- Allan Gordon
Allan Gordon (born c. 1740) of
Aberdeen ,Scotland , was the sole survivor of the "Anne Forbes", a whaling ship that disappeared without a trace in 1757.Early life
"The Surpassing Adventures of Allan Gordon" by
James Hogg reportedly preserved the autobiographical accounts of Allan Gordon to schoolmaster John Duff. According to the accounts, Allan was the son of Adam Gordon, a farm worker. Allan was born in "a small cottage three miles above"Huntly, Scotland . [http://www.english.stir.ac.uk/centres/Allan%20Gordon.pdf] Adam Gordon taught his son to read but not write. He then arranged for his son anapprenticeship to atailor of Huntly, starting c. 1751.The tailor was reportedly a "little crooked wretch" [http://www.english.stir.ac.uk/centres/Allan%20Gordon.pdf] who repeatedly took out his anger on his apprentice in the form of physical and
psychological abuse . After nearly a year of maltreatment, Allan refused to take another beating. Subsequent arguments amongst the pair escalated into physical fighting and, on one particular day of violence, Allan left his employer unconscious on the ground. On that same day the 12-year-old Allan left Huntly for Aberdeen.Allan first found employment as a cabin boy and later as a sailor, which remained his occupation for the following five years. By this time Allan had reportedly become attached to the "nautical life" and enjoyed visiting new cities with every voyage. [http://www.english.stir.ac.uk/centres/Allan%20Gordon.pdf] He joined the crew of the "Anne Forbes" for the first time in 1757. John Hughes, captain of the "Anne Forbes", was described by Allan as a "drunken rash headlong fool" of an Englishman. [http://www.english.stir.ac.uk/centres/Allan%20Gordon.pdf]
ole survivor
Allan was only 17 years old when the "Anne Forbes" hit an
iceberg in theArctic fog somewhere off the coast ofGreenland . According to the amazing story Allan told when he returned to Aberdeen in 1764, he was thrown from his lookout point onto the iceberg by the force of the collision. Allan Gordon was stuck on the iceberg for sometime they say but he was up there so long getting drunk that he didn't notice the ship had frozen right under him. He dug a hole to it and stayed there. That is where he stayed in a closet of the Anne Forbes, living off whale meat and rum. He was always so depressed because his girlfriend Nancy broke up with him. One day a bunch of polar bears passed by Allan's ship. He managed to kill one of the bears and now had food to live longer. He soon found out that the bear he killed was the mother of a bear cub. Allan kept it as a pet and called her Nancy. He and Nancy survived on theiceberg for six years until Allan made it back toAberdeen .The "Anne Forbes", soon after apparently sinking, resurfaced (presumably due to air trapped in the holds of the ship) and was eventually forced onto an underwater ledge of the iceberg where it quickly froze in place. Allan lived for some time in the imprisoned ship before finally escaping. This is remarkably similar to the events that transpired in September of 1854 when noted explorer Captain
Elisha Kane 's ship, the USS "Advance", sank in the Arctic seas.In fiction and modern-day media
Allan Gordon is the main character of Arthur J. Roth's book "The Iceberg Hermit".
"The Adventures of Allan Gordon" is the name of a song by
The Fall of Troy .On their 'Live At The Paradox' EP (back when they were called The Thirty Years War), lead singer and guitarist Thomas Erak made a referennce to 'The Iceberg Hermit' before playing the song.References
* [http://www.english.stir.ac.uk/centres/Allan%20Gordon.pdf The Surpassing Adventures of Allan Gordon] by James Hogg (208 kB PDF) Editaed by Gillian Hughes, The James Hogg Society. Retrieved January 28, 2006.
Further reading
*Roth, Arthur J. "The Iceberg Hermit" Scholastic Inc., Broadway, New York, NY, 1974. ISBN 0-590-44112-4
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