https://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/ss-warimoo-ship-in-two-centuries
*
*
Trips
[aoa_logo_a]
Take your next trip with Atlas Obscura!
Our small-group adventures are inspired by our Atlas of the
world's most fascinating places, the stories behind them, and the
people who bring them to life.
Visit Adventures
Trips Highlight
Djerba Island
Tunisia * 13 days, 12 nights
Tunisia & the Sands of Time
from $5,145 USD
The Jaipur City Palace remains the home of the Jaipur royal
family to this day.
India * 14 days, 13 nights
Delhi and Rajasthan: Colors of India
from $3,570 USD
View all trips
*
Experiences
Upcoming Experiences
View All Experiences >>
[blank-f2c3]
Members only
Monster of the Month w/ Colin Dickey: Venusians
[blank-f2c3]
Members only
Accidental Discoveries
[blank-f2c3]
Members only
Antiques and Their Afterlives
[blank-f2c3]
Members only
Monster of the Month w/ Colin Dickey: Night Doctors
[blank-f2c3]
Cambridge
Wild Life: An Explorer's Guide to the World's Living Wonders
*
Courses
Upcoming Courses
View All Courses >>
[blank-f2c3]
Making Scents: Experimental Perfumery With Saskia Wilson-Brown
[blank-f2c3]
The Truth About Sharks With Melissa Cristina Marquez
[blank-f2c3]
Exploring the Aurora Borealis With Dr. Ryan French
[blank-f2c3]
Playing for Keeps: Designing Keepsake Games With Shing Yin Khor
[blank-f2c3]
Writing the Food Memoir: A Workshop With Gina Rae La Cerva
*
Places
+ Top Destinations
+ Latest Places
+ Most Popular Places
+ Random Place
+ Lists
+ Itineraries
+ -------------------------------------------------------------
Add a Place
-------------------------------------------------------------
+ Download the App
Latest Places
View All Places >>
[blank-f2c3]
Harrislee, Germany
'Das Wahlversprechen' ('The Election Promise')
54.8003, 9.3962
Minnesota State Public School For Dependent and Neglected
Children
Owatonna, Minnesota
Minnesota State Public School for Dependent and Neglected
Children Museum
44.0894, -93.2382
The arrow illuminated target, on ground level
Fordingbridge, England
Ashley Walk Illuminated Target
50.9214, -1.7335
Traditional Danish comfort food is on the menu.
Copenhagen, Denmark
Tolbod Bodega
55.6872, 12.5908
Top Destinations
View All Destinations >>
Countries
+ Australia
+ Canada
+ China
+ France
+ Germany
+ India
+ Italy
+ Japan
Cities
+ Amsterdam
+ Barcelona
+ Beijing
+ Berlin
+ Boston
+ Budapest
+ Chicago
+ London
+ Los Angeles
+ Mexico City
+ Montreal
+ Moscow
+ New Orleans
+ New York City
+ Paris
+ Philadelphia
+ Rome
+ San Francisco
+ Seattle
+ Stockholm
+ Tokyo
+ Toronto
+ Vienna
+ Washington, D.C.
*
Foods
Latest Places to Eat & Drink
View All Places to Eat >>
Traditional Danish comfort food is on the menu.
Tolbod Bodega
Royal red shrimp are a seasonal delicacy found along the Florida
coast and the Mississippi Delta.
North of Bourbon
Grab your tray and snag a spot at one of the outdoor picnic
tables.
Trenton Bridge Lobster Pound
The Margarita here needs no additional adornment.
Una Pizza Napoletana
You can't leave Ginza without tasting their coffee.
Cafe Paulista
*
Stories
+ Recent Stories
+ All Stories
+ Puzzles
+ Video
+ Podcast
Most Recent Stories
View All Stories >>
[blank-f2c3]
Two Lions Swam Nearly a Mile Through Dangerous Waters, Again and
Again
The lamprey's so-called oral disk is its most distinct feature.
This Ancient, Toothy Sea Beast Sustains Ecosystems in the Pacific
Northwest
In Shah's kitchen, Rice Krispie treats get upgraded with jaggery
and colorful candied fennel seeds.
A Cookbook That Celebrates Indian American Ingenuity
Fans often enjoy imagining how fictional characters would cook
and eat.
