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The Last Man
in the Water
The smell of the sea pulled him east. The Atlantic spread before
him like a pool of diamonds, liquefied, tossing gently in gleaming
tips and shards of changeable, fading bronze light. The sun climbed
down toward dusk behind mountains of clouds swollen with moisture.
The young man couldn't wait to get in the water.
The sandy beach stretched for miles. Behind him were seagrass-covered
dunes, bleached fragments of shipwrecks, the shadows of Victorian
turrets facing the sea. The warm wind carried the bark of a retriever,
the faint perfume, so close, of the young women watching from the
sands in their hourglass Gibson Girl dresses, their hair swept up
high like the clouds captured in silk bow-tie ribbons. He was a
handsome young man with slicked-back dark hair, a strong profile,
a man who drew notice. He moved with the slight elbows-out jauntiness
of a rebel, for ocean swimming was a new and godless pursuit, a
worship of the cult of the body. The startling vision of a young
man at the edge of the sea, Thomas Mann had recently written, "conjured
up mythologies, was like a primeval legend, handed down from the
beginning of time, of the birth of form, of the origin of the Gods."
As the young man paused to survey the beach, the dog came beside
him and lapped his hand. The man put his toes in the water, then
strode quickly into the shallows, the sandy muck sucking at his
feet, for there could be no hesitation, no sign of timidity. Timidity
was something he was determined to leave far behind, once and forever.
The temperature of the water was sixty-eight degrees Fahrenheit,
but he walked out thigh-deep, giving the impression it was a stroll
in the afternoon air. As the water reached for his torso, he jackknifed
his body and dove in. The lifesavers' rowboat, an old shore-whalers
model, lay up on dry sand, beyond the seaweed line.
There were a few other swimmers, splashing and floundering near
shore. Quickly, he was beyond them. He was strong and practiced,
with a lean, muscular body, and he moved swiftly into deeper water.
In the far distance, merchant steamers crawled northward on the
warm, onrushing torrents of the Gulf Stream. He could hear splashing
behind him, the dog playfully following. All eyes, he knew, were
on him now.
He had tried out for the swim team at the university and failed
to make it, but he was in his early twenties, at the cusp of manhood,
and his endurance did not wane. Soon he had the water to himself,
it was his ocean, he was without doubt the strongest swimmer of
the hour, and he stopped, exhaled, and floated on his back, a signal
to shore that he had done what he had set out to do. He couldn't
have known precisely how deep the water was beneath him, but, considering
his distance from shore, he was certainly in far over his head.
It is impossible to know what the young man was thinking as he floated,
and the moments passed lazily into twilight. Perhaps he was thinking
that he had come to a place of greatest ease, safety, and comfort.
The whole summer stretched before him on the beach, with family
and friends, not a care in the world but the European war "across
the pond," which touched him not. His father had removed him from
the mysterious and deadly plagues afflicting the lower classes in
Philadelphia. He was engaged to be married in the fall. Perhaps
he was pining over his absent love, his first and forever love,
as a young man does under a summer sky with all of life ahead. The
wedding was arranged. His whole future had been wonderfully arranged.
After a time, he realized he no longer heard the splashing of the
dog. He turned over on his stomach and looked toward land: the beach
was a distant, shimmering strip exhaling the day's radiant heat;
the shadows had deepened in front of the turrets; ladies' parasols
on the boardwalk bobbed like puffs of yellow cream against the darkening
sky. He was the last man in the water. He heard the dog barking
from somewhere, across the wind and waves, and was amused. He heard
voices, as if from far away. He kicked vigorously, and began his
crawl toward shore. He felt an exhilarating jolt of adrenaline lifting
him onward and over the waves. Perhaps he mistook it for the thrill
of being noticed, or a simple joy in his youth and strength--"He
is a Mercury, a brown Mercury, his heels are winged, and in them
is the swiftness of the sea," Jack London, one of his favorite authors,
had written.
His form was perfect, arms arcing through the sea.
AN ERRATIC ERA
The Hotel
On an island off the southern coast of New Jersey, at the edge of
the vast and desolate pinelands, stood an old, proud wooden hotel.
The graceful spire could be seen far over land and sea and stole
the flat horizon from the famous bygone lighthouse that was crumbling
into the tides. Carved around the crown of the spire was a bas-relief
of ocean waves rolling in endless and regal procession. The overall
effect was of a Greek temple left to preside over a land of mosquitoes
and greenhead flies. The Engleside Hotel was the grandest lodge
on the deserted stretch north of Atlantic City, a world apart from
the glamour of Asbury Park, where President Woodrow Wilson stayed
that summer of 1916, running for reelection on the promise "He kept
us out of the war." In Asbury Park, notable and fashionable people
set the modish style, but the Engleside moved to the cadence of
elegant and simpler days. With its somber turrets and long, low
porches, the hotel had a noble and slightly melancholy air, like
the last member of an old line.
