Embarcadero

True Tales of Sea Adventure from 1849 to 1906

Nonfiction, History, Americas, United States, State & Local, 19th Century
Cover of the book Embarcadero by Richard Dillon, The Write Thought
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Author: Richard Dillon ISBN: 9781618090386
Publisher: The Write Thought Publication: June 18, 2012
Imprint: Language: English
Author: Richard Dillon
ISBN: 9781618090386
Publisher: The Write Thought
Publication: June 18, 2012
Imprint:
Language: English

     There are no tales like high-sea tales and here’s a baker’s dozen of true sea adventures—tales filled with salt spray, blood-and-thunder, and man-overboard action all guaranteed to satisfy the hardiest armchair adventurer.

     Researched from ships’ logs, manuscripts, newspaper accounts and historical records and penned by Richard Dillon a gifted storyteller and one of California’s finest historians.

Here’s a sampling:

“San Francisco’s Own Pirate”

     The story of Captain Bully Hayes, who had a habit of running off with other men’s ships—and sometimes their women.

“The Odyssey of Bernard Gilboy.”

     How a courageous, publicity dodging navigator, alone in an eighteen-foot open craft, sailed from San Francisco to Australia without touching land en route.

“Shanghai Days in Frisco”

     How crimps like Shanghai Kelly perfected the fine art of kidnaping sailors for the dreaded China run and made East Street (as San Francisco’s Embarcadero was called for a time) a thoroughfare to be given a wide berth after dusk.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

     There are no tales like high-sea tales and here’s a baker’s dozen of true sea adventures—tales filled with salt spray, blood-and-thunder, and man-overboard action all guaranteed to satisfy the hardiest armchair adventurer.

     Researched from ships’ logs, manuscripts, newspaper accounts and historical records and penned by Richard Dillon a gifted storyteller and one of California’s finest historians.

Here’s a sampling:

“San Francisco’s Own Pirate”

     The story of Captain Bully Hayes, who had a habit of running off with other men’s ships—and sometimes their women.

“The Odyssey of Bernard Gilboy.”

     How a courageous, publicity dodging navigator, alone in an eighteen-foot open craft, sailed from San Francisco to Australia without touching land en route.

“Shanghai Days in Frisco”

     How crimps like Shanghai Kelly perfected the fine art of kidnaping sailors for the dreaded China run and made East Street (as San Francisco’s Embarcadero was called for a time) a thoroughfare to be given a wide berth after dusk.

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