Sea Shanties & Maritime Music

An encyclopedic reference of 434 sea shanties and maritime songs, with full lyrics, history, and playable melodies.

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Jul
4
This Day in History · 1840

Cunard's Britannia Departs Liverpool

On July 4, 1840, the paddle steamer Britannia left Liverpool for Halifax and Boston, inaugurating the first regular transatlantic steamship mail service. The date was no accident: it was both American Independence Day and the birthday of Samuel Cunard, the Nova Scotian shipping magnate who had won the Royal Mail contract. The Britannia reached Halifax in ten days and Boston in just under fourteen, a crossing that sailing packets could rarely match and never guarantee. Cunard himself was aboard, and the Bostonians greeted him with such enthusiasm that he was reportedly invited to over 1,800 dinner parties.

Liverpool was already a busy port, but Cunard’s fortnightly service transformed it into the undisputed hub of transatlantic travel. Within a few years, a fleet of steamers was running on schedule between the Mersey and North America, carrying mail, emigrants, and cargo. The Prince’s Landing Stage, the long floating pier where passengers embarked, became one of the most famous departure points in the world. Millions of Irish and British emigrants would leave from there in the decades that followed, bound for new lives across the ocean.

That waterfront is the setting of The Leaving of Liverpool, one of the best-known farewell songs of the sea. Its opening lines, “Fare you well, the Prince’s Landing Stage / River Mersey, fare you well,” speak for every sailor and emigrant who stood on that pier and watched Liverpool fall away astern.

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Featured · Forecastle song · Roud 9435

The Leaving of Liverpool

Fare you well, the Prince's Landing Stage, River Mersey, fare you well. I'm off to California, A place I know right well. So fare you well, my own true love, When I return united we will be. It's not the leaving of Liverpool that grieves me, But me darling, when I think on you.

In those days every task aboard ship was done by man power, and the chanty was like a shot of grog to the men.

Capt. James P. Barker, The Log of a Limejuicer, 1936