Svend Foyn

Svend Foyn (1809–1894)
Foynegården in Tønsberg, Norway

Svend Foyn (July 9, 1809 – November 30, 1894) was a Norwegian whaling, shipping magnate and philanthropist. He pioneered revolutionary methods for hunting and processing whales. Svend Foyn introduced the modern harpoon cannon and brought whaling into a modern age.[1][2]

Background

Svend Foyn was born in the neighborhood of Foynegården at Tønsberg in Vestfold, Norway. He was the son of shipmaster Laurentius Foyn (1772–1813) and Benthe Marie Ager (1781–1842). Foyn was fatherless at four years of age and his mother came to characterize his upbringing. By age 11, Foyn sent to sea on the family ships. He took navigational exams in Kristiansand at age 19 and from 1833 he was a master sailor.[3]

Career

His ship initially transported lumber from Sweden and Norway to European ports and returned with manufactured goods. Started in 1846, Foyn was on the expedition for seals and walrus. By the 1860s, he had a fleet of whaling ships. In 1863, he build the world's first steam-powered catcher. Within four years he experimented with whaling on the coast of Finnmark.

Foyn was the first to hit the whale with grenade harpoon. Svend Foyn patented his grenade harpoon gun in 1870. He modified existing designs and utilized ideas developed by Erik Eriksen. It consisted of a cannon that fired a barbed explosive head harpoon. Aimed and fired, the harpoon barb would hook into the whale. A moment later an explosive charge in the head of the harpoon would inflict a mortal wound. Then the whale was retrieved by a winch. Once alongside the whaling vessel, the whale was pumped full of air to keep it afloat, as the whale was moved to the location of processing.[4][5]

The whole process of whaling was changed drastically when Svend Foyn invented the exploding harpoon. By doing so, he removed much of the danger from whaling although it remained a very dangerous undertaking. His invention increased the efficiency by which whales could be captured and made it possible to hunt the larger and faster rorquals, the largest group of baleen whales.[6]

Svend Foyn introduced mechanized, steam-powered catcher boats equipped with bow-chaser deck cannons and heavy-caliber harpoons that exploded on impact. Foyn constructed his 86-ton, seven-knot Spes et Fides, the first steam-powered whale catcher. The ship was equipped with seven whale guns separately mounted on the forecastle, each firing a harpoon and grenade. The vessel was 94 feet (29 m) long, with a 20-horsepower (15-kW) engine. It could reach a speed of 7 knots (13 km/h).[7]

With this development, he launched Norway into a new and profitable industry. After years of perfecting a cannon that could fire a grenade and harpoon simultaneously, Foyn finally managed to catch 30 whales in 1868. These increased efficiency and volume, enabling the harvest not only of all of the species that had been hunted for, but also the largest species which had eluded all previous hunting technologies. The whaling industry was in decline when Foyn first began his development of the bow-mounted harpoon cannon. Foyn's eventual successful development of the cannon, in combination with fast and sleek steam-powered catcher vessels, ushered in a modern whaling industry that was to become dominated first by the Norwegians, then the British and finally the Russians and Japanese.[8]

The Antarctic Expedition of 1894–95 was funded by Svend Foyn and led by Henrik Johan Bull. The two-year expedition was a whaling expedition that sailed to the Ross Sea aboard the ship Antarctic. The crew included Carsten Borchgrevink, who later lead the Southern Cross Expedition to Antarctica.[9][10]

Philanthropy

Svend Foyn Chapel in Tonsberg

By processing the whale's raw materials in its own facilities, Foyn steadily increase his profit and accumulated a considerable fortune. He donated funds for several purposes including worker housing in Tonsberg. He gave funds to benefit his employees and later bequeathed his fortune to a mission fund. Foyn restored and protected worker's homes. In 1865 there were 73 flats and 303 residents. There was a library, prayer room and the country's first kindergarten. Svend Foyn was not only a man before his time in the modern whaling industry, but also as regards social conditions. Svend and Lena Foyn's Memorial, a home for elderly ladies was founded by Lena Foyn in 1896. Svend Foyn Chapel was consecrated November 5, 1876. There was seating for 500 people and at the time it was among Norway's largest and most beautiful chapels.

