
Itโs a tale as old as time. Boy meets ocean. Boy takes a dip in Havana harbor. Shark says, โSnack time.โ What follows is arguably the first documented shark attack in Western historyโunless you count every sailorโs tall tale everโbut more importantly, itโs the only one immortalized with the flair of 18th-century drama and a shark with… lips?
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One Leg, Nine Rescuers, and a Whole Lot of Shark Drama
Our unlucky protagonist is 14-year-old Brook Watson, a cabin boy who, in 1749, decided to go for a swim in Havana, Cuba. Cue the ominous cello musicโenter stage left: shark. What kind of shark, you ask? Experts now say it was probably a tiger shark or a great white, but in 18th-century artistic tradition, it was… whatever a shark would look like if painted by someone who had never seen one before.
The shark attacked young Brook not once, but twice. It chomped off his right leg below the knee and was reportedly coming back for thirds when a boatload of crewmates managed to drag him out of the water. This sceneโgruesome, heroic, and apparently lacking any concern for shark anatomyโwas immortalized decades later in a painting commissioned by Watson himself. Because when you survive a shark attack and lose a leg, what you really want is a giant oil painting to show everyone just how close your femoral artery came to becoming fish food.
The Painting That Bit Back
Watson commissioned American artist John Singleton Copley to paint the scene in 1778. The result, Watson and the Shark, became an instant sensationโand also an instant case study in marine biology by way of speculative fiction. The shark in the painting has lips (yes, actual lips), front-facing eyes (like a wolf, but wetter), and an expression that suggests it may be late for a dinner reservation. Copley had never seen a shark, so he did what any artist might do: he winged it. The result is either horrifying or adorable, depending on your feelings about anthropomorphic sea creatures.

The painting features nine men attempting to rescue Watson, most of whom seem dramatically confused or spiritually conflicted about what exactly to do with their oars. One figure, a Black sailor holding a rope, is especially striking. Some scholars believe he was included intentionally to emphasize the humanity of Black men at a time when abolitionist ideas were starting to gain traction. Others think heโs just there because someone had to throw the rope. Either way, the man looks like he knows what heโs doing, which is more than we can say for some of the other crew members who appear to be engaged in synchronized flailing.
Shark Bites and Social Clout
After surviving the attack, Watson went on to live a legendarily successful life. He became a wealthy merchant, Member of Parliament, and eventually Lord Mayor of London. Take that, Sharky. He made sure his amputated leg didnโt keep him downโunless, of course, he was falling down a flight of stairs, in which case… well, we all have our limits.
Watsonโs choice to commission the painting wasnโt just an act of personal catharsis; it was branding. โLook at me,โ it seemed to say. โI lost a leg and still beat the odds. Also, hereโs a great example of why you shouldnโt swim unsupervised.โ The painting was donated to Christโs Hospital School in London with a note that it should serve as โa most usefull lesson to youth.โ Thatโs rightโnothing says moral education like a child being devoured by a sea monster with kissing lips.
Was This Really the First Shark Attack?
Technically, no. Archaeologists have discovered shark-bitten human remains in Japan dating back 3,000 years and in the Caribbean from around the 9th century. So while Watsonโs run-in may be the first documented shark attack in the sense that it came with an oil painting and a moral lesson for the kiddies, itโs far from the earliest.
Still, itโs the first one to feature a nine-man rescue team, theatrical posing, a shark with human lips, and a future Lord Mayor. So, historically speaking, itโs got flair.
Moral of the Story? If It Ainโt Baroque, Donโt Fix It
If youโre going to be eaten by a shark, make sure it happens in dramatic fashion, ideally in full view of multiple rescue boats. Bonus points if you can later commission a baroque masterpiece that redefines marine zoology and earns you political clout. Or, you know, maybe just stick to the pool. And since New Yorkers have a tendency to bite more frequently than sharks, you might want to avoid swimming in the Big Apple altogether.
Watson may have lost a leg, but he gained a legacyโand a permanent spot in both art history and our collective โbad decisions near waterโ file. Somewhere out there, a shark with a lip gloss addiction is still wondering what went wrong.
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