George Pollard served on the
Essex for four years in the capacities of second mate and first mate from 1815–1819. On April 5, 1819, Pollard was appointed captain of
Essex by the owners, Gideon Folger and Paul Macy, when the previous captain, Daniel Russell, was promoted. The ship set sail for the
Pacific Ocean on August 12, 1819, from which it was to return to Nantucket with a load of whale oil. Other members of the 21-man crew included
Owen Chase as
first mate, Matthew Joy as
second mate,
Thomas Nickerson as
cabin boy, and six other Nantucket men. Those included Pollard's seventeen-year-old cousin
Owen Coffin with whose care and protection Pollard had been entrusted by his aunt, Nancy Bunker Coffin. To fill in the crew, others had to be recruited from
Cape Cod and
New England cities; these were inexperienced seamen and were known as "
green hands" by the Nantucketers. Four days after leaving Nantucket, the ship was struck by a sudden storm and experienced a knockdown, where the ship tipped to its side by nearly ninety degrees. Two of the ship's whaleboats were lost and another was damaged, leaving two usable whaleboats. The knockdown was caused in part by miscalculations on the part of Pollard and his officers, and in part by the inexperience of the crew. In his personal account of the event Nickerson wrote that, once the ship was upright, "the cool and undismayed countenance of the captain soon brought all to their sober senses." Pollard declared the damage was so extensive that they should sail back to Nantucket for repairs, but Chase and Joy persuaded him to go forward to the
Azores and replace the whaleboats there. After a difficult passage around
Cape Horn,
Essex arrived in the Pacific Ocean in January 1820. On November 20, 1820, in a remote area of the ocean, some west of the
Galapagos Islands,
Essex was struck twice by a huge
sperm whale, estimated to be in length. With only three ship-keepers and the crew of Chase's whaleboat on board to repair their damaged vessel,
Essex began taking on water following the second collision with the whale. The crew abandoned the sinking vessel, taking the navigational equipment and Pollard's and Chase's sea chests with them. Meanwhile, Pollard and Joy were hunting smaller whales near the ship, and on their return found
Essex had capsized. The crew chopped off the masts, a necessary move that would enable the ship to stay upright for a longer time, and outfitted the whaleboats with sails and masts using ''Essex's'' spars and sails. They also hastened to retrieve what provisions they could and divided them equally so that each whaleboat had 200 pounds of hardtack, 65 gallons of freshwater, and some Galapagos tortoises. The crew was divided into three whaleboats commanded by Pollard, Chase, and Joy and set sail with provisions estimated to last them 60 days. Pollard, Chase, and Joy set up a council to decide which direction to sail in. The closest landfall was the
Marquesas Islands, about 1,200 miles (1,900 km) west of their position, but the crew decided against this option due to the inhabitants' practice of
cannibalism at the time. Pollard suggested sailing to the
Society Islands, which were further away but presumed to be safer. However, on the grounds that very little was actually known about these islands, Chase and Joy disagreed, proposing instead to sail south far enough to pick up a band of variable breezes that would take them to South America. Once again, Pollard "reluctantly yielded to their arguments". As they sailed, Pollard's whaleboat was attacked and damaged by a twelve-foot fish; those on the boat temporarily moved to Joy's and Chase's boats during repairs. On December 20, near starvation, the crews of the three whaleboats reached what they believed to be
Ducie Island, but was actually
Henderson Island, just 100 miles from
Pitcairn where the residents lived comfortably. After seven days, they exhausted the island's meager supply of food and decided that the island could not sustain them. As such, they set sail again, hoping to reach
Easter Island, about 850 miles away. Three of the men opted to remain on the island and were eventually rescued by the trading vessel
Surry. Sailing east towards South America, Pollard and Chase had seen Joy's health decline. He was transferred to Pollard's boat and shortly thereafter died. Obed Hendricks was given command of Joy's boat, and the three boats sailed on until during a gale one night Chase's boat became separated from the other two. By January 20, 1821, a crew member, Lawson Thomas, died just as the boats of Pollard and Hendricks had come to the end of their provisions. It was at this point that to survive their ordeal the men resorted to
cannibalism at sea. As other crew members died, their bodies were eaten, until only four men were left alive on Pollard's boat. One of them, Charles Ramsdell, proposed that lots should be drawn to determine who should be killed so that the rest might survive. Pollard at first resisted this suggestion but then gave in to the majority. The lot fell to his cousin Owen Coffin and lots were drawn again to determine who would be Coffin's executioner. Ramsdell drew the black spot and Coffin was shot and his remains eaten. After the death of Barzillai Ray five days later, Pollard and Ramsdell sailed on and were rescued on February 23 by the whaleship
Dauphin. For a time the crews of
Dauphin,
Two Brothers,
Hero, and
Diana, which were all involved in the rescue of Pollard and Ramsdell, thought that Pollard and Ramsdell were the only survivors of the
Essex crew. They were eventually moved to the whaleship
Two Brothers and taken to
Valparaíso. There, on March 17, they were reunited with Chase, Benjamin Lawrence, and Thomas Nickerson, the cabin boy of
Essex, all of whom had been rescued by the British merchant ship
Indian. The majority of the surviving crew returned to Nantucket aboard
Macedonian. Pollard, however, remained behind because his health was not stable enough for travel. Upon his return on August 5 aboard
Two Brothers, Pollard had to face Nancy Bunker Coffin, who was distraught at the idea that her son's death resulted in Pollard's preservation. According to his nephew Joseph Warren Phinney, every year Pollard spent the anniversary of the
Essex disaster fasting in solitude. He did so in memory of the survivors' reversion to cannibalism. ==
Two Brothers and later years ==