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Tierra del Fuego: Of Sailors and Savages (1851—1900)
Contacts between ships and natives groups, as reported in the English-language press

BALAKLAVA  [1887]

Article title Exciting Adventures Ship Ship, barque, Britain
Source Daily Telegraph (Hawke's Bay, NZ), 27 April 1888 Date of event 1887
More info. Location Cape Pillar, Tierra del Fuego
Article Transcript Informant Thomas Riordan, seaman

Abstract: The informant was washed overboard, clung to the shp's wreckage, and was ultimately washed ashore. Here he was taken prisoner by "big men", and carried to their camp. He made good his escape by murdering one of his guards at night.

Assessment: Other news reports state that as many as ten of the crew were swept overboard, near Cape Pillar. The natives were said to be "giants in size": however, this is not consistent with the believed location of the contact, in the territory of the relatively short-statured Kaweskar people. The captive feared cannibalism, but cited no evidence — but then, he imagined himself as the intended victim. It is unclear what happened between the time of his escape and his rescue — why, for instance, was he not recaptured.