In February 2025, UArctic and Lloyd's Register Foundation (LRF) announced the recipients of five research fellowships, funded by the Foundation through our joint initiative "Maritime Safety: Learning from the Past to Address Challenges to the Safety of Peoples in the Arctic". UArctic x LRF Fellows Dr Claudio Aporta, Professor and Canadian Chair in Marine Environmental Protection and Dr Anish Hebbar, Associate Professor at the World Maritime University in Malmö, Sweden lead one of the funded projects, "Historical Accidents and Ships – Inuit Encounters in the North-West Passage".

The industrial whaling era of the late 19th and early 20th centuries was a defining period for Arctic shipping, with impacts extending beyond the maritime domain.

Whaling was transformative for Arctic Indigenous inhabitants (Inuit), as whalers were among the first outsiders to spend extended periods in the region, wintering to take advantage of favourable sailing and hunting conditions. The interactions between Inuit and whalers brought significant changes to Inuit communities, while whalers gained valuable knowledge about safety, ice navigation, and the geography and environment of parts of the Arctic that were largely uncharted. Additionally, industrial whaling profoundly affected Arctic ecosystems, nearly driving bowhead whales to extinction.

In the eastern Canadian Arctic, particularly in Hudson Strait, Hudson Bay, and Foxe Basin, industrial whaling was especially intense, with 150 voyages between 1860 and 1915. Most whaling ships to that area came from the American ports of New Bedford and New England, and from the Scottish port of Dundee. The whaling boom was driven by substantial economic incentives, including the trade of whale oil (used for lighting, lubrication, and other industrial purposes) and baleen, which was essential for producing items like corsets, umbrella ribs, buggy whips, and industrial springs.

The whaling period also occurred during a shift in shipping practices, transitioning from wind to steam-powered vessels. By the early 20th century, the whaling era waned due to several converging factors, including the decline of whale populations and technological advancements that reduced the economic and practical value of whale products.

Contact and exchange

These 150 voyages (along with other whaling in the Arctic) facilitated significant exchanges of knowledge and material culture between whalers and Inuit, transforming Inuit residence patterns, hunting techniques, and diet. However, these interactions also introduced endemic problems, such as alcohol and diseases, to which the local population had no immunity. Moreover, the voyages generated both accurate and distorted information about the Arctic, shaping the public imagination of the region and its inhabitants.

While Inuit were often employed or engaged by whalers as part of the whaling crews, including as interpreters, cartographers and navigators, their contributions to shipping and Arctic exploration are poorly understood and scarcely acknowledged. Inuit knowledge enhanced the geographic understanding of the Arctic, as well as ice navigation techniques, understanding of seasonal changes, and the wellbeing of seafarers through the improvement of clothing and diet.

Learning from the past

Thanks to our fellowship with Lloyd’s Register Foundation and UArctic, we are now able to conduct research to improve our understanding of Inuit-whaler interactions, with a particular focus on maritime-related knowledge exchanges and their implications in Arctic shipping safety.

Our study – ‘Learnings from historical shipping accidents and ships-Inuit encounters: an examination of whaling in Arctic Canada’ – will also examine the intersections between shipping transits and Inuit traditional mobility, and analyse shipping accidents and incidents during the 1860-1915 whaling period.

The project will seek to answer three primary research questions:

  1. What role did Inuit communities play in supporting shipping and whaling in the Hudson Strait and surrounding areas between 1860 and 1915, and how did their interactions with whalers impact them?
  2. What types of shipping incidents and accidents occurred in the region, as recorded in logs, journals, and historical reports?
  3. How can this historical analysis contribute to the improvement of Arctic shipping safety practices and to the engagement of coastal communities in the context of shipping governance?

These questions will be investigated using a qualitative analysis of Inuit-whaler encounters, primarily using published historical records and previously documented Inuit knowledge. These will be drawn from sources such as the Whaling Archives in Dundee, the New Bedford Whaling Museum Archives, and the Mystic Seaport Museum Collections and Research Centre, as well as the archives of Lloyd’s Register Foundation and the Royal Society.

In order to analyse marine casualties and incidents during the relevant historical period, we will employ the International Maritime Organization’s Maritime Casualties and Incidents taxonomy. All this information will be used to develop an interactive map showcasing trajectories of whaling ships, interactions between Inuit communities and whalers, and locations of major shipping accidents.

By drawing lessons from the past, this research will explore how Arctic shipping safety and Inuit engagement in maritime governance can be improved today.

If you would like to find out more about this project, you can get in touch with the research fellows at ca@wmu.se.

Article written by Claudio Aporta and Anish Hebbar. The blogpost was originally published by LRF on April 1, 2025. Link to the original post