The Engleside tower struck toward the heavens with peculiar immodesty
for a structure built by Quakers. It rose in a series of four deep
balconies, where guests in wicker rocking chairs watched white-sailed
wooden craft play with the wind. On the beach were potato-in-spoon
races, skits with parasols, violins, and leaping dogs--entertainments
that diverted their guests from rumors that the kaiser's U-boats
were trolling offshore. The hotel was a temperance house, but guests
enjoyed the pleasures of reading, dining, dancing in the starlit
evening, rowing on the moonlit bay, writing long, intimate letters,
and waiting for the return mail. There was little else to do. On
the porches by the sea there was Edith Wharton's popular Ethan
Frome to read, and W. Somerset Maugham's Of Human Bondage.
The children were in a tizzy over Kenneth Grahame's storybook The
Wind in the Willows. The distant views were of twisted sea pine
among the dunes, lonely golden eagles floating over the back country,
and the water, thick with bluefish and striped bass, oyster and
hard clam, which New Englanders called by the Indian name quahog
and Philadelphians called Venus. Most of the guests of the Engleside,
born to the Philadelphia aristocracy, read Latin and Greek. On clear
days, the ocean appeared infinite before them. Long, gentle waves
curled languorously onto miles of virgin beach and returned endlessly
back to sea, but if the surf held the song of a Siren, it had long
been resisted. For many years the Engleside's Victorian guests were
too modest to disrobe to bathe. Philadelphians, changeless as their
old and distinguished city, were reluctant or afraid to enter the
water, for ocean bathing had not been done, and so for many years
was not.
But late on the last night of June of that year, the deskman at
the Engleside heard gentle splashing and frolicking in the water
in front of the hotel. The young were challenging their Victorian
parents with rebellious behaviors, and the latest fad was moonlight
swimming. Perhaps the older generation was growing sentimental,
aware of the looming shadows of the European mess. But many a deaf
ear was turned that summer to the midnight air; the young were allowed
to get away with it. The clerk that night heard nothing. The first
cool air of the day blew through the hotel's open windows as the
faint strains of hits such as "Don't Take My Darling Boy Away" spilled
out over the water from the popular new portable camp and seashore
Victrolas. The hotel's first five hundred electric lights glimmered
and swam in the darkened sea. Deeper into the night, after the hotel
was quiet and dark, the splashing and laughter in front of the Engleside
lulled, and finally ceased.
Only yesterday, in the ancient life of the ocean fishes, had Leni-Lenape
Indian kings led their warriors to the virgin beach to feast upon
mountains of clams in preparation for autumn's wars; colonial sportsmen
rumbled seaward on the carriage roads; Pennsylvania farmers rattled
eastward by wagon, leaving crops behind for the annual "sea day."
Never in the three human centuries at the shore, the eye blink that
was the forty years of the Engleside, had so many people enjoyed
the pastime of ocean bathing.
The tide surged in, free of human presence once again. The skates
and rays and other fishes swarmed in their timeless feeding ways
of the night sea, making subtle and unknowable adjustments.
At dawn on Saturday, July 1, the hotel and the ocean were united
by the bright gold band of beach. Breakfast was served in the Engleside
dining room by young Irish immigrant women from Boston, while the
men read the Philadelphia Public Ledger and smoked Turkish
cigarettes on the porches, and discussed the German march to Paris
and the fall of the Philadelphia A's to last place. That was the
summer the great Connie Mack affixed to the American language the
axiom "You can't win 'em all." That weekend Mrs. Hetty Green, the
world's richest and stingiest woman, would die, leaving $80 million
and the notorious legacy of having refused to pay for an operation
for her son, costing him his leg. By late morning, the sands were
crowded with young men and women in the startling new swimming costumes,
the women revealing inches of leg never before seen in public. In
playful teams, men and women built sand castles, a new art in America
and Europe that year. The shouting and flirting rose and fell like
a nervous and reluctant tide, for this was all new, this lush and
languid meeting of mankind and the sea, this joyful display of flesh.
In his office under the great spire, hotelier Robert Fry Engle reviewed
the booking columns for the Independence Day weekend with great
satisfaction. Engle, an artist and a gentleman given to tapered
suits, Arrow collars, and the polished grooming of the new century
(which included the new style of a cleanshaven face), shared his
father's level-eyed Quaker pursuit of profit. For the second consecutive
year, all one hundred and fifty rooms, rooms for three hundred people,
were sold out from July Fourth straight through Labor Day. Engle,
like his late father, born of old New Jersey stock, disapproved
of the immoral and noisome behavior of some of his more modern guests,
particularly those who tippled the stronger waters. But there was
no denying the wonderful impact of the new horseless carriage and
the railroads ferrying middle-class tourists en masse to the seashore,
whatever their nouveau morality. The Engleside had never experienced
such a boom. The great new century heralded a bright dawn for the
hotel.
