Title supplied by cataloger.; Photograph was edited for publication purposes. The Metha Nelson was a was a wooden-hulled sailing schooner. The vessel, which was chartered to Mario Bello, former stepfather of Jean Harlowe, sailed from Long Beach on September 10, 1938, sailing to Guatemala. Two men, Charles Segal and Abraham Kapellner, claimed that the captain of the ship, Robert Hoffman, treated them badly because they were Jewish and he was German. Segal and Kapellner went ashore in Guatemala and boarded the Italian ship Cellina to return to Los Angeles. Hoffman radioed the captain of the Cellina and told him to hold the pair as mutiny suspects. Two days later, the Cellina, responding to distress flares, encountered the Metha Nelson, its sails in tatters and its engine disabled. When the ship reached San Pedro, Segal and Kapellner were arrested on charges of mutiny. Hoffman admitted using chains to restrain and beat crew members because of necessity. Most of the crew and guests aboard the ship disagreed with the captain and a grand jury refused to indict the two men. Photograph caption dated January 10, 1939 reads "Matt Thornton, mate on the Metha Nelson, is shown holding a dried shark jaws upon arrival here. The voyage started as a shark-hunting expedition. Charges that Captain Hoffman persecuted some crew members because of anti-Semitism feelings were made by some of the party upon arrival. He denied the charges."
Type
image
Format
1 photographic print :b&w ;26 x 21 cm. Photographic prints
Hoffman, Robert--Trials, litigation, etc Sailors--California--Los Angeles Shark cartilage Men--California--Los Angeles Portrait photographs Los Angeles Evening Herald and Express photographs Herald-Examiner Collection photographs
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