How Sharing Recipes Brings Fans Together
* Newsletters
* Sign In Join
*
Explore Newsletters
*
Sign In
-----------------------------------------------------------------
Join
*
Places near me Random place
The Strange Tale of SS Warrimoo, the Ship That Existed in Two
Centuries at Once
On New Year's Eve 1899, the captain of this Pacific liner steamed
into history. Or did he?
by Frank Jacobs, Big Think April 28, 2023
The Strange Tale of SS Warrimoo, the Ship That Existed in Two
Centuries at Once
Copy Link Facebook Twitter Reddit Flipboard Pocket
SS Warrimoo plied a trans-Pacific route from Canada to
Australia, which means it crossed both the equator and the
international date line on every trip.
SS Warrimoo plied a trans-Pacific route from Canada to Australia,
which means it crossed both the equator and the international date
line on every trip. Allan C. Green (1878-1954)/Wikimedia/Public
domain
"Be good and you will be lonesome," Mark Twain wrote under a
photograph of himself. The author sits on a folding chair, his feet
on a ship's railing. Wearing a peaked cap and a grumpy face, he
stares listlessly out to sea.
The picture was likely taken in 1895 on board SS Warrimoo, as Twain
was crossing the Pacific from Canada to Australia. It's used as the
frontispiece for Following the Equator (1897), a travelogue of his
year-long round-the-world lecture tour. The tour and his bad mood had
a common cause: Twain was bankrupt.
A World Tour to Pay Off Creditors
In previous years, the former printer had sunk $300,000 of his (and
his wife's) money into an invention he thought would revolutionize
printing, until then very much a manual, labor-intensive industry.
But the Paige Compositor, a mechanical typesetter, was a disaster.
Twain's investment--about $9 million in 2022 money--was a total loss.
He embarked on his world tour to pay off his various creditors.
Twain, likely on the deck of SS Warrimoo, wasn't exactly
relishing the trip around the world. Twain, likely on the deck of SS
Warrimoo, wasn't exactly relishing the trip around the world. Digital
Collections, The New York Public Library
While on board SS Warrimoo, Twain crossed the equator and the
international date line, two events he noted in his book:
A sailor explained to a young girl that the ship's speed is poor
because we are climbing up the bulge toward the center of the
globe; but that when we should once get over, at the equator, and
start down-hill, we should fly.
Afternoon. Crossed the equator. In the distance, it looked like a
blue ribbon stretched across the ocean. Several passengers
kodak'd it.
And a few days later:
While we were crossing the 180th meridian it was Sunday in the
stern of the ship where my family were, and Tuesday in the bow
where I was. They were there eating the half of a fresh apple on
the 8th, and I was at the same time eating the other half of it
on the 10th--and I could notice how stale it was, already.
The family were the same age that they were when I had left them
five minutes before, but I was a day older now than I was then.
The day they were living in stretched behind them half way round
the globe, across the Pacific Ocean and America and Europe; the
day I was living in stretched in front of me around the other
half to meet it.
Along about the moment that we were crossing the Great Meridian a
child was born in the steerage, and now there is no way to tell
which day it was born on. The nurse thinks it was Sunday, the
surgeon thinks it was Tuesday. The child will never know its own
birthday. It will always be choosing first one and then the
other, and will never be able to make up its mind permanently.
This will breed vacillation and uncertainty in its opinions about
religion, and politics, and business, and sweethearts, and
everything, and will undermine its principles, and rot them away,
and make the poor thing characterless, and its success in life
impossible.
Crossing the equator and the date line may have been memorable for
Twain and other occasional passengers, but for the crew of SS
Warrimoo, a steamliner plying a regular connection hauling mail,
cargo, and passengers between Canada and Australia, it was just
another day at the office. The American satirist's passage could have
been the high-water mark (so to speak) of the ship's wider notoriety,
had it not been for an even more fateful encounter with both lines, a
few years later.
A Prank of Historical Proportions
This happened on the evening of December 30, 1899, as SS Warrimoo was
once more making the crossing from Vancouver to Sydney. By chance,
the ship was just a few nautical miles from the intersection of the
equator and the date line.