Other than their father-son business--an American tradition that
was disappearing as the first generation of men dedicated their
work lives to corporations--Robert Fry Engle seemed to have little
in common with his father. Robert Barclay Engle, the Engleside's
founder, was an immense, great-bellied Civil War veteran with a
Whitmanesque Grand Army of the Republic beard. He was also a highly
personable and witty innkeeper, a prosperous farmer, a shrewd and
combative New Jersey state senator, and a dead-eye gunner. He was
legendary for helping the leading men of his time, such as Jay Cooke,
the great Philadelphia financier who bailed the nation out of the
panic of 1873, shoot hundreds of wildfowl in a single day.
It was Robert Barclay Engle who possessed the pride, unseemly for
a Quaker, to build a spire that thrust skyward; he who cleverly
named the hotel by mixing the family surname with the ancient Gaelic
word "aiengle," which his wealthy and literate guests knew meant
"fireside" in the novels of Sir Walter Scott. It was Engle who had
the guile to open his massive, remote hostelry in June 1876, less
than a month before the centennial of the United States in Philadelphia,
his primary market, as if daring the world to ignore him. (It didn't;
wealthy sportsmen hired boats and knowledgeable guides to ply through
the bays and marshes to his isolated lodge.) Engle, one of many
Union veterans who made good after the war, sold Jack London fantasies
to wealthy Philadelphia and New York businessmen in the Railroad
Age already pining for the lost wilderness and rough fireside camaraderie
of the war. But he had been born too soon. It was his son, born
in the age of Rockefeller, who was poised to indulge in the big
dreams and abundant capital of the twentieth century.
Yet, as a young man with artistic sensibilities, Robert Fry Engle
was an unlikely candidate for the family business, and thus something
of a disappointment to his father. Educated at elite Quaker private
schools, he showed a rare feeling for the beauty of the ocean and
dunes. Although he enjoyed hunting, he preferred aiming a camera
instead of a Winchester at the wilderness. In the 1890s, graduating
from the Kodak Brownie and its slogan "You push the button, we do
the rest," Engle became one of America's first art photographers,
imitating the evocative landscapes of the French Impressionist school
of painters. In 1896, at the age of twenty-eight, Engle's photograph
of a sunset over the bays of Long Beach Island west of the Engleside
was included in the first art photography salon in Washington, D.C.,
which was praised by Alfred Stieglitz as the first American exhibit
"worthy of international attention." Engle's photograph titled "The
Summer Was Sinking Low" was subsequently chosen among the first
fifty art photographs for the permanent photography collection at
the Smithsonian Institution. The collection--sheep grazing in sun-hazed
midwest pastures, idyllic mid-Atlantic hills and valleys, the innocence
of Victorian mothers and children in portraiture with nature--captured
an American nostalgia for the wild places lost to the Industrial
Revolution.
The celebrated young pictorialist traveled across America and into
Mexico and Europe. He became a protégé of photographer
Burton Holmes, the most famous travel photographer and lecturer
of his day, and seemed likely to achieve Holmes's fame. But the
ocean at Beach Haven, his father, the family business kept calling
him back. At the height of his artistic promise, he returned to
the Engleside and never left, content to shoot portraits of his
guests, the skits on the beach, the great spire looming over the
sea. If there were two men in him, the artist and the bourgeois
merchant, it was clear which one society valued most. The object
of his career became business. It was the tenor of the times. Gusto,
vitality, the bigness of big business, were the values of the young
industrial republic already beginning to dominate the world. Sprawling,
monstrous American capitalism was "The Octopus," said the rough-hewn
California novelist Frank Norris. Theodore Roosevelt set the new
American credo, but Norris expressed it best: "Vitality is the thing
after all. The United States in this year of grace 1902 does not
want and need Scholars, but Men."
There was big money to be made by the right kind of men. Inspired
by giants like Henry Flagler, Rockefeller's partner at Standard
Oil who opened the Florida wilderness with hotels and railroads,
Engle was one of a group of Philadelphians who had invested millions
of dollars to develop Long Beach Island into a similar paradise,
a Florida of the mid-Atlantic. At the southern tip of the eighteen-mile-long,
nearly one-mile-wide island was tiny Beach Haven, which would become
known as "the greatest ocean city in the world." A sea metropolis
lined with skyscrapers and humming with trolleys and tens of thousands
of wealthy residents, it would outshine Atlantic City, its neighbor
to the south, which, being closer to shore, had inferior ocean breezes,
Engle claimed. Nothing less would do than a capitalistic conquest
of the Jersey shore; men like Morgan, Carnegie, and Harriman set
standards that were colossal.
