On 9 January 1871, Slocum and the
Constitution put in at Sydney. There he met, courted, and married Virginia Albertina Walker. They were married on January 31, 1871 and the couple left Sydney on the
Constitution the following day. Miss Walker, quite coincidentally, was an American whose New York family had migrated west to California at the time of the
1849 gold rush and eventually continued on, by ship, to settle in Australia. She sailed with Slocum, and, over the next thirteen years, the couple had seven children, all born at sea or foreign ports. Four children, sons Victor, Benjamin Aymar, and James Garfield, and daughter Jessie, survived to adulthood. In Alaska, the
Washington was
wrecked when she dragged her anchor during a gale, ran ashore, and broke up. Slocum, however, at considerable risk to himself, managed to save his wife, the crew, and much of the cargo, bringing all back to port safely in the ship's open boats. The owners of the shipping company that had employed Slocum were so impressed by this feat of ingenuity and leadership, they gave him the command of the
Constitution which he sailed to Hawaii and the west coast of
Mexico. His next command was the
Benjamin Aymar, a merchant vessel in the
South Seas trade. However, the owner, strapped for cash, sold the vessel out from under Slocum, and he and Virginia found themselves stranded in the
Philippines without a ship.
The Pato While in the Philippines, in 1874, under a commission from a British architect, Slocum organized native workers to build a 150-ton
steamer in the shipyard at
Subic Bay. In partial payment for the work, he was given the ninety-ton schooner,
Pato (Spanish for "Duck"), the first ship he could call his own. Ownership of the
Pato afforded Slocum the kind of freedom and autonomy he had never previously experienced. Hiring a crew, he contracted to deliver a cargo to
Vancouver in British Columbia. Thereafter, he used the
Pato as a general freight carrier along the west coast of North America and in voyages back and forth between San Francisco and Hawaii. During this period, Slocum also fulfilled a long-held ambition to become a writer, and became a temporary correspondent for the
San Francisco Bee. The Slocums sold the
Pato in Honolulu in the spring of 1878. Returning to San Francisco, they purchased the
Amethyst. He worked this ship until June 23, 1881. The Slocums next bought a third share in the
Northern Light 2. This large clipper was 233 feet in length, 44 feet beam, 28 feet in the hold. It was capable of carrying 2000 tons on three decks. Although Joshua Slocum called this ship "my best command", it was a command plagued with mutinies and mechanical problems. Under troubling legal circumstances (caused by his alleged treatment of the chief mutineer) he sold his share in the
Northern Light 2 in 1883.
The Aquidneck The Slocum family continued on their next ship, the 326-ton
Aquidneck. In 1884, Slocum's wife Virginia became ill aboard the
Aquidneck in
Buenos Aires and died. After sailing to Massachusetts, Slocum left his three youngest children, Benjamin Aymar, Jessie, and Garfield in the care of his sisters; his oldest son Victor continued as his first mate. In 1886, at age 42, Slocum married his 24-year-old cousin, Henrietta "Hettie" Elliott. The Slocum family, with the exception of Jessie and Benjamin Aymar, again took to the sea aboard the
Aquidneck, bound for
Montevideo, Uruguay. Slocum's second wife would find life at sea much less appealing than his first. A few days into Henrietta's first voyage, the
Aquidneck sailed through a hurricane. By the end of this first year, the crew had contracted
cholera, and they were quarantined for six months. Later, Slocum was forced to defend his ship from pirates, one of whom he shot and killed; following which he was tried and acquitted of murder. Next, the
Aquidneck was infected with
smallpox, leading to the death of three of the crew. Disinfecting of the ship was performed at considerable cost. Shortly afterward, near the end of 1887, the
Aquidneck was wrecked in southern Brazil. He and his family began their voyage back to the United States, his son Victor (15) being the mate. After fifty-five days at sea and 5510 miles, the Slocums reached Cape Roman,
South Carolina and continued inland to Washington D.C. for the winter and finally reaching Boston via New York in 1889. ==Voyage of the
Destroyer==