1853-1894
American (Nyack, New York)
Julian O. Davidson was born on December 17, 1853, to Matthias and Harriet (nee Standish) Davidson. His father was a civil engineer who, while Julian was “still a boy” was tasked to oversee the construction of the Havana Railroad. Julian made five trips to Cuba with his father and, on the final trip, the ship they were sailing on became shipwrecked in a severe storm. Rather than frighten Julian off of the water for good, he became infatuated with it.
As a teen, Davidson was sent to the Rectory School in Hamden, Connecticut, a college preparatory school modeled after a military academy. At 16, when Davidson graduated, he became an apprentice in his father’s firm as a surveyor and draughtsman. Davidson’s eye was to the sea, however, and preferred to devote his time sketching ships coming and going out of New York Harbor. With a burning desire to leave New York for life on the sea, Davidson “ran away” and joined the crew of SS Arizona -a side-wheel steamer that made voyages to the Far East via the Suez Canal. It is during his time aboard Arizona that his nautical eye began to come into focus.