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David Blish

Generation:7
Born:November 30th, 1814
Died:November 21st, 1847, aged about 33 years
Cause of death:Overcome by flames and smoke
Father:David Blish
Mother:Mary (Whitney) Blish
Occupation(s): Lumber trade
Marriages:• Adaline Sophia (Irwin) Blish
At Green Bay, Wisconsin, USA
Children:Robert Irwin Blish
William David Blish
Mary Augusta Blish
Charles Frederic Blish

From the 1st Compiler's work, JKB, ca. 1905

David Blish was for many years engaged in the lumber trade at Green Bay and Kenosha, Wisconsin. He is described by those who knew him as one of the best of men. Genial, intelligent, and devoted to his family and friends, only words of commendation and praise are spoken of him. His unselfishness and courage are best shown in the tragic manner of his death. On the morning of November 21st, 1847, the propeller "Phoenix" was burned near Sheboygan, Wisconsin. He was on the steamer and did heroic service in rescuing the helpless. He brought many fainting and unconscious women and children from the hold, which was filled with smoke and flames. He was warned by the Captain not to go down again, as the steamer was fast settling, but he insisted on making one more trip, and descended into the hold. He never returned, and was doubtless overcome by the flames and smoke. The vessel shortly went down and he went with her. Mrs... De Nevue, near Fon Du Lac, Wisconsin, was well acquainted with David Blish and is authority for the forgoing statement. She speaks of him as "one of the best men I ever knew."

From the 3rd Compiler, CBB, ca. 2001

I have taken the following quotes from a considerably longer historical account of the Phoenix disaster. You will note details which do not agree exactly with the JKB account, but gives the same sense of heroism; also that at the time, there appear to have been many stories regarding his final acts. It does seem clear that while the precise details may have been lost, David Blish made an immensely strong impression on those who would later tell stories of that fateful evening:

"If the most basic of human urges, the dark will to survive at any cost, was seen that night, so was the bright beacon of heroism and selfless giving.

A young merchant traveling first class named David Blish of Southport, Wisconsin, now known as Kenosha, had given up his seat in one of the boats so that he might stay aboard the Phoenix and assist the frightened passengers. Mr. Blish was a man of substantial means, an owner of docks and warehouses in the Kenosha, a married man with children, but he chose to stay and throw in his lot with the immigrants that he had come to know so well. It was told how, when the fire started, Mr. Blish organized passengers into bucket brigades, and, then, when the flames were out of control, he helped many over the side onto makeshift rafts. When he could do no more aboard the stricken vessel, he rounded up two lost children and, holding one under each arm, plunged into the icy waters. He did not survive."

"Perhaps, one day, a monument will be raised in Sheboygan in the area of the harbor to commemorate the heroism of David Blish and the hundreds of sturdy Dutch immigrants who gambled everything for religious freedom and a new way of life -- and lost -- just five heartbreaking miles short of their goal after a journey of over four thousand miles."

"On November 24, 1847, the Schooner Liberty carried word of the disaster to Milwaukee which relayed the terrible news to Chicago who informed the world by telegraph. As the word of the calamity spread, newspapers throughout the county and then the world carried the story.

Slowly, stories of the loss of the ship were told by the survivors -- stories of cowardice, heroism, uncontrolled fear, and calmness in the face of certain death. Time and time again, the name of David Blish, the Southport merchant, came up, and he began to loom large as a hero. A newspaper of the day commented that, if one tenth of the stories told about Mr. Blish were true, he would go down as the greatest of heroes. At first, it was hoped that Mr. Blish had survived in a third boat (which later turned out not to exist), but, as the days went by and no other survivors were found, all hope for his safety was given up."

Author's Credit: Bill Wangemann, City of Sheboygan Historian, ca. 1995


David Blish
   David BlishMary (Whitney) Blish   
 David BlishLucy (Wilcox) Blish  Samuel WhitneyMary (?) Whitney 
David BlishZeruiah (Skinner) BlishObadiah WilcoxSarah (Talcott) Wilcox------------

David Blish

1814 through 1847

1478-1834 Torquemadas Spanish Inquisition
1760-1820 Reign of King George III (Hanover)
1792-1815 Napoleonic war
1809-1816 James Madison elected president of US
1812-1814 War of 1812
  1815   French outlaw slavery in France
  1815   Battle of Waterloo
  1815   Sumbawa volcano (Indonesia) erupts; 50,000 killed
  1816   Photographic Negative
  1816   Indiana enters the union - 19th
  1816   Stethoscope
1817-1825 Erie canal constructed
  1817   Alabama organized as a territory
  1817   Mississippi enters the union - 20th
1817-1824 James Monroe president of US
  1817   Pentrich Revolution - Englands last revolution
1817-1823 1st Cholera pandemic
  1818   Jackson Purchase - Kentucky lands
  1818   Savannah 1st steamship to cross the Atlantic
  1818   Illinois enters the union - 21st
  1819   Alabama enters the union - 22nd
  1819   Oersted discovers electro-magnetism
  1819   Arkansas organized as a territory
1820-1830 Reign of King George IV (Hanover)
  1820   Maine enters the union - 23rd
1821-1829 Greek war of Independence
  1821   Missouri enters the union - 24th
  1821   US pop. reaches 9.2 million
  1821   1st US womens college
  1822   Florida organized as a territory
1824-1828 John Quincy Adams president of US
  1824   Internal Combustion Engine
  1824   Erie canal finished
  1826   1st railroad tunnel (England)
  1827   Ohms Law formulated
  1827   1st Black newspaper Freedoms Journal
  1827   Ships propeller (screw)
  1828   1st railroad in the US
1828-1836 Andrew Jackson president of US
  1828   1st Websters Dictionary
  1829   1st US patent on a typewriter
1829-1851 2nd Cholera pandemic
1830-1837 Reign of King William IV (Hanover)
  1830   Mormons (Latter Day Saints) founded
1830-1860 Underground railroad leads 100,000+ slaves to freedom in US
  1832   Horse-drawn trolleys in New York
  1832   Black Hawk War
  1833   Telegraph
  1833   Slavery abolished in British Empire (home and colonies)
  1834   Modern computer conceived by Charles Babbage
1835-1842 2nd Seminole War
  1835   Halleys Comet
  1835   Mormon leader Joseph Smith prophesies of coming of lord by 1891
  1836   Texas war for independence from Mexico
  1836   Arkansas enters the union -25th
  1836   Battle of the Alamo
  1837   Michigan enters the union - 26th
1837-1840 Martin Van Buren president of US
1837-1901 Reign of Queen Victoria (Hanover)
  1837   Depression and Panic in the US - inflation, speculation
1838-1839 Forced relocation of Cherokee
1839-1842 Opium war between China and the English
1841-1844 John Tyler president of US
  1842   Chinese cede Hong Kong to the English
  1844   1st telegraph line message, Washington to New York
  1845   Texas enters the union - 28th
1845-1848 James K Polk president of US
  1845   Florida enters the union - 27th
1845-1849 Irish Potato Famine
  1846   Iowa enters the union - 29th
1846-1848 The Mexican-US War