After the tourist season of 1915, the most successful ever in Beach
Haven, Engle could envision his great ocean city taking form, a
paradise of comfort and ease for his guests, freed from the annoyances
of nature. He could hear it in the roar of the new acetylene plant
firing up the sixty-five goosenecked streetlamps that cast shadows
on the four dirt roads and two dusty avenues of town; in the stir
of the hundreds of newly planted saplings waving under the starlight
to shade future tourists; in the rumble of Overland Tourers and
tin lizzies plying the first automobile bridge to the mainland,
which he had lobbied state politicians to build.
Progress was in the groan of cranes filling marshes to create land
and digging miles of drainage ditches to defeat the mosquito, a
notable pest of progress. A born salesman, Engle had what folks
said was a "line" for the persistent "Jersey skeeter" problem. "There
never was an Eden that the Devil did not try to get into," Engle
said, "and the more perfect the Eden the more he tried to get into
it."
Mosquitoes and flies buzzed and banged on the doors of the cottages
facing the ocean, and flew straight in the open hotel windows, for
there were no screens in those days. Another blemish on Engle's
paradise that Saturday was the weather. The morning air clung like
a limpid cheesecloth, a phenomenon the best scientific minds on
the East Coast couldn't explain; the heat just wouldn't quit. White-clad
figures on the tennis courts by the sea, where a youngster named
Billy Tilden would play, moved at half speed. By late afternoon,
many of Engle's guests retreated to the rustic comforts of their
small, narrow, vintage seventies rooms, to the renewing balm of
hot and cold seawater showers, the latest modern convenience. As
dusk approached, a line of roadsters nudged quietly against the
sand-blown ark of the Engleside, and Beach Haven was left to its
timeless sounds of wind and surf that came, again, with the lingering
twilight. The last of the sails tipped and skittered on the horizon
as a handful of guests watched from the wicker rockers high in the
tower. In his office far below, Engle set plans for Sunday's "ladies'
softball game," where men played in skirts to even the odds. The
laughter of the sea and of the swimmers subsided as the tide flowed
out and young bathers changed in the Victorian bathhouses, leaving
few swimmers in the water. There was a steady boardwalk parade back
to the hotel of women who ducked demurely under sun umbrellas and
cooled their porcelain faces with Chinese fans. In the lobby, men
returned from fishing trips, grumbling there was nothing to be had;
local guides were complaining of a mysterious disappearance of gamefish.
From the formal dining room, lined with Corinthian columns and tropical
murals like a European court, came the clink of china and silver
and crystal, muting the distant call of gulls.
Other sounds, presently, drifted over wind and waves and echoed
along the ramparts of the great hotel. In the beginning, the sounds
were quieter than the dissolving hiss of sandcastles, soft beyond
the range of human detection, in fact. They were easily lost amid
the languid noises of the summer colony winding down an ordinary
afternoon in the wistful last days of the Edwardian period.
Yet the sounds would grow in intensity and travel swiftly, as sound
does through water, and in time the reverberations would reach every
corner of the grand hotel, around the globe, and across the new
century, awakening something ancient and long forgotten in the human
memory of the sea.
The Fish
The big fish moved slowly on the surface of the deep. Its dark top
matched the leaden sea; its white bottom blended with sunshine reflected
from beneath. The fish moved with grace and beauty remarkable for
its size, in a cloak of invisibility fashioned from infinite silvery
refractions of light. Unseen and unheard, it would swim for days
without coming in sight of man or boat or another of its kind. Little
about the scene had changed since the fish swam in the Age of Reptiles.
The ocean was not yet watched by satellites or shadowed by the flying
cross of airplanes. The fish had appeared before the continents
divided before there were trees and flying insects, enduring while
nature underwent upheaval and extinction. The fish had survived
and changed little.
The Victorian scientific lust, after Darwin, to classify and catalogue
every living plant, animal, and human tribe had made no inroads
on the fish's privacy. Indeed, extreme scarcity is one of its greatest
survival gifts. It was in 1916--and still is, almost a century later--a
once-in-a-lifetime experience for a fisherman or a sailor to see
such a fish.
It was nature's plan for a minnow or a Maryland crab to be ordinary
sights, but, like eagles in the sky and tigers on land, the great
white shark sits atop the ocean's food pyramid, an "apex predator."
