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File:Davy Jones by George Cruikshank.png
Davy Jones pictured by George Cruikshank in 1832, as described by Tobias Smollett in The Adventures of Peregrine Pickle.<ref>However, the depicted character is a fake created by Pipes, Perry and Pickle to scare Mr. Trunnion; see: Template:Cite book</ref>

Davy Jones' locker is a metaphor for the oceanic abyss, the final resting place of drowned sailors and travellers. It is a euphemism for drowning or shipwrecks in which the sailors' and ships' remains are consigned to the depths of the ocean (to be sent to Davy Jones' Locker).

First used in print in 1726, the name Davy Jones' origins are unclear, with a 19th-century dictionary tracing Davy Jones to a "ghost of Jonah". Other explanations of this nautical superstition have been put forth, including an incompetent sailor or a pub owner who kidnapped sailors.

HistoryEdit

The earliest known reference of the negative connotation of Davy Jones occurs in The Four Years Voyages of Capt. George Roberts, attributed to Daniel Defoe (but potentially involving the journal of a real George Roberts), published in 1726 in London.<ref name="Green's Dictionary of Slang">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

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And elsewhere in The Four Years Voyages:

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Proposed origins of the taleEdit

The origin of the tale of Davy Jones is unclear, and many conjectural<ref name="slang">Template:Cite book</ref> or folkloric<ref name="mq">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> explanations have been told:

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  • David Jones, a real pirate, although not a very well-known one, living on the Indian Ocean in the 1630s.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Charles Grey calls him "a truculent rascal ... to whose activities in covering up the evidence of their misdeeds, Sir William Foster is inclined (wrongly) to attribute the origin of the sea phrase Davy Jones's Locker".<ref name="Grey - Eastern Seas">Template:Cite book</ref>
  • Duffer Jones, a notoriously myopic sailor who often found himself overboard.<ref name="jones">Template:Cite book</ref>
  • A British pub owner who supposedly threw drunken sailors into his ale locker and then gave them to be drafted on any ship.<ref name=mq/>
  • Pinkerton attributes its origin to the Biblical Jonah:

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During many years of seafaring life, I have frequently considered the origin of this phrase, and have now arrived at the conclusion that it is derived from the scriptural account of the prophet Jonah. The word 'locker', on board of ship, generally means the place where any particular thing is retained or kept, as "bread locker", "shot locker", "chain locker", &c. In the sublime ode in the second chapter of the Book of Jonah, we find that the prophet, praying for deliverance, described his situation in the following words:—"in the midst of the seas; and the floods compassed me about; the depth closed me round about; the earth with her bars was about me". The sea, then, might not be misappropriately termed by a rude mariner, Jonah's locker—that is, the place where Jonah was kept or confined. Jonah's locker, in time, might be readily corrupted to Jones's locker; and Davy, as a very common Welsh accompaniment of the equally Welsh name, Jones, added, the true derivation of the phrase having been forgotten.{{#if:W. Pinkerton, Notes and Queries: Vol. III, No. 86, page 478, Saturday, June 21. 1851.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

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  • The phrase may have been associated with balladeer and clergyman David Lloyd, well known for his nautical adventure ballad The Legend of Captain Jones.<ref name="Lloyd">Template:Cite book</ref>
  • Linguists consider it most plausible that Davy was inspired by Saint David of Wales, whose name was often invoked by Welsh sailors, and Jones by the Biblical Jonah.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

|CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Positive associationsEdit

File:USS Triton SSRN-586 - Crossing the Equator - Operation Sandblast - 1960.jpg
Crossing the equator ceremony (with "Davy Jones" with yellow cape and a plunger as sceptre) aboard the Template:USS, 24 February 1960 as part of the Operation Sandblast cruise

Not all traditions dealing with Davy Jones are fearful. In traditions associated with sailors crossing the Equatorial line, there is a "raucous and rowdy" initiation presided over by those who have crossed the line before, known as shellbacks, or Sons of Neptune. The eldest shellback is called King Neptune, and Davy Jones is to be re-enacted as his first assistant.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

Use in mediaEdit

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18th centuryEdit

After 1726's Four Years Voyages, another early description of Davy Jones occurs in Tobias Smollett's The Adventures of Peregrine Pickle, published in 1751:<ref name="fable">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

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In the story, Jones is described as having saucer eyes, three rows of teeth, horns, a tail, and blue smoke coming from his nostrils.

