3.8 Article

Driven Mad by the Sea Serpent: The strange case of Captain George Drevar

Journal

MARINERS MIRROR
Volume 107, Issue 3, Pages 308-323

Publisher

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/00253359.2021.1940521

Keywords

sea serpents; cryptozoology; sea monsters; eyewitness testimony; Pauline; Norfolk; mental health; sperm whales

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George Drevar, a merchant captain who survived a shipwreck, was tried in 1881 for libel and threatening the life of Henry Cadogan Rothery due to a disagreement over the existence of the sea serpent. His actions were driven by mental illness and a fervent religious belief in the sea serpent.
In 1881 George Drevar, a merchant captain who had survived a shipwreck in the Cape Verde Islands, was tried at the Old Bailey for libel and threatening the life of the Commissioner of Wreck, Henry Cadogan Rothery, in part because of a disagreement over the existence of the great sea serpent. This article explains the background to the trial, including Drevar's own sea serpent sightings, the trial's eventual outcome and some later related events in Drevar's life. Drevar's actions seem to have been driven by mental illness caused by the stress of shipwreck coupled with a fervent religiosity with regard to the sea serpent.

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