Jump to content

Lusitania (1805 ship)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by WikiCleanerBot (talk | contribs) at 17:46, 29 June 2020 (v2.02b - Bot T17 - WP:WCW project (Internal link inside external link)). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

History
UK
NameLusitania
OwnerVarious
BuilderWells,[1] or Wales[2]
Launched1805,[1] or 1804[2]
FateLast listed 1838
General characteristics
Tons burthen243 (bm),[2] or 244,[3] or 245 (bm),[1] or 243 (bm)
Complement18[3]
Armament
  • 1805:6 × 4-pounder guns[1]
  • 1807:10 × 9-pounder guns[3]
  • 1813(1):2 × 12-pounder guns + 8 × 9-pounder carronades[4]
  • 1813(2):6 guns[4]

Lusitania was a British merchant vessel launched in 1804. She emerges from the general background for two notable events in her history, one in 1813 when the French Navy captured and released her, and then between 1826 and 1830 for a whaling voyage.

Career

On 27 August 1807, Captain John Carman received a letter of marque for Lusitania.[3]

Capture and release

In 1813 Lusitania's owner was Buckle, and her master changed from Bennett to Johnston.[4]

On 27 November 1813 Lusitania and four other merchant vessels left Portsmouth in a convoy under escort by HMS Severn. The other four were:

  • Blendon Hall, 473 tons (bm), Barr, master, which had been sailing from London to Bermuda;
  • John O'Gaunt, 426 tons (bm), P. Inglis, master, which had been sailing from London to Martinique;
  • Aurora, Scheidt, master, which had been sailing to Amelia Island; and,
  • Superb, 130 tons (bm), R. Roberts, master, which had been sailing from Gibraltar to England.

Due to a heavy storm, the five merchantmen lost contact with the convoy and its escort. On 6 December they were in the Atlantic Ocean when the French frigate Clorinde captured all five (44°30′N 10°30′W / 44.500°N 10.500°W / 44.500; -10.500).[5] The French took off the crews of four vessels and scuttled three. They kept Lusitania as a cartel and put all their captives aboard her. In their haste, they failed to sink Blenden Hall. They then permitted Lusitania to sail to a British port.[5]

On 18 December Challenger brought Blenden Hall into Plymouth. There, Blenden Hall was reunited with her crew, which had arrived that same day on Lusitania.[6]

Voyages to Australia

The Register of Shipping (RS) for 1823 showed Lusitania with Langdon, master, Buckle, owner, and trade London-New South Wales.[7][Note 1] She had departed London 6 July 1821 with general cargo and passengers. She had arrived in the River Derwent, Van Diemen's Land on 28/29 October 1821.[9] Langdon made a second voyage that reached Sydney in May 1823.

Whaling

In 1825 Lusitania underwent a large repair. Thereafter she is described as a bark.[10]

Lusitania left Britain on 21 October 1826 for a whaling voyage to Timor. Her owner was Thomas Sturge & Co., and her master was Robert Ross. She was at St Iago, Cape Verde, on 5 December. She sighted the Australian coast near Shark Bay on 21 April 1827. By 20 May she was at Timor, where she landed five Dutch missionaries. A few days later, on 1 June, Lusitania was at Coupang. Between 21 and 25 November 1828 and 2 February 1829 she was whaling off New Guinea.[2] In November 1828 she was at Saint George's Channel, where she encountered many "old friends" among the locals,[11] suggesting that she had been that way before. On 2 February she spoke Cyrus. Nine days later Lusitania was at Carteret Bay, where she traded with islanders who had come some distance overland to trade a hog for an old whaling lance.[12] Lusitania was again at Coupang on 27 April. By 1829 illness aboard Lusitania was so bad that she had to return home.[13] She returned via Delagoa Bay and the Cape of Good Hope. She returned to Britain on 26 January 1830 with 500 casks and 36 tanks of whale oil.[2]

Fate

Lusitania's entries in Lloyd's Register in the 1830s show her master as C.Brown, but are otherwise essentially blank. Lloyd's List did report on 16 September 1834 that Lusitania, Brown, master, had stranded on Fastbro Reef (possibly Falsterborev).

Lusitania was last listed in Lloyd's Register in 1838, but the listing had been unchanged for several years and showed no owner or trade.

Notes, citations, and references

Notes

  1. ^ The Australian Dictionary of Biography reports that Langdon owned Lusitania at the time of her voyages to Australia.[8]

Citations

  1. ^ a b c d Lloyd's Register Supple. Seq. №L24.
  2. ^ a b c d e British Southern Whale Fishery Database – voyages: Lusitania.
  3. ^ a b c d Letter of Marque,"Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2015-07-09. Retrieved 2015-10-07.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) - accessed 14 May 2011.
  4. ^ a b c Lloyd's Register (1813), Seq. №L617.
  5. ^ a b Senior (1911), pp. 180–182.
  6. ^ Lloyd's List №4831. Accessed 3 December 2016.
  7. ^ RS (1823), Seq.№637.
  8. ^ Australian Dictionary of Biography: Langdon, William (1790–1879).
  9. ^ Hobart Town Gazette and Van Diemen's Land Advertiser, 3 November 1821, p.2.
  10. ^ Lloyd's Register (1826), Seq. №L668.
  11. ^ Gray (1999), p. 26.
  12. ^ Gray (1999), p. 29 fn. 28.
  13. ^ Gray (1999), p. 38.

References

  • Gray, Alastair C. (1999). "Trading Contacts in the Bismarck Archipelago during the Whaling Era, 1799-1884". Journal of Pacific History. 34 (1): 23–43.
  • Senior, W. (1911). "The Rivals". Mariner's Mirror. 1 (7): 180–182.