Svend Foyn worker housing in Tønsberg

Personal life

Svend Foyn wed Elise Amalie Tvede in 1839 in a marriage which ended in an amicable separation in 1842. His former wife, later known as Elise Wærenskjold, immigrated to Texas in 1847. Foyn maintained a long distance friendship with his ex-wife throughout the remainder of their lives. In 1849, Foyn married Magdalene Margrethe “Lena” Bull, (1824–1905), daughter of the master and shipowner Henrik Johan Bull (1793-1826) and Andrea Mathea Bull (1796-1844).[11]

Foyn was entered as a Knight in the Royal Norwegian Order of St. Olav in 1853, was promoted to Commander in 1870 and received the Grand Cross in 1893. Foyn died in 1894 in Nøtterøy, followed by the death of his widow Lena in 1905. both were buried in Tønsberg gamle kirkegård located in Tønsberg city center. [12]

The couple had established “The Svend Foyn and Wife Mission Fund” (Svend Foyn and Hustrus Missionsfond) with an endowment of over NOK 3 million. The fund was intended for the benefit of their workforce and for the welfare of their families.[13]

Statue of Svend Foyn by Tonsberg Cathedral

Memorials

The former residence of Svend and Lena Foyn on Storgaten in Tønsberg is a protected house. Built in 1700, Svend Foyn's complete townhouse complex is a shipowner's house from 1750. Svend Foyn's childhood home has been protected since 1924. It is the only complete house of its style from the 18th century in the town.[14]

His statue by Norwegian sculptor Anders Svor (1864-1929) was erected outside the cathedral in Tønsberg (Tønsberg domkirke) in 1915.[15][16][17]

Legacy

A number of locations related to the Antarctica and the surrounding area are named for Svend Foyn including:

Additionally streets were named for him in numerous Norwegian communities including: Tønsberg, Lørenskog, Stavanger, Vadsø, Båtsfjord and Andenes on the island of Andøy .

References

  1. Svend Foyn’s bomb-tipped harpoon fired from a gun forever changed whaling. (Marine Science. Modern Whaling)
  2. Per Thoresen. "Svend Foyn, Pioner, Hvalfanger, Oppfinner". Norsk biografisk leksikon. Retrieved July 1, 2016.
  3. "Svend Foyn". lokalhistoriewiki.no. Retrieved July 1, 2016.
  4. The Harpoon Gun(Arctic Website)
  5. "Persongalleri: Erik Eriksen (1820–1888)". Norsk Polar Historie. Retrieved July 1, 2016.
  6. Modern Whaling, 1861-1987, (New Bedford Whaling Museum)
  7. Modern Whaling, 1861-1987 (New Bedford Whaling Museum)
  8. Greenland Whaling - Whales and Whaling(Cool Antarctica)
  9. [http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayAbstract?fromPage=online&aid=967620 Polar Record
  10. "Persongalleri: Svend Foyn". Norsk Polar Historie. Retrieved July 1, 2016.
  11. Elise Amalie Tvede Wærenskjold (Handbook of Texas)
  12. "Tønsberg gamle kirkegård". lokalhistoriewiki.no. Retrieved July 1, 2016.
  13. "Svend Foyn". Store norske leksikon. Retrieved July 1, 2016.
  14. Svend and Lena Foyn (Go Norway)
  15. The Discovery of King Karl Land, Spitsberge ( Adolf Hoel, The Geographical Review Vol. XXV, No. 3, Pp. 476–478, American Geographical Society, New York. July, 1935)
  16. Hvalfanger Svend Foyn f. 1809- d. 1894 (Tønsberg Atrractions)
  17. "About Anders Svor". The Anders Svor Museum. Retrieved July 1, 2016.
  18. "Foynøya". Norwegian Polar Institute. Retrieved 2 December 2011.
  19. Henriksen, Petter (ed.). "Foynøya". Store norske leksikon (in Norwegian). Oslo: Kunnskapsforlaget. Retrieved 2 December 2011.

Additional sources

External links

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