arnold, James Magee, commander, which was cast away near Plymouth-Harbour, in a most terrible snow-storm, December 26, 1778, when more than sixty persons were frozen to death. Containing also a particular account of said shipwreck

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A brief and remarkable narrative of the life and extreme sufferings of Barnabas Downs, Jun. : Who was among the number of those who escaped death on board the privateer brig Arnold, James Magee, commander, which was cast away near Plymouth-Harbour, in a most terrible snow-storm, December 26, 1778, when more than sixty persons were frozen to death. Containing also a particular account of said shipwreck

by Barnabas Downs

EN·~17 minutes·5 chapters

Chapters

5 total

A brief and remarkableNARRATIVEOF THELIFEAnd extreme Sufferings ofBARNABAS DOWNS, Jun.

2:30

PREFACE.

1:03

ANARRATIVE, &c.

10:14

The SHIPWRECK: A Hymn of Praiſe.

2:25

A HYMN. By another Author.

1:18

Description

Born in mid‑18th‑century New England, Barnabas Downs grew up on a farm before the Revolutionary War pulled him into the militia. After three campaigns he turned to the sea, signing on as a privateer in hopes of fortune and adventure. His early voyages quickly turned perilous: captured by a British brig, he endured a brief imprisonment, a bout of small‑pox, and a fever that brought him close to death.

Undeterred, Downs returned to privateering aboard the brig Arnold, only to face a ferocious snowstorm off Plymouth Harbour on December 26, 1778. The vessel was driven ashore, and more than sixty men perished, frozen in the gale. Against overwhelming odds, Downs survived, and his vivid, first‑hand narrative recounts the horror of the wreck, the desperate struggle for warmth, and the gratitude that carried him through the ordeal.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~17 minutes (16K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Original publisher

Boston: E. Russell, 1786, copyright 1972.

Credits

Steve Mattern, David Wilson and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net

Release date

2023-09-29

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

BD

Barnabas Downs

1757–1817

A Revolutionary War survivor turned his own ordeal into a gripping first-person narrative. This rare memoir is best known for its account of the wreck of the privateer brig Arnold near Plymouth Harbour in December 1778 and the brutal struggle to stay alive.

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