Seeing a chance to pull a prank of historical proportions--big enough
to be written about more than a century hence--Captain John Duthie
Sydney Phillips ordered his crew to steer the ship toward the meeting
point of both lines. Five experienced navigators checked the position
of the sun and, after sunset, the stars. The ship's position was
checked every three hours. Helped by smooth seas and open skies, SS
Warrimoo at the stroke of midnight found itself right across the
aforementioned intersection, its bow pointing south and its stern
facing north.
A lot comes together at the point where the international date line
and the equator cross, about 2,000 miles southwest of Hawai`i and
2,500 miles north of New Zealand. This chart shows the route across
that point that SS Warrimoo attempted to take. A lot comes
together at the point where the international date line and the
equator cross, about 2,000 miles southwest of Hawai`i and 2,500 miles
north of New Zealand. This chart shows the route across that point
that SS Warrimoo attempted to take. Annelisa Leinbach
This had some positively mind-boggling consequences. The forward part
of the ship was in the Southern Hemisphere, where it was summer, and
already January 1, 1900. The aft part of the ship was in the Northern
Hemisphere, where it was winter, and still December 31, 1899.
It could be said, therefore, that the same ship was, for a brief
moment:
* in two different days (on its forward half, it was already
Monday, while on its aft part, it was still Sunday);
* in two different months (forward in January, aft in December);
* in two different seasons (summer and winter);
* in two different years (1900 and 1899);
* in two different centuries (the 20th and the 19th); and
* in all four hemispheres at once (the southern and the northern on
either side of the equator, and the eastern and western on either
side of the 180th meridian).
Did This Really Happen?
However, like many stories that sound too good to be true, this one
is as well.
It's not that the story is entirely made up. In 1942, the Ottawa
Journal reported that Captain Phillips, now retired, was able to
verify the whole thing from his logbooks. And it's not unheard-of for
ships in the neighborhood to go out of their way to cross the equator
on the date line. In nautical lore, this makes you a "golden
shellback."
It's doubtful that they would have been able to achieve and
maintain a position that precise at the appropriate time.
And in theory, it's certainly possible for a ship on that specific
point at a specific time to be in different days, months, seasons,
years, centuries, and hemispheres. However, even though the captain
and his crew may have believed they were at exactly the intersection
of the Great Meridian (180deg E/W) and the equinoctial circle (0deg N/S),
it's doubtful that with the navigational methods and instruments of
that time that they would have been able to achieve and maintain a
position that precise at the appropriate time.
And then, of course, there's the matter of the new century. As some
may remember from the whole Y2K hullaballoo, centuries (and
millennia) only end when the year ending in zero is over, not when it
starts. So, just like the 21st century and the third millennium
started on January 1, 2001, the 20th century began on January 1,
1901, not 1900. (Not that this chronological truth got in the way of
popular opinion.)
Apart from that mention in the captain's log, there is no record of
that remarkable evening on board SS Warrimoo. Mark Twain, had he been
on board, probably would have had a witty thing or two to say about
it. However, being the unreliable narrator that he was, we still
wouldn't have known what actually happened.
This article originally appeared on Big Think, home of the brightest
minds and biggest ideas of all time. Sign up for Big Think's
newsletter.
Read next
Beltane Is About More Than Fire and Fertility
The ancient "Celtic" start of summer is rooted in animal
husbandry--and it's not on May 1.
[blank-f2c3]
strange mapsshipsmapsoceansmystery
Want to see fewer ads?
Become a Member.
Want to see fewer ads?
Become a Member.
Using an ad blocker?
We depend on ad revenue to craft and curate stories about the world's
hidden wonders. Consider supporting our work by becoming a member for
as little as $5 a month.
Continue Using Ad-Block Support Us
Keep Exploring
Over time water has a way of turning wrecks into otherworldly
archaeological sites.
ships
The Year in Wrecks, Lost Ships, and Underwater Discoveries
From unexpected treasure in Ukraine to a unique relic of the American
Revolution, Captain Santa's lost ship to digital dugouts.
Gemma Tarlach December 27, 2023
Newfoundland, known for its thick fog and beautifully stark
landscape, seems a fitting locale for the mysterious 'Isle of
Demons,' said to exist just off Newfoundland's northern tip.
lighthouses
The Phantom Island That Haunted 16th-Century Newfoundland
The 'Isle of Demons' was said to be overrun with ghosts and ghouls.
