The Demeter
Whitby is closely associated with Dracula because Bram Stoker who wrote the original novel spent time in the town while on holiday there during the summer of 1890. While he was there he was researching and writing a novel that would eventually become Dracula. The most important piece of information Stoker found while staying in Whitby was in a document he found in Whitby library, An Account of the Principalities of Wallacia and Moldavia by William Wilkinson. This document contained a reference to a 15th Century prince who had earned himself the nickname 'Dracula'. In a way, Whitby can be seen as Dracula's birth place. Not only did Stoker spend time in Whitby himself, he also set a significant part of Dracula in the town and used it as the place Dracula first steps ashore in England in the form of a big black dog which jumps from a ship called The Demeter which had run aground in Whitby. If you are interested in Dracula, you can take a trip to Whitby and see it all for yourself!
Having been loaded on to a ship (the Demeter) bound for England, Count Dracula, hidden in a box containing his homeland earth, lived on the blood of the sailors on board until all were dead. The ship then pitched up, wrecked, in the harbour of Whitby in the county of Yorkshire in England, whereupon Dracula jumped from the wreck on to the quay in the shape of a large dog and escaped into the night.
- Mr. Swales - Mr. Hawkins - the crew of the ship ´Demeter´ - Quincey P. Morris - Count Dracula - the three female vampires
Demeter was among other things the Goddess of the cycle of life and death. The ship Demeter brings Dracula to his victims speeding up that cycle or altering it.
Yes, he does. He kills the crew of the ship ´Demeter´ and makes Lucy Westenra a vampire.
Bram Stoker visited Whitby in 1890, inspired by its dramatic landscape and ancient ruins. The town's abbey and coastal setting served as inspiration for key settings in his novel "Dracula," such as Dracula's arrival in England. Stoker also named a ship in the novel after Whitby.
Whitby is closely associated with Dracula because Bram Stoker who wrote the original novel spent time in the town while on holiday there during the summer of 1890. While he was there he was researching and writing a novel that would eventually become Dracula. The most important piece of information Stoker found while staying in Whitby was in a document he found in Whitby library, An Account of the Principalities of Wallacia and Moldavia by William Wilkinson. This document contained a reference to a 15th Century prince who had earned himself the nickname 'Dracula'. In a way, Whitby can be seen as Dracula's birth place. Not only did Stoker spend time in Whitby himself, he also set a significant part of Dracula in the town and used it as the place Dracula first steps ashore in England in the form of a big black dog which jumps from a ship called The Demeter which had run aground in Whitby. If you are interested in Dracula, you can take a trip to Whitby and see it all for yourself!
Captain Cook lived in Whitby while he was an apprentice in ship building. He also sailed from Whitby when he discovered many parts of the world, including Hawaii and Australia.
The name of french ship that brought slaves to Mobile was called The Africane ship
Having been loaded on to a ship (the Demeter) bound for England, Count Dracula, hidden in a box containing his homeland earth, lived on the blood of the sailors on board until all were dead. The ship then pitched up, wrecked, in the harbour of Whitby in the county of Yorkshire in England, whereupon Dracula jumped from the wreck on to the quay in the shape of a large dog and escaped into the night.
No, he was born in Marton, but he lived in Whitby whilst serving an apprenticeship in ship building.
The ship Brooklyn.
Captain James Cook is the famous explorer from Whitby. He lived there whilst training as an apprentice ship builder. Cook sailed from Whitby when he discovered Australia.
The Mayflower is the ship you seek.
Speedwell was the name of the 60 ton ship that the pilgrims brought along with the Mayflower.
The Mayflower
The Mayflower.