The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Waterfront plans beckon story from Dundee’s whaling heyday

As art installati­on concept is unveiled, the city’s exploratio­n and hunting links are remembered

- MICHAEL ALEXANDER malexander@thecourier.co.uk

The announceme­nt that a spectacula­r sculpture of a humpback whale has been selected as the centrepiec­e for a prime position on Dundee’s waterfront has resurrecte­d stories about the city’s remarkable links with polar exploratio­n and the whaling industry.

However, the unveiling of artist Lee Simmons’ stunning design for an interactiv­e play park at Waterfront Place has also raised the dramatic story of Dundee’s “original” Tay whale.

In December 1883, a humpback whale appeared in the Firth of Tay off the shore of Dundee, at that time Scotland’s major whaling port.

The skeleton of the 40-foot-long specimen – harpooned off the Mearns coast by city sailors who pursued the 18-tonne animal from the Tay – is suspended from the ceiling in The McManus.

While the museum continues to be closed as a result of the coronaviru­s shutdown, curator of botany and zoology Mike Sedakat has recalled the story of the Tay Whale to mark its designatio­n as The McManus’ “object of the month”.

“The skeleton is one of the largest objects in The McManus collection,” he said.

“It is a young adult male humpback whale and it swam into the Firth of Tay in 1883.

“Dundee at the time was the premier whaling town of the British Empire.

“Unfortunat­ely this was very bad timing on this whale’s part. It was attracted to the Firth of Tay by an unusually large number of herring and sprat – small fish that it was feeding on.

“The Arctic whaling fleets were docked in the city harbour, so they took the opportunit­y to try and hunt the whale.

“Initially the whale got away but later died of exhaustion when it was harpooned and was found a week or so later along the Aberdeensh­ire coast.

“Humpback whales had suffered in the past from overhuntin­g by whalers. Although their numbers have increased slightly, it’s still fairly small.

“Hopefully efforts to conserve their population­s will lead to an increase in the numbers.”

From RRS Discovery to the famous King Penguin, Dundee’s links with the so-called heroic age of polar exploratio­n and whaling are well documented.

In the 19th Century, Dundee was the major European capital of the whaling industry.

Every year, whaling ships would sail to the Arctic to hunt whales, their oil being used for lighting and their bone used for corsets.

Whale oil was also the catalyst for Dundee’s world domination of the jute industry. It was used to make jute workable, transformi­ng Dundee into what was known as Juteopolis.

The city’s expertise in building whaling ships led to Captain Scott’s Discovery and many other Antarctic exploratio­n vessels being built in the city, while former Dundee student Alister Forbes Mackay was a member of the first party to reach the South Magnetic Pole in 1909.

Of course the whaling and ship building industries that once powered Dundee’s waterfront have long gone.

But following in the wake of the V&A Design Museum and as the headwinds of potentiall­y difficult post-coronaviru­s economic times build on the horizon, it seems apt that Lee Simmons’ stunning humpback design represents the next phase of a project, which city chiefs say will be a fundamenta­l part of Dundee’s economic recovery plan.

It is the artist’s first Scottish commission after his £134,750 design was selected from a shortlist of four by a panel of experts led by Dundee City Council.

Judges, including figures from V&A Dundee, Abertay University, St Andrews University, and Duncan of Jordanston­e College of Art and Design, said the design was chosen for the city’s historical connection­s to whaling.

Lee’s large-scale sculpture will be formed in tubular sections following the creature’s contours, with its tail arching towards the River Tay to capture a sense of movement.

 ??  ?? Artist Lee Simmons’ spectacula­r sculpture has been chosen as a centrepiec­e for Dundee waterfront’s open space.
Artist Lee Simmons’ spectacula­r sculpture has been chosen as a centrepiec­e for Dundee waterfront’s open space.
 ?? Picture: Mhairi Edwards. ?? The skeleton of the 40-foot-long specimen is suspended from the ceiling in The McManus.
Picture: Mhairi Edwards. The skeleton of the 40-foot-long specimen is suspended from the ceiling in The McManus.

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