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Re: Easter Island, and boxhauling


Subject: Re: Easter Island, and boxhauling
From: Trevor J. Kenchington (Gadus@XXX.XXX)
Date: Thu Oct 17 2002 - 19:13:44 EDT


George Huxtable wrote:

> Hal Mueller's posting from Easter Island included-.
[snip]

>>Why is it called "boxhauling"? There's a Dutch expression "bak
>>zeil", back sail, which means to renege on a promise; it sounds like
>>it also has the connotation of reneging surreptitiously or
>>indirectly, equivocating. I'm no linguist, but I'm certain that
>>"boxhauling" is derived from that Dutch expression.

> Hal's interesting question is answered in d'Arcy Lever's "Young
> sea-officer's sheet anchor", 1819, and better, perhaps, in John Harland's
> superb "Seamanship in the age of sail", 1984.

[snip]

> As the operation involves using backed sails, might the term box-hauling
> perhaps just be a corruption of the English words "back-sailing", which
> have a very similar sound to them?
>
> Needless to say, this information is from book-learning and not from
> personal experience.
>
> George Huxtable

The best way to get a near-definitive judgement would be to ask John
Harland himself, who will likely quote derivations from a half-dozen
European languages. However, in his book (p.189) he suggested that
"boxhauling", like the "box" in boxing the compass, may come from the
Spanish "boxar" meaning "to sail around". The "hauling" part, of course,
relates to using physical effort to work the ship around and is also
seen in "clubhauling" (the method used by those really desperate to tack
a big ship with very limited searoom) as well as in the key commands
when tacking ship: "mainsail haul" and "let go and haul".

"Bak zeil", on the other hand, appears in English quite simply as "back
sail". Sails are backed in the process of boxhauling but so they are in
normal tacking, so I'd doubt a derivation of "boxhaul" from that root.

Trevor Kenchington

who also has only book-learning where boxhauling is concerned but who

has hauled on the fall of an upper topgallant brace when tacking ship

in the normal way.

--
Trevor J. Kenchington PhD                         Gadus@XXX.XXX
Gadus Associates,                                 Office(902) 889-9250
R.R.#1, Musquodoboit Harbour,                     Fax   (902) 889-9251
Nova Scotia  B0J 2L0, CANADA                      Home  (902) 889-3555

Science Serving the Fisheries http://home.istar.ca/~gadus





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