From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
History
Dutch Republic
NameThe Flying Deer
FateLost with all hands in August 1638

The Flying Deer ( Dutch: Het fliegende hert) was a 17th-century Dutch ship. She was lost at sea with all hands during a hurricane off St. Kitts in 1638.

History

The Flying Deer was an early 17th-century sloop in Dutch service. She was recorded as participating in the lucrative trans-Atlantic tobacco trade. In August 1638, the sloop was anchored off island of St. Kitts when the Swedish-flagged Kalmar Nyckel (which was returning from its first voyage to establish the colony of New Sweden) also dropped anchor off the island. [1] The captain of The Flying Deer was a friend of Peter Minuit, a prominent explorer aboard the Swedish ship, and so Minuit and Captain Jan Hindricksen van der Water of Kalmar Nyckel were invited aboard The Flying Deer. During the visit, a powerful storm (possibly a hurricane) swept up on the island, battering the ships at anchor. Kalmar Nyckel rode out the storm at sea, but The Flying Deer was never seen again and presumed to be lost with all hands. [2] [3] [4]

References

  1. ^ The Kalmar Nyckel; A Guide to the Ship and Her History. The Kalmar Nyckel Foundation, Wilmington D.E. URL: http://www.kalmarnyckel.org/docs/knf_guidebook.pdf
  2. ^ Scharf, John Thomas (1888). General history. L. J. Richards & Company.
  3. ^ Strand, Algot E. (1910). A History of the Swedish-Americans of Minnesota. Lewis Publishing.
  4. ^ Scharf, T. History of Philadelphia. Рипол Классик. ISBN  9785883517104.