Santa Anna (1806 ship)
History | |
---|---|
Spain | |
Name | Santa Anna |
Builder | Brazils[1] |
Captured | 18 June 1806 |
United Kingdom | |
Owner |
|
Acquired | 18 June 1806 by capture |
Fate | Wrecked 11 August 1811 |
General characteristics | |
Tons burthen | 220 or 225[1] (bm) |
Santa Anna was a Spanish brig that a British privateer captured in 1806. Her new owners then employed Santa Anna as a whaler. She wrecked in the Straits of Timor in 1811.
Capture
On 18 June 1806 the British privateer Port au Prince's boats entered San Blas Bay (possibly San Blas, Nayarit), and captured Santa Anna. Santa Anna was a "corbetta" under the command of Captain Francisco Puertas and carrying a cargo of pitch, tar, and cedar boards to Guayaquil. The next day Captain Isaac Duck of Port au Prince sent 20 of his Spanish prisoners ashore in his longboat. Two Spaniards and two negro slaves joined Port au Prince. The slaves belonged to Santa Anna's owner; legally Duck should have sent them ashore too, but they pleaded not to go have to go ashore and Duck yielded to their pleas. Duck then put Mr. Charles Maclaren in command of Santa Anna and gave him a crew of 12 men, plus a Spaniard, to navigate her to Port Jackson.
Subsequent career
Santa Anna arrived at Port Jackson on 24 October 1806.[2][3] There the Vice admiralty court condemned her and Maclaren sold her for £3200. A list of ship arrivals and departures gives the cargo of the "Santa Anna prize" as "sugar, etc."[4] The last of her cargo was sold on 8 December 1806 and it included a "bale of chillies".[5]
Lord, Kable, & Underwood purchased her for use as a whaler. She left Port Jackson on 14 July 1807,[3] under the command of Captain William Moody, and with a crew of 20 men. She was bound for the New Zealand seal fisheries and then London.[6] At the Bay of Islands Moody picked up Ruatara (or Duaterra), a Maori chief who wanted to travel to London to meet King George. Santa Anna then sailed to the Bounty Islands, where she left a "gang" for what would be 10 months.[7] The men left included Ruatara, another Maori, two Tahitians, and ten British sailors.[6] Santa Anna then sailed to Norfolk Island and Sydney.
Santa Anna reached Sydney from Norfolk Island on 6 June 1808, and left for the Bounty Islands on 15 October. There she picked up 8000 sealskins and the 11 survivors of the shore party that she had left. She had left the shore party with short rations, and despite reports that a resupply vessel had been sent, the shore party did not get resupplied until the whaler King George arrived a few weeks before Santa Anna returned.[8]
Santa Anna reached Deal on 13 July 1809.[a] Ruatara did not get to see King George. Moody refused to pay him back wages and clothing, but offered to send him back via Ann, which the government had hired to take some 200 prisoners to New South Wales. Captain Charles Clarke, of Ann refused to take Ruatara on board without seaman's clothing, which the Reverend Samuel Marsden, who was returning to Australia on her, purchased for him. Ann left Portsmouth shortly after 25 August, with Marsden taking the opportunity of the voyage to learn Maori and to teach Ruatara more English.[7] Ann arrived in Sydney on 17 or 27 February 1810. After more misadventures Ruatara eventually reached home in 1812 or so. There he reciprocated Marsden's kindness and friendship by facilitating the Reverend's mission to the Maori.[8]
Santa Anna first appeared in Lloyd's Register (LR) in 1810 with William Dagg, master and owner. Her trade was London–South Seas.[1]
In 1810 William Dagg acquired Santa Anna; between 1803 and 1806 he had been captain of the whaler Scorpion. Santa Anna was on the Protection List in 1810, and on 23 May 1810 Dagg sailed her for the South Sea Whale Fishery.[10] Santa Anna arrived at Sydney on 5 February 1811 and left for the seal fishery on 10 April.[4] At the time of sailing she was carrying 45 tons of sperm whale oil, but wished to complete her cargo.[6]
Loss
On the way back to England she was wrecked in the Straits of Timor. On 21 February 1812 Lloyd's List reported that Santa Anna, Dagg, master, had been lost on the coast of New Holland, but that all the crew had been saved.[11] Henderson, based on an account by a surviving crew member, gives the date of loss as 11 August, and the location as north of New Guinea.[6]
Misattribution
Some have hypothesized that Santa Anna is the Mahogany Ship of Warrnambool.[12] However, this is incorrect as Santa Anna was wrecked north of Australia in 1812. All the ship's crew were saved.[13]
Notes, citations, and references
Notes
Citations
- ^ a b c d LR (1810), Supple. pages "S", Seq.№107.
- ^ Clayton (2014), p. 213.
- ^ a b Bladen (1898), p. 339, fn.
- ^ a b "Arrival of Vessels at Port Jackson, and their Departure". Australian Town and Country Journal, Saturday 3 January 1891, p.17. Retrieved 17 November 2015.
- ^ Barnard (2015), p. 67.
- ^ a b c d Henderson (2007), Vol. 1, Section 2: Santa Anna.
- ^ a b Letter of Samuel Marsden dated Rio de Janeiro 15 November 1809. Christian Observer, Vol. 9, pp.639-40.
- ^ a b McNab (1907), pp. 95–97.
- ^ [Lloyd's List 14 July 1809, №4370.]
- ^ British Southern Whale Fishery Database – Voyages: Santa Anna.
- ^ Lloyd's list 21 February 1812, n°4641
- ^ Loney (undated pamphlet, c.1975), p.13.
- ^ Bateson (1972), p. 48.
References
- Barnard, Edwin (2015). Emporium: Selling the Dream in Colonial Australia. National Library of Australia. ISBN 9780642278685.
- Bateson, Charles (1972). Australian Shipwrecks. Vol. 1: 1622-1850. Sydney: AH and AW Reed. ISBN 0-589-07112-2.
- Bladen, Frank Murcot (1898). Historical Records of New South Wales. Vol. 6. C. Potter.
- Clayton, Jane M. (2014). Ships employed in the South Sea Whale Fishery from Britain: 1775–1815: An alphabetical list of ships. Berforts Group. ISBN 978-1908616524.
- Henderson, Graeme (1980). Unfinished Voyages: Western Australian Shipwrecks 1622–1850. University of Western Australia. ISBN 0855641762.
- Loney, Jack (undated pamphlet, c.1975) The Mahogany Ship. Marine History Publications, Geelong. National Library of Australia Card 0 909244030
- McNab, Robert (1907). Murihiku and the Southern Islands: A History of the West Coast Sounds, Foveaux Strait, Stewart Island, the Snares, Bounty, Antipodes, Auckland, Campbell and Macquarie Islands, from 1770 to 1829. W. Smith.