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Unexplained Mysteries Discussion Forums > Unexplained Mysteries > Cryptozoology, Myths and Legends
greattenchim
For many, many years a stately cypress tree stood in the midst of the Edenton harbor.
No one is entirely sure just how long the tree was there, but legend suggests it was standing long before the first English colonists set foot in the Albemarle region.

Somehow, a curious custom grew up around the tree. Whenever a ship of trade called at Edenton, it was almost obligatory for the master to place a bottle of the best Jamaican rum in a hollow place in the trunk. Whenever a ship left for foreign parts, the vessel would stop at the tree, and all hands would drink to a safe voyage. Thus it was that the old cypress became known as ''the Dram Tree.''

Ships whose crews failed to drink of the Dram Tree or, even worse, failed to place a bottle there when entering port were doomed to disaster. Many are the tales of ill-fated vessels that met violent storms or were becalmed in the doldrums.

The tree survived until the spring of 1918, when a tremendous ice floe vanquished the landmark to the sound's waters.
Tia
Mind over matter.

The sailors built up a superstition around the tree protecting them.

It's always nice to believe in something though especially if it brings you comfort. grin2.gif
Undefined_innocence
Right. ITs like people that carry around objects that are for good luck, or people who are deep into superstcions.(sp).
JMPD1
Nothing unexplainable here. This is no better or worse than some of the other 'safe passage' customs that spring up whenever people travel a hazardous path.

Similiar to rabbits feet (don't know why people believe the foot of a rodent is lucky-it didn't seem to do anything for the lepus); throwing spilled salt over your shoulder; or 'knocking wood' for luck.


editted for typo-ma-graphical errors.
TheOriginalF
It would appear to me that we have a case of simple superstition, nothing more, nothing less.
747400
Sounds a little like the legend of HMS Totem:

http://www.rnsubmus.co.uk/collection/totem.htm

classic sailor's superstition ...
nativechick1989
QUOTE(TheOriginalF @ May 31 2005, 10:40 AM)
It would appear to me that we have a case of simple superstition, nothing more, nothing less.
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Ditto!

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