The Nicholson Whaling Collection is one of the nation’s most important resources for whaling research. At the heart of the collection is the world’s second largest collection of whaling logbooks, recording more than 1,000 voyages. Within their pages, the logbooks hold records of whales captured and lost; accounts of shipwrecks, mutinies and other nautical misfortunes; poetry and paintings made by crew members in their spare time; and a wealth of data for researchers. The collection was donated to the Library in 1956 by Paul C. Nicholson, grandson of the founder of the Nicholson File Company, and it now includes more than 15,000 items, ranging from prints, photographs, scrimshaw and other artifacts to an extensive collection of manuscripts and account books. The earliest materials date from the 1700s and include a contract in which a Native American whaler agrees to be part of the crew of a 1723 whaling voyage. Hundreds of logbooks document the 19th-century high point of the whaling trade. This important collection continues to grow, thanks to an endowment provided by the Nicholson family
Three voyages: May 12, 1863-June 19, 1864. (sherman 704) July 14-Nov. 23, 1864. (Sherman 705). May 1, 1865-Sept. 18, 1866. (Sherman 707). Sold to New Bedford in 1865. Contains whale stamps.
Two voyages: July 1, 1841-July 12, 1843. (Sherman 690). Oct. 13, 1843-Oct. 21, 1844. (Sherman 691) Contains whale stamps. At end: list of provisions used.
Contains whale stamps. WILLIAM LEE (Ship) Newport. Logbook. May 24, 1848-Nov. 30, 1849. 2nd half was written upside down. ROMAN (Ship) New Bedford. Logbook. July 19, 1843-Jan. 22, 1845. Contains whale and ship stamps.
At front: list of crew members. This logbook covers the same voyage, same dates as the private journal kept by the log-keeper, 1st mate Joseph T. Samson (Sherman 681).