Great whites must consume such massive quantities of flesh to survive,
it would be unthinkable for them to be numerous. The great white
is the largest predator fish on the contemporary planet that the
laws of physics allow. It is, quite simply, too dangerous for there
to be more than a limited number of its kind.
As a result of its great scarcity, little was known about the white
shark in 1916. Most Americans had never seen a shark, except for
scattered photographs in newspapers and drawings such as the comically
nearsighted "grand chien de la mer," vaguely resembling a great
white shark, in Jules Verne's bestseller Twenty Thousand Leagues
Under the Sea. The sailors' myth of a "man-eating fish" persisted
in the machine age as a hoary, vaguely dubious relic of the Age
of Sail. Herman Melville had witnessed ferocious sharks on his Pacific
whaling trips and wrote in Moby Dick of the white shark's
"transcendent horrors, its elusive . . . terrible . . . whiteness."
But Melville had died penniless in New York in 1891, his big book
an antiquated flop in the modern age of steamers and telegraph cables,
Ahab's great sperm whale, the nineteenth-century sea monster, driven
nearly extinct by man. All the sea monsters of the ancients were
shrinking in the deductive glare of science: "It's scientific" would
soon be the magic phrase that settled all parlor arguments, as Frederick
Lewis Allen would write in Only Yesterday. The ship-grappling
kraken turned out to be the giant squid, huge, mysteriously shy,
tucked away harmlessly in the depths. The "man-eating giant octopus"
was neither, simply a large, inky cephalopod; the mermaid, mythic
Siren that lured sailors to their doom, was the far less perilous,
if less comely, manatee. Well-read Victorian and Edwardian men were
determined not to fall prey to excesses of ancient myth or modern
"pseudo-science of the Jules Verne sort," as Mark Sullivan noted
in Our Times. A man was wary of being duped by the newspapers, notorious
fabricators that trafficked in "perpetual motion, rain-making, pits
dug through to China, messages from Mars, visitors from outer space."
To turn-of-the-century men, the man-eating shark, like the sea serpent,
seemed just such a myth.
Jules Verne himself faithfully reported the Victorian skepticism
in 1870 in Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea: "Even though
fishermen's stories are not to be believed it is said that in one
of these fish was found a buffalo head and an entire calf; in another,
two tuna and a sailor still in uniform; in another, a sailor with
his saber; and in yet another, a horse with its rider. It must be
said, though, that these stories seem a bit doubtful." Myths of
the sea had a way of enduring, however, even in the most rational
men. It would fall to the 1890s, to a new class of men, men who
controlled and manipulated nature like none before, to expose the
myth. In 1891, "monopolies," "trusts," and "robber barons" entered
the American language and men were seized by an awe and fear of
bigness--big railroads, big money, big men like Rockefeller and
Harriman. Yet if ordinary man was small and had to bow to "nature's
noblemen," as the robber barons much preferred to be called, he
could at least be at ease and equal in the ocean, swimming--a sport
"we all from cats to kings can enjoy." For in the 1890s, the largest
oceanic predator, the man-eating shark, was proven to be a specious
fable, a fish no match for any man, and surely not the colossus
of the day.
On a warm, windy afternoon in July 1891, the luxury yacht Hildegard
steamed east in the Atlantic far from the dark New York skyline.
The day was fair with a reluctant sun, and now and again a wave
crested. The Hildegard ran trim with teak and brass gleaming
but lacked the whimsical grace of the old sailing yawls; the new
coal-powered yachts of the Gilded Age were low and slick. Against
the gray emptiness with only petrels for company and an occasional
distant steamer, the ship buzzed and glowed with the faint nimbus
of a Gay Nineties party. Cigar smoke curled beyond the gunwales,
and the sports chewed tobacco. Cigarettes were a sign of sissiness
to the men, or low breeding, for the men aboard the Hildegard
were the "upper crust," as the newspapers called them then. Smoking
was verboten for women and the showing of an ankle a scandal, yet
the gentler sex aboard the Hildegard displayed a decadent
and empiric sensuality. In swan dresses and broad hats bedecked
with ostrich feathers, they moved in a shifting constellation of
diamonds--diamond hatpins, tiaras and diamond-encrusted lizards,
insects, and bees, all the rage. Steam had given the rich for the
first time in history the ability to sail away to the deep, to float
to nowhere in particular for sporting amusements or the pleasure
of squandering time and space as if there were no greater refinement.
The wastes of ocean were a final barrier distancing gentlemen from
the rabblement. "You can do business with anyone," said J. P. Morgan,
"but you can go sailing only with gentlemen."