19th centuryEdit

File:The Upshot of the Invasion, or Bony in a fair way for Davey's Locker. (caricature), 1804 RMG PU4797.tiff
1804 print showing "The Upshot of the Invasion, or Bony in a fair way for Davey's Locker"

in 1812, a musical pantomime 'Davy Jones's Locker, Or Black ey'd Susan' was performed at London's West End theatre; Sans Pareil, known today as Adelphi Theatre.<ref>Morning Chronicle - Wednesday 30 December 1812 - https://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0000082/18121230/005/0003</ref>

20th centuryEdit

File:"Lubbers don't live - Oh learn a lesson from Joe Gotch" - NARA - 514926.jpg
World War II poster makes reference to Davy Jones's Locker.Template:Refn In nautical jargon, a lubber is a clumsy or inexperienced sailor.<ref>Template:Cite OEDj</ref>

In the 1930 cartoon "The Haunted Ship", from the Aesop's Fables series, Davy Jones is depicted as a living skeleton wearing a pirate's bicorne hat.

Raymond Z. Gallun's 1935 science fiction story "Davey Jones' Ambassador" tells of a deep-sea explorer in his underwater capsule who comes in contact on the seabed with a deep-sea culture of underwater creatures.

Theodore Sturgeon's 1938 short story "Mailed Through a Porthole", about a doomed freighter, takes the form of a letter addressed to "Mr. David Jones, Esq., Forty Fathoms".

Davy Jones is a character appearing in Popeye comics authored by Tom Sims and Bela Zaboly between 1939 and 1959. He is depicted as a sea spirit who inhabits the bottom of the ocean as well as his Locker, which is located in a sunken ship.

Tom Lehrer's 1953 album Songs by Tom Lehrer includes the number "The Irish Ballad", in which one of the stanzas contains the lines "She weighted her brother down with stones / And sent him off to Davey Jones."<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

The 1959 Broadway musical Davy Jones' Locker with Bil Baird's marionettes had a two-week run at the Morosco Theatre.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

In the television series The Monkees 1967 episode "Hitting The High Seas", the character Davy Jones (played by musician Davy Jones) receives special treatment while kidnapped in a ship as he claims to be related to "The Original" Davy Jones, his grandfather. The fact that Jones the musician shared a name with the legendary seafarer has itself led to a number of puns swapping the two in the decades that followed.Template:Refn

21st centuryEdit

The concept of Davy Jones was combined with the legend of the Flying Dutchman in the Pirates of the Caribbean film series, in which Davy Jones's locker is portrayed as a purgatory place of punishment for those who crossed Davy Jones. Jones is portrayed as a captain assigned to ferry those drowned at sea to the afterlife before he corrupted his purpose out of anger at his betrayal by his lover, the sea-goddess Calypso. Davy Jones is portrayed as an enigma of the sea, featuring octopus tentacles for a beard and crab claw for a hand.

The phrase has often been referenced comedically in the animated television series SpongeBob SquarePants, particularly by the show's ghostly personification of the Flying Dutchman.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> "Davy Jones's locker" has made occasional appearances in the cartoon as a literal gym locker used to contain souls and socks. One episode features Davy Jones from The Monkees claim ownership of the locker, as a pun on the pop singer's name.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

French singer Nolwenn Leroy recorded a song titled "Davy Jones" for her 2012 album Ô Filles de l'Eau. The English version contains the lines: "Davy Jones, oh Davy Jones / Where they gonna rest your bones / Down in the deep blue sea / Down in the deep blue sea..."

In 2022 it was widely reported as referenced and explained by Mrs Justice Steyn to Rebekah Vardy in the Wagatha Christie trial.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

See alsoEdit

NotesEdit

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ReferencesEdit

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