Everett S. Allen, through diaries, letters, and newspaper accounts of
the period, follows the Quakers from Plymouth Colony to New Bedford,
Massachusetts, where these children of the light lived and founded an
enormously lucrative whaling industry and elevated it to an almost holy
activity ordained by God for the enrichment of the chosen. Allen
recounts the full story of a famous 1871 Arctic disaster, in which
thirty-two vessels in the New Bedford whaling fleet, carrying 1200
officers and crew, found themselves trapped in gale-driven pack ice. The
shipwrecked victims were miraculously rescued without a single loss of
human life. The damage to the fleet, however, was something from which
New Bedford never fully recovered.