Fame (1786 ship)

Fame was launched in India in 1786. She was sold to Portuguese owners. A French privateer captured but the Royal Navy recaptured her in 1794. She then became a West Indiaman, sailing from Liverpool. Between 1796 and 1804 she made three voyages as a slave ship. She then returned to the West Indies trade. From 1818 on she was a whaler in the Greenland whale fishery, sailing from Whitby and then Hull. She burnt in 1823 while outward bound on a whaling voyage.

History
United Kingdom
Name: Fame
Builder: India[1]
Launched: 1786,[1] or 1787[2]
Fate: Burned 23 April 1823
Notes: Teak-built
General characteristics
Tons burthen: 306,[1] or 370,[3] or 377, or 3705894,[4] or 384494 (by calc.), or 396,[5][6] or 420[2] (bm)
Length: 103 ft 3 in (31.5 m)[4]
Beam: 29 ft 0 in (8.8 m)[4]
Propulsion: Sail
Complement:
Armament:
  • 1795:8 × 6-pounder guns[2]
  • 1796:20 × 9&6-pounder cannons[5]
  • 1798:18 × 6&9-pounder cannons[5]
  • 1800:18 × 9-pounder cannons[5]
  • 1803:20 × 6&9&18-pounder cannons[5]
  • 1807:16 × 9&6-pounder guns + 2 × 18-pounder carronades[6]
Notes: Three decks; built of teak

Career

Origins

Fame was built in India in 1786,[1] or 1787. At some point her owners sold her to Portuguese owners. The French privateer Marseilles captured her but then HMS Blanche recaptured her. She was condemned at Roseau, Dominica on 18 June 1794, and duty on her was paid at Liverpool on 9 February 1795.[7]

Fame first appeared in Lloyd's Register (LR) in 1795. This entry gave her origins as the E.Indies.[2] It gave her origins as the East Indies and made no mention of her being a prize. She then became a West Indiaman.

Year Master Owner Trade Source & notes
1795 T.Lorney Neilsen & Co. Liverpool–Dominica
Liverpool–Africa
LR; repaired 1794
1796 T.Lorney Neilsen & Co. Liverpool–Dominica
Liverpool–Africa
LR; repaired 1794
1797 T.Lorney Neilsen & Co. Liverpool–Dominivc
Liverpool–Africa
LR

Slave ship (1796–1804)

In 1796 Fame sailed on the first of three slave-trading voyages.

1st slave voyage (1796–1797): Captain Robert Bennett acquired a letter of marque on 20 October 1796.[5] He sailed from Liverpool on 26 October, bound for Bonny Island.[8] On 25 November, as she sailed to purchase her slaves, Fame recaptured Bernard. Bernard had been sailing from Demerara to Bremen with a cargo of coffee and cotton for Messrs Neilsen and Heathcote when a French frigate and a brig had captured her. After Fame recaptured Bernard, Bernard sailed to Swansea.[9] [10] Fame stopped at Barbados, and arrived at Kingston, Jamaica, on 21 June 1797 with 480 slaves. She sailed from Kingston on 26 July and arrived back at Liverpool on 18 October. She had left Liverpool with 42 crew members and she suffered five crew deaths on her voyage.[8]

Mercantile voyage (1798–1799): Captain Thomas Atkinson acquired a letter of marque on 5 March 1798.[5] He sailed Fame to Grenada via Madeira. On 29 March 1799 LL reported that Fame, Atkinson, master, had been sailing from Demerara to Liverpool when she had put into St Vincents.[11]

2nd slave voyage (1800–1802): Captain Owen Prichard acquired a letter of marque on 21 July 1800.[5] He sailed from Liverpool on 8 August. Fame purchased her slaves at Calabar. She arrived at Trinidad on 12 October 1801, where she landed c. 300 slaves. At some point Captain John Campbell replaced Prichard. She arrived back at Liverpool on 18 January 1802. She had left Liverpool with 42 crew members and suffered 12 crew deaths during the voyage.[8]

3rd slave voyage (1803–1804): Captain Richard Davidson acquired a letter of marque on 8 October 1803.[5] He sailed from Liverpool on 16 November 1803 and purchased her slaves at Rio Pongas, Cape Grand Mount, and Gallinhas. Fame then arrived at Demerara on 14 April 1804. She had embarked 338 slaves and she landed 315.[8] When she arrived at Demerara she brought news that Active, Dalrymple, master, and Prudence, Darby (D'Arcy), master, had been captured on the Windward Coast.[12] Fame arrived back at Liverpool on 21 September 1804. She had left Liverpool with 49 crew members and had suffered seven crew deaths on the voyage.[8]

Year Master Owner Trade Source & notes
1803 Pritchard
J.Campbell
Neilson
Rigg & co.
Liverpool–Africa LR; repairs 1795
1804 J.Campbell Rigg & Co. Liverpool–Africa LR; repairs 1795
1805 J.Campbell Rigg & Co. Liverpool–Africa LR; repairs 1795
1806 J.Campbell
P. Williams
Rigg & Co.
Neilsen & Co.
Liverpool–Africa LR; repairs 1795

West Indiaman

Fame returned to the West Indies trade. In January 1806 Fame sailed for Demerara but had to put back to Liverpool, having suffered damage in a gale. In her trade with Demerara Fame returned with sugar, cotton, and coffee.

