Late 1800s Whale Blubbering Small Hook - Iron & Wood

Pricing & History
  • Sold for
    Start Free Trial or Sign In to see what it's worth.
  • Sold Date
  • Source eBay
This is an original whale blubbering hook similiar to a cargo hookexcept the it came out of a Massachusetts whaling collection and has a round iron shaft. It is the small size sometimes called a hook hand. Hook was made from an round iron bar that was passed through a hardwood white oak handle and terminated with a handcut nut on handcut threads. Excellent condition. This is definitely late 1800's based on the iron bar stock and handcut nut. Hook is only 4 inches long and 4 1/2 inches across at the handle. Hook is in excellent condition. This hook saw moderate use and is an late 1800's whaling tool. This is from a collection that I recently acquired in New Bedford Massachusetts. Excellent condition and is a museum piece. Used to pull back the whale skin as blubber strips were removed for the smelting pots. It is unknown when humans began hunting whales. The earliest archaeological record of whaling is found in South Korea w carved drawings, dating back to 6,000 BC, show that Stone Age people hunted whales using boats and spears. However, over time, whaling techniques have grown more technologically sophisticated. Initially, whaling was confined to (near) coastal water, such as the Basque fishery targeting the Atlantic Northern right whale around 15th to 18th century and the Atlantic Arctic fishery around and in between Spitzbergen read more