Mary Celeste Found Adrift: Crew Vanishes at Sea
Ten people vanished mid-Atlantic. No signs of struggle, no bodies, no blood. The ship's cargo — 1,701 barrels of raw alcohol — sat untouched. One lifeboat missing. Captain's log ended nine days earlier with a routine weather note. Navigation equipment gone, but the vessel sailed perfectly seaworthy, meals half-eaten in the galley. The crew of the Dei Gratia found her ghosting forward under partial sail, making two knots. Theories piled up for 150 years: waterspout, seaquake, fumes from the alcohol creating panic. Nobody knows. And the Mary Celeste kept sailing, unmanned, until someone else climbed aboard and wondered where everyone went.
December 4, 1872
154 years ago
Key Figures & Places
What Else Happened on December 4
A Roman officer discovers his daughter has converted to Christianity. He locks her in a tower. She escapes, gets baptized, returns. He drags her before the pref…
Carloman was 20 when he died. His widow fled immediately to Italy with their sons — she knew what was coming. Charlemagne absorbed his brother's kingdom before …
Emperor Otto I forced the election of the lay official Leo VIII to the papacy, asserting imperial control over the Roman Church. This move deposed the incumbent…
The Crusaders starved Sidon for 47 days. No relief came from Egypt. No help arrived from Damascus. The city's Muslim governor finally opened the gates on Decemb…
King Baldwin I of Jerusalem captured the coastal city of Sidon with the support of a Norwegian fleet led by King Sigurd the Crusader. This victory secured a vit…
Baldwin I of Jerusalem and Sigurd the Crusader of Norway seize Sidon, securing a vital coastal foothold that expands Frankish control along the Levantine shore.…
Talk to History
Have a conversation with historical figures who witnessed this era. Ask questions, explore perspectives, and bring history to life.