Benjamin "Flood" Ireson (c. 1775 – after 1808) was a 19th-century American sailor, captain of theschoonerBetsy. In 1808, during agale, theBetsy was on its way fromGrand Banks to home port when it discovered another ship, theActive. TheActive was wrecked and taking on water.[1]
"Ireson tried to rescue the crew of the sinking vessel, but his own men insisted upon giving up an attempt which held considerable dangers. On return toMarblehead, the crew, finding themselves blamed for the loss of life, placed responsibility upon their captain."[2] The people of Marblehead, theBetsy's home port, were outraged with Ireson, and he wastarred and feathered and dragged out of town in a cart.
John Greenleaf Whittier first heard the tale in 1823,[3] and wrote a poem based on the incident,Skipper Ireson's Ride.
There was some question as to the identity of the person. In later retellings, it was "Floyd" Ireson who was punished. A series of letters in theBoston Evening Transcript in 1837 identified "Floyd" Ireson as Benjamin "Flood" Ireson. In retellings, his nickname, Flood, had become corrupted to Floyd.[4]
"The inhabitants of Marblehead eventually recognized their mistake, but Whittier's poem served to perpetuate the original story."[2]
The True Story of Skipper Ireson byCharles Buxton Going is a poetic rebuttal of Whittier's poem.
The1941 film adaptation ofThe Devil and Daniel Webster names Ireson as one of the Jury of the Damned -"Floyd Ireson andStede Bonnet, the fiendish butchers."