On 5 September 1807 Captain Phillip Williams acquired a letter of marque.[6]

Year Master Owner Trade Source & notes
1807 P.Williams Notton & Co.
Neilson & Co.
Liverpool–Demerara LR; repairs 1795
1810 Williams Neilson & Co. Liverpool–Demerara LR
1811 Williams Neilson & Co. Liverpool–Demerara LR
1812 Williams Davis & Co. Liverpool–Demerara LR
1814 P.Williams
J.Gilmour<br /M.Philau
Davison & Co. Liverpool–Brazils LR
1815 M.Pilau
C.H.Byrne
Davison & Co. Liverpool–Antigua LR
1816 C.H.Byrne
G.Huston
Davison & Co. London–Archangel LR
1818 G.Hutton
W.Scorsbie
Hamilton & Co. Liverpool–Brazils LR

Northern Whale Fishery

Fame was registered at Whitby in January 1818. One source states that Scoresby (Snr) purchased her in 1817 as a French prize. Another source declares her a Portuguese prize.[3] She appeared in the Register of Shipping in 1818 with origin India, but no date of building, or mention of her being a prize.

For her first voyage to the Northern Whale Fisheries she sailed from Liverpool on 2 April 1818 and returned to Whitby on 18 August. From 1821 on she sailed from Hull. The data in the table is from Coltish:[13]

Year Master Ground Whales Tuns of whale oil
1818 Scoresby, Jr. Greenland (Gr) 8 122
1819 Dunbar Gr 16 123
1820 Scoresby 10
1821 Scoresby Gr 9 143
1822 Scoresby Gr 6 70
1823 Scoresby, Sr Gr 0 0

On the 1821 whaling voyage Fame carried Congreve rockets. Sir William Congreve equipped her with rockets at his own expense to test their utility in whaling hunting. The Master General of Ordnance and the First Lord of the Admiralty had Lieutenant Colquhoun and two Marine artillerymen accompany the rockets as observers. Captain Scoresby wrote a letter from the Greenland fishery in June reporting that the rockets had been a great success.[14] Subsequent reports made clear that the rockets were fired from about 40 yards and were highly effective in killing whales that had already been conventionally harpooned.[15] In December Lieutenant Colquhoun demonstrated the use of the rockets at Annapolis, Maryland. A newspaper story gave a detailed account of the experiments he performed.[16]

On 27 August 1822, a storm dismasted Dundee in the Greenland whale fishery and trapped her in ice. Fame, Scoresby, Snr., pulled Dundee out and stayed with her until Dundee had rigged jury masts and was sufficiently equipped and supplied to reach Liverpool.[17]

William Scoresby, Jr William Scoresby, Sr, registered Fame at Hull in 1823 after having her almost rebuilt.

Fate

Fame burned at Dear Sound (58°58′00″N 2°48′15″W), in Orkney, on 23 April 1823. Some of the crew arrived at Lieth on the 27h.[18][Note 1]

Captain Scoresby, Sr, retired after 37 years in the Arctic.

Notes, citations, and references

Notes

  1. One source attributes to Fame the fate of a different Fame.[1]

Citations

  1. Hackman (2001), p. 276.
  2. LR (1795), Seq.No.460.
  3. Weatherill (1908), p. 259.
  4. Scoresby (2003), p. 66.
  5. "Letter of Marque, p.62 - accessed 25 July 2017" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 20 October 2016. Retrieved 27 October 2018.
  6. "Letter of Marque, p.63 - accessed 25 July 2017" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 20 October 2016. Retrieved 27 October 2018.
  7. Scoresby (2003), p. 61.
  8. Trans Atlantic Slave Trade Database – Voyages: Fame.
  9. Lloyd's List (LR) №2875.
  10. Williams (1897), p. 342.
  11. LL №3060.
  12. "LIVERPOOL, MAY 2". Lancaster Gazette and General Advertiser, for Lancashire, Westmorland, &c. (Lancaster, England), Saturday, May 05, 1804; Issue 151.
  13. Coltish (c. 1842).
  14. "SHIP NEWS". Morning Chronicle (London, England), 25 July 1821; Issue 16307.
  15. "THE CONGREVE ROCKET". Morning Post (London, England), 6 October 1821; Issue 15775.
  16. "Whale Fishery.—Congreve Rockets". Maryland Gazette and Political Intelligencer (Annapolis, Maryland), 20 December 1821; Issue 51.
  17. "ARCHERY". Lancaster Gazette and General Advertiser, for Lancashire, Westmorland, &c. (Lancaster, England), 28 September 1822; Issue 1111.
  18. Lloyd's List №5799.

References

  • Coltish, William (c. 1842). An account of the success of the ships at the Greenland and Davis Straits fisheries 1772-1842 inclusive.
  • Hackman, Rowan (2001). Ships of the East India Company. Gravesend, Kent: World Ship Society. ISBN 0-905617-96-7.
  • Scoresby, William (2003). The Arctic Whaling Journals of William Scoresby the Younger: The voyages of 1817, 1818 and 1820. Ashgate Publishing. ISBN 9780904180954.
  • Weatherill, Richard (1908). The ancient port of Whitby and its shipping. Whitby: Horne and Son.
  • Williams, Gomer (1897). History of the Liverpool Privateers and Letters of Marque: With an Account of the Liverpool Slave Trade. W. Heinemann.
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