Keywords
Whaling, Colonialism, Exploitation, Africa, Conservation
Abstract
This paper examines the colonial whaling industry in Southern Africa, with a focus on Walvis Bay, tracing its long term environmental and socio-economic impacts. From the 1700s to the 1900s, whaling operations, primarily led by American, British, and French enterprises, exploited the region’s rich populations of sperm and right whales, drastically reducing their numbers. The study contextualizes whaling within a broader colonial framework, analyzing its effects on whale migratory patterns, indigenous communities, and marine ecosystems. It explores as well, the transition from whaling as an economic endeavor to modern conservation efforts and the romanticization of whales in literature and art. The research in its entirety represents the continual challenges of reconstructing African environmental histories due to colonial record-keeping biases and the erasure of indigenous knowledge.
Creative Commons License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
Recommended Citation
Zarak, Jake L. (2026) "Colonial Whaling in Walvis Bay and in Southern Africa: Environmental Exploitation and Legacy of South Africa’s Cetaceans," Swarthmore Undergraduate History Journal: 7 (1), 121-150. 10.24968/2693-244X.7.1.6 https://works.swarthmore.edu/suhj/vol7/iss1/6
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African History Commons, Agricultural and Resource Economics Commons, Animal Studies Commons, Cultural History Commons, Environmental Studies Commons
