J. Habakuk Jephson's Statement was created in 1884.
A fictitious brigantine that is abandoned after all but six of the 14 people officially listed on board die in November 1873 is a simple explanation of Marie Celeste. The proper name in question references the short story J. Habakuk Jephson's Statement. The story's title refers to Dr. Joseph Habakuk Jephson, a physician from Lowell, Massachusetts, and the only person not involved in a five-member, murderous, mutinous conspiracy to survive.
Europe was the destination of the fictitious Marie Celeste. The brigantine in question was traveling from Boston, Massachusetts, to Lisbon, Portugal. All but six of the 14 individuals officially listed as on board were killed so that the ship could be headed to Cape Blanco in the short story J. Habakuk Jephson's Statement.
Nobody knows what happened to the owner of the fictitious Marie Celeste. The vessel in question was described in the short story J. Habakuk Jephson's Statement as a 170-ton brigantine belonging to White, Russell & White, wine importers of Boston, Massachusetts. First names and life events were not given for any of the owners, other than a reference to the son of Russell as an acquaintance of Dr. Joseph Habakuk Jephson of Lowell, Massachusetts, one of six survivors of murder and mutiny on the above-mentioned brigantine.
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J. Habakuk Jephson's Statement is the title of the short story about the fictitious Marie Celeste. The brigantine in question serves as the setting for dereliction, murder and mutiny in the Atlantic Ocean off southwestern Europe and northwestern Africa. Critics speak of the short story as a pre-Sherlock Holmes endeavor in 1884 by Sir Arthur Ignatius Conan Doyle.
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Eight is the number of crewmen described as being on the fictitious Marie Celeste. The imaginary brigantine in question was mentioned in the short story J. Habakuk Jephson's Statement as carrying Captain J.W. Tibbs and seven crewmen as well as the captain's five-year-old son and 31-year-old wife and four passengers. Septimius Goring of New Orleans, Louisiana, and Dr. Joseph Habakuk Jephson of Lowell, Massachusetts, were the only survivors among the known passengers whereas everyone else was killed by Goring, a cook, a page and two sailors.
It is not known whether the fictitious Marie Celeste disappeared. The brigantine surfaces in the fictionalized J. Habakuk Jephson's Statement. The short story in question tells nothing of ultimate fates other than the events prefatory to the derelict vessel's arrival at the port of Gibraltar thanks to the towing efforts supervised by the fictionalized Captain Dalton of the ship Dei Gratia.
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Yes, the fictitious Marie Celeste was found. The above-mentioned imaginary brigantine was towed from the Atlantic Ocean to the Mediterranean Sea port of Gibraltar during December 1873. Descriptions of the discovery at latitude 38 degrees 40' N, longitude 17 degrees 15' W and of the events prefatory to the vessel's abandonment and drifting were consolidated in the short story J. Habakuk Jephson's Statement from a fictitious article in the Gibraltar Gazette of Sunday, Jan. 4, 1874, a fictitious narrative by the imaginary Dr. Joseph Habakuk Jephson of Lowell, Massachusetts, and a fictitious telegram from Boston, Massachusetts.