Leaning over the railings that afternoon were men in Prince Albert
suits and ties and glistening soft shoes, sportsmen like William
K. Vanderbilt, Jr., the captain's brother-in-law, who would reciprocate
with invitations to come aboard his family's 291-foot yacht with
twenty staterooms and crew of sixty-two. The younger Vanderbilt,
dark and mustachioed and handsome, was in the process of reducing
his grandfather Cornelius's railroad fortune in a manner that would
directly inspire the coining of the 1890s term "conspicuous consumption."
Parties aboard the Hildegard routinely included such men
as the captain's friend Charles Dana, publisher of the New York
Sun; his newly hired architect, Stanford White; his boon drinking
companion at Delmonico's, Theodore Roosevelt, seven years away from
leading the Rough Riders up Kettle Hill. The captain himself, Hermann
Oelrichs, had also donned a suit and vest, yet neither silk nor
gabardine could conceal the enormous power of his torso, nor deflect
the admiring looks cast his way. In those days of titans of industry
and sensation-seeking socialites and the obsequious gentlemen of
the press, all were drawn to Hermann Oelrichs.
Oelrichs stood nearly six feet, more than two hundred pounds, a
giant of a man for the time, broad-beamed and narrow-waisted with
a great handlebar mustache and shining, arrogant eyes. An international
shipping mogul, Oelrichs was one of America's richest men, and had
won the hand of the finest catch of the late Victorian Age--"bonanza
heiress" Teresa Fair, a California senator's daughter in line to
inherit the Comstock Lode. An avid sportsman, Oelrichs helped introduce
polo and lacrosse to the United States. He was also acclaimed as
the best amateur baseball player and hammer thrower in New York
City and the finest amateur boxer and swimmer in the country. Yet
there was about Hermann Oelrichs, too, the ache of promise unrealized.
He remained aloof, declining offers to run for both mayor of New
York City and president of the New York Athletic Club. "Hermann
Oelrichs was so richly endowed by nature and so perfectly equipped
both mentally and physically," opined The New York Times, "that
his friends have been almost unanimous in declaring that had he
so chosen he might have made for himself a much larger place in
life."
Yet that afternoon, as the Hildegard steamed east, Hermann
Oelrichs made perhaps his greatest contribution. As his crew fed
the leaping fires of the boiler, as servants distributed food, and
the men called out, "gimme a smile" (a gentleman's term for a drink),
and grew loud and expansive and joined in a raucous sporting mood,
there arrived a moment, on the edge of dusk and the continental
shelf, freighted with the nineties need for spectacle. In that moment
Hermann Oelrichs declared he was looking for sharks.
If a shudder overtook the Hildegard's passengers scanning
the iron-colored sea, they could have been forgiven. Sharks were
widely feared in those days as ferocious man-eaters, based on terrifying
tropical legends of which Oelrichs, like his friend and fellow world-traveler
Roosevelt, was especially familiar. Despite the skepticism of science,
dread of the shark persisted in 1891 in tingling hairs on the back
of the neck. In the publication that year of "Song of Myself," Whitman
celebrated all the universe except the "leaden-eyed" shark, the
ominous crease in a wave "where the fin of the shark cuts like a
black chip out of the water." That afternoon, as ripples of anticipation
traversed the ship, Oelrichs announced, as he often had back in
the parlors of Gilded Age New York, that so-called "man-eating"
sharks were a fable of the ancients. Sharks were in fact cowardly,
he insisted, and he would frighten away the largest of them that
surfaced from the fathoms.
That year Oelrichs had offered in the pages of the New York Sun
a reward of five hundred dollars for "such proof as a court would
accept that in temperate waters even one man, woman, or child, while
alive, was ever attacked by a shark." Temperate waters he defined
as the East Coast of the United States north of Cape Hatteras, North
Carolina.
In the rollicking spirit of the times, Oelrichs--like his brother-in-law,
Vanderbilt, who hosted America's first motorcar race to further
"scientific development of the automobile"-- seemed more interested
in a good show than in advancing science.
But the audacious wager by a captain of the shipping industry "started
the papers all over the country to discussing sharks," The New
York Times reported. "Mr. Oelrichs contended that the ancient
and widespread fear of sharks had little or no support in the shape
of verified or verifiable cases in which they had killed or even
injured a human being . . . He limited the offer to temperate waters
because he had little knowledge of shark habits in the tropics,
but even there he thought them harmless scavengers."
Now, on this summery afternoon at the edge of the century of human
progress, the validity of shark attacks would be settled to the
satisfaction of intelligent men once and for all.