Shoshi Parks December 7, 2023
Rama's Bridge between India and Sri Lanka figures in ancient myths,
and can be seen from space, in this case captured from the Space
Shuttle Endeavour in 1994.
maps
Sea Cucumber Crime Is a Thing, and This Is Where It's Happening
A "seafood mafia" is plying the waters between India and Sri Lanka to
satisfy China's appetite for an increasingly rare delicacy.
Frank Jacobs, Big Think July 7, 2023
This ancient dodecahedron found in Avenches, Switzerland, once the
Roman city of Aventicum.
objects of intrigue
The Mysterious Dodecahedrons of the Roman Empire
The first of many of these puzzling objects was unearthed almost
three centuries ago, and we still don't know what they were for.
Frank Jacobs, Big Think May 12, 2023
[IHZpZXcuan]
Video
All Roads Lead to Texas | From Ancient Past To Modern Future
03:33
Sponsored by Travel Texas
[LmpwZw]
Video * Object of Intrigue
Here Be Dragons: Secrets of One of the Earliest Terrestrial Globes
2:26
[NS5qcGc]
Video
Mapping the World Through Smell
3:25
[IFN0aWxsLm]
Video * Wonder From Home
Show & Tell With Colored-Pencil Cartographer Anton Thomas
11:53
[NS5qcGc]
Video
All Roads Lead to Texas: Texas's Watery Wonders
05:06
Sponsored by Travel Texas
[b25lXy5qcG]
Video
Why Won't These Icebergs Leave Canada Alone? | Untold Earth
7:05
[LmpwZw]
Video * Let Your Florida Adventure Begin
Atlas Obscura Tries: Tarpon Fishing
0:00
Sponsored by VISIT FLORIDA
[ZSBEYXJrXy]
Video
Why Does This Sea Glow in the Dark? | Untold Earth
8:26
Want to see fewer ads? Become a Member.
From Around the Web
ATLAS OBSCURA BOOKS
A Visual Odyssey Through the Marvels of Life
Venture into Nature's Unseen Realms with Our New Book Atlas Obscura:
Wild Life Pre-Order Now
Gastro Obscura Book
See Fewer Ads
Become an Atlas Obscura member and experience far fewer ads and no
pop-ups.
Learn More
Get Our Email Newsletter
[ ]
Thanks for subscribing! View all newsletters >>
[Submit]
Follow Us
*
*
*
*
*
*
Get the app
Download on the Apple App Store Get it on Google Play
Download the App
Places
* All Places
* Latest Places
* Most Popular
* Places to Eat
* Random
* Nearby
* Add a Place
Editorial
* Stories
* Food & Drink
* Itineraries
* Lists
* Puzzles
* Video
* Podcast
* Newsletters
Trips
* All Trips
* Trips Blog
* Art & Culture Trips
* Food Trips
* Hidden City Trips
* History Trips
* Wildlife & Nature Trips
* FAQ
Experiences
* Experiences
* Online Courses
* Online Experience FAQ
* Online Course FAQ
* Eclipse Festival 2024
Community
* Membership
* Feedback & Ideas
* Community Guidelines
* Product Blog
* Unique Gifts
* Work With Us
Company
* About
* Contact Us
* FAQ
* Advertise With Us
* Advertising Guidelines
* Privacy Policy
* Cookie Policy
* Terms of Use
(c) 2024 Atlas Obscura. All rights reserved.
Questions or Feedback? Contact Us
Thanks for sharing!
Follow us on Twitter to get the latest on the world's hidden wonders.
Like us on Facebook to get the latest on the world's hidden wonders.
Follow us on Twitter Like us on Facebook
Wild Life Cover
Pre-Order Atlas Obscura: Wild Life Today!
Venture into nature's unseen realms with our new book Wild Life.
Explore hidden ecosystems & discover incredible species. Free luggage
tag with every pre-order.
Pre-Order Now!
Wild Life Cover
Add Some Wonder to Your Inbox
Every weekday we compile our most wondrous stories and deliver them
straight to you.
[ ] Subscribe
No Thanks
We'd Like You to Like Us
Like Atlas Obscura and get our latest and greatest stories in your
Facebook feed.
No Thanks
[p]
Quantcast
**