If any man in the Gilded Age could best the shark, it would be a
man who possessed Vanderbilt's wealth and Roosevelt's vigor and
an unsurpassed reputation for prowess at sea. Such a man was Hermann
Oelrichs. He was American director of the prestigious North German
Lloyd shipping company, which would soon produce the world's first
luxury superliner, the Kaiser Wilhelm der Grosse. According
to historian Lee Server, the 655-foot-long, two-thousand-passenger
German ship "held a place of pride in the human spirit" rivaled
only by the big city skyscrapers as a "remarkable emblem . . . of
a remarkable era . . . and of the seemingly limitless progress of
science and technology." Before the Mauretania and Lusitania,
Normandie and Titanic were built in an effort to duplicate
the glory of the Kaiser Wilhelm der Grosse, Oelrichs hosted elaborate
dinner parties in the middle of the Atlantic in the stateroom of
the world's greatest ship, regaling his wealthy friends with tales
of his long swims and encounters with sharks.
In an era when the first modern oceanographic research from the
1870 voyage of the HMS Challenger was just being published,
Oelrichs's captains, who traversed the seven seas in steamships,
reported to him that in their combined years of transoceanic travel
they had neither seen nor heard reliable evidence of a man-eating
shark. And the tycoon confirmed as much to be true from his own
extensive observations.
The millionaire director of Norddeutscher Lloyd Bremen was
indisputably one of the world's great long-distance ocean swimmers.
At a time when ichthyologists researched sharks by waiting for dead
species to be brought ashore by fishermen, Oelrichs had swum in
the presence of countless sharks in deep and shallow waters and
never been attacked. Although he never swam the Hellespont like
Byron, as he had dreamed, New York newspapermen spread his fame.
One wrote, "Some of the trans-Atlantic skippers used to say . .
. that upon nearing the American coast they would look for Hermann
Oelrichs, and would then know that they could not be very far from
land." Every summer for years he had made legendary five-mile "shark-chasing''
swims off the New Jersey coast, from which he returned to shore
and New York Herald headlines like "Oelrichs Scares Away
the Sharks."
A generation before the Roaring Twenties rise of professional sports,
Oelrichs was a star of heavily publicized sporting stunts for which
the public hungered. He challenged the champion John L. Sullivan
to a boxing match, putting up a $10,000 purse of his own money.
Sullivan declined. Fighting an adversary who had no choice in the
matter, Oelrichs wrestled a caged lion to a draw, to the thunderous
approval of the press and his fans. Many of the passengers of the
Hildegard had no doubt seen Oelrichs in the Atlantic off
Newport, Rhode Island, demonstrating he was stronger than any fish
in the sea. As the press and the cream of New York society, including
Whitneys and Vanderbilts, crowded the cliffs over the ocean, Oelrichs
challenged a fisherman in a boat to reel him in as a "human fish."
For twenty minutes the fisherman struggled and failed to reel in
the stout sportsman on a line fastened to his waist, providing society
with what newspapers called "the most interesting incident of the
Summer."
Now, aboard the Hildegard, a hundred miles from shore, several
large sharks appeared starboard. Conversation ceased as the big
fish moved silently, fins slicing high through the waves. Whispers
traversed the deck as Oelrichs quickly changed to his bathing clothes,
murmurs growing to shouts as the sports in the crowd urged him on.
Oelrichs directed his hands to move the ship closer, and approached
the railing. While side wagers were made, men snatched their white
boaters against the wind, and women leaned over the railing to watch,
long dresses whipping erratically. Others averted their eyes as
the water received the powerful athlete.
Oelrichs disappeared for a moment, then surfaced between heaving
four- and five-foot waves. Shaking the water from his brow, he stroked
away from the boat, knifing through the waves atop a thousand feet
of ocean. In ways unknown by the boating party, the sharks detected
the presence of a large mammal thrashing noisily in the water and
began to move in eerie concert.
Yet to the astonishment of the shipboard party, Oelrichs thrashed
boldly in the presence of the sharks, quickly scattering the most
fearsome-looking fish in the sea as if knocking out a dozen John
L. Sullivans at once. As the sharks disappeared into the deep, Hermann
Oelrichs, flushed with pride and exertion, climbed back aboard his
yacht, victorious. The passengers of the Hildegard cheered
wildly, waving boaters, handkerchiefs, and scarves in the briny
air. It is not known whether it was a harmless species or dangerous
makos or oceanic whitetips that had fled into the deep. A century
later, scientists would not have been surprised to see any of these
sharks avoiding a man, not preferred prey in such a chance encounter.
The big sharks attack in stealth or in defense, and a small, sluggish,
finless mammal would hardly represent a threat. The truth of the
encounter was impossible for men to discern that afternoon in 1891,
and couldn't compete with the legend that reached New York City
that evening: Hermann Oelrichs had conducted an experiment, man
versus shark, and the outcome was plain for any man to see. The
sportsman had swom among ferocious sharks, and sent them fleeing.
The great fish were no match for a man.
The moment would have been emphemeral, a parlor trick at sea, yet
Oelrichs, like the fish he challenged, possessed his own qualities
of myth. Fifteen years later, in November 1906, Oelrichs was crossing
the Atlantic on the Kaiser Wilhelm-- returning to New York
from "taking the waters at Carlsbad" to recover from the exhaustion
of assisting in the relief efforts of the San Francisco earthquake--when
he died, at age fifty-six, of a dissipated liver. He was eulogized
on the front page of The New York Times as a major figure
in the city's life for a quarter century, who might have contributed
far more to society. Yet the Gilded Age mogul-sportsman went to
his grave knowing he had won his wager. Indeed, his position on
man-eating sharks had grown more convincing to the scientific community
with each passing year. By 1906, the Wright Brothers had flown,
the newly invented marvel of neon lights lit Broadway (where George
Bernard Shaw opened with Man and Superman), Jack London had
written The Sea Wolf. Yet scant more was known about the
true nature of sharks. No one since 1891 had come forward with proof
of a shark attack on man in the temperate waters on the East Coast.
As the widowed grande dame, Mrs. Hermann Oelrichs, and an aging
William K. Vanderbilt, met Hermann's body at the port of New York,
the shark wager had fully outgrown its vaudevillian beginnings as
a feature in New York's yellow journalism wars, a summer diversion
for the Four Hundred who graced Mrs. Astor's and Mrs. Oelrichs's
ballrooms. It was now respected scientific data. Ichthyologists
at the American Museum of Natural History in Manhattan, a world
leader among the new and serious museums, were quoting Hermann Oelrichs's
bet as compelling evidence that maneating sharks did not exist.
On the question of shark attack in the new twentieth century, it
was the best science there was.
By the summer of 1915, when Bell in New York spoke to Watson in
San Francisco in the first long-distance call, and Ford developed
the marvel of a farm tractor (and made his one millionth car), the
editors of The New York Times adjudged it time, long overdue,
for society to acknowledge the modern and scientific view of sharks.
In an August 2 editorial, "Let Us Do Justice to Sharks," the Times
decided it was "time to revive the controversy . . . [Hermann Oelrichs]
excited" and put the issue to rest once and for all. Almost a decade
had passed since Hermann Oelrichs's death, the Times noted,
a quarter century since his famous wager, and no verifiable shark
attacks on man on the East Coast had yet been reported. The editors
were puzzled at the persistence among modern people of an irrational
fear of sharks.
"To this day there is nothing that will so quickly set a crowd of
swimmers scurrying for our beaches as the sight of a shark's fin
in the offing," the Times lamented. Such fears were baseless
and unreasonable, the newspaper's editors wrote. While the Times
allowed that "the bitter hate that every sailor feels for the whole
shark tribe can hardly be wholly baseless, for hate is always the
exact measure of fear, and all fears have reason of one sort or
another," the only evidence of such an attack was a single photograph,
reportedly taken from a steamer in the Red Sea, "seeming to be a
shark in the very act of closing his jaws on a man." Given Oelrichs's
uncollected reward and the paucity of other evidence, the Times
concluded "that sharks can properly be called dangerous, in this
part of the world, is apparently untrue."
In the spring of 1916, the great white swam on the surface of a
world that perhaps knew less about its nature than it had in several
centuries. Even in the twenty-first century, the white shark remains
largely a mystery. The force of its bite has never been measured.
The bite of a six-foot lemon shark has been calculated at seven
tons per square inch. The great white, at nearly twenty feet, three
thousand pounds, will not submit to dental examination, and will
not accept confinement. The fish is too big, too violent, beyond
control. Man has never been able to keep the great white in captivity.
When this has been attempted, the giant shark batters its head against
its prison, unable to accept boundaries, hammering at the metal
stays in the concrete that it senses electromagnetically. All that
is known about the jaw power of the great white is that it must
be immeasurably stronger than a small lemon shark's.
In 1971, Jacques Cousteau postulated that the white shark had poor
vision. Now it is known that its eyesight is so remarkable that
it can hunt, in rare cases, more than half a mile deep, its expressionless
black eyes absorbing the faintest light. Until the late nineteenth
century, scientists did not believe life existed at such a depth,
concluding that the ocean floor was a lifeless plain. But when the
transatlantic telegraph cable was hauled up for repairs, the thick
cable swarmed with heretofore unknown creatures, a new universe.
The first ocean scientists to explore the depths of that universe
were alive in 1916, but their discoveries were decades away. They
could not have known what was coming.
The fish's arrival was choreographed by nature to be mysterious--a
survival advantage--a mystery that only heightened human ignorance
and fear.
Copyright ©
2001 by Michael Capuzzo. All rights reserved.
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