Duke of Montrose (1804 ship)

Last updated

History
Civil Ensign of the United Kingdom.svgUnited Kingdom
NameDuke of Montrose
Namesake Duke of Montrose
BuilderFalmouth [1]
Launched1804 [1]
FateWrecked April 1815
General characteristics
Tons burthen180 [1] (bm)
Armament12 × 6-pounder guns [1]

Duke of Montrose was a Falmouth packet launched in 1804. She participated in six single-ship actions. During the Napoleonic Wars she captured a French naval schooner but a year or so later a French privateer captured her. She returned to British hands some nine months later. During the War of 1812 she was able to drive off American privateers twice. An American frigate captured her in 1813 but gave her up to her crew, also putting onboard the crews of other vessels the frigate had captured. Then a French frigate also captured her and gave her up after disarming her. She was wrecked at Barbados in 1815.

Contents

Career

Duke of Montrose first appeared in Lloyd's Register (LR) in 1813. (Prior to 1813 LR did not carry information on the Falmouth or Harwich packets.) LR showed her with Blewett, master and owner. She had undergone small repairs in 1811. [1]

Duke of Montrose had, of course, been sailing for some time before she appeared in LR. Ship arrival and departures (SAD) data in Lloyd's List and other newspapers carry mentions.

There were also two notable engagements. The first occurred in May 1805. Mutineers had turned HMS Dominica over to the French at Guadeloupe and the French commissioned her as the privateer Napoléon. Napoléon and Impériale, with a large number of privateers and some troops aboard then sailed to Dominica where they captured a British vessel. [lower-alpha 1] On 24 May, at Roseau, the President of Dominica wanted to send out a vessel to chase Napoléon and Impériale. Captain Dyneley of Duke of Montrose was at Roseau and was willing, but had a crew of only 22 men and boys. He also wanted the merchants at Dominica to agree to pay for Duke of Montrose if she was lost. The merchants refused, but Dyneley decide to go out anyway. The President then put on board 26 men from the 46th Regiment of Foot and 13 men from the light company of the 3rd West India Regiment, all under the command of Lieutenant Wallis of the 46th, and Duke of Montrose set out in chase. [3]

Two British warships, Cygnet and Wasp were in the area. They arrived and joined the pursuit. Duke of Montrose succeeded in bringing Impérial to action and about 45 minutes of exchange of fire ensued. As Cygnet came up, Impériale struck. Wasp recaptured Napoléon. [3] In his letter reporting the action, Admiral Alexander Cochrane, commander of the Leeward Islands Station, mentioned that "[T]he Captain of the Duke of Montrose Packet deserves great Credit for his Exertions". [4]

Duke of Montrose, White, master, sailed from Falmouth on 31 December 1806, bound for New York. She was at Bermuda between 28 and 31 January 1807. Next, she was at New York between 18 February and 13 March. Homeward bound, she left Halifax, Nova Scotia, on 25 March, and arrived back at Falmouth on 15 April. [5]

On 13 April 1807 Duke of Montrose arrived at Falmouth, having left New York on 13 March and Halifax on the 25th.

Captain Deneley sailed from Falmouth on 18 May 1807, bound for New York. She was at Halifax between 10 and 13 June, and New York between 22 June and 6 August. She left Halifax on 18 August, and arrived back at Plymouth on 8 September. [5] An alternate report has Duke of Montrose arriving back at Falmouth on 13 July, having left New York on 4 June and Halifax on 16 June. [6]

1st capture: In November Duke of Montrose, Donelely, master, sailed for the West Indies. On 12 December she was 200 miles to windward of Barbados where she encountered the French privateer Confiance, of 5 guns and 85 men. An engagement of three hours ensued in which Captain Dynally, the mate, and four crew men were killed, and the master and one man were wounded, out of a crew of 28. After Duke of Montrose struck, her captors took her into Guadeloupe. Confiance had five men killed and many men wounded. [7] [8]

HMS Eclair captured the merchant vessel Grand Duc de Berg on 27 September 1808 and brought her into Plymouth on 4 October. Grand Duc de Berg was the former Duke of Montrose, and was coming from Guadeloupe with a valuable cargo. [9] Head money was finally paid in April 1829 to the surviving members of Eclair's crew. [lower-alpha 2]

Captain Aaron G. Blewitt was appointed captain of Duke of Montrose on 18 January 1809. [11]

On 9 March 1809 Duke of Montrose sailed from Falmouth for Jamaica. She arrived at Barbados on 5 April and Jamaica on 16 April.

On 6 September 1809 Duke of Montrose arrived back at Falmouth from Cadiz.

Captain Blewett sailed from Falmouth on 14 March 1810. Duke of Montrose stopped at Bermuda on 20 to 23 April on her way to New York. She was at New York from 28 April 8 May. Homeward bound, she was at Halifax from 21 to 24 May, and arrived back at Falmouth on 20 June. [5]

On 24 July 1810, Captain Aaron G. Blewitt sailed from Falmouth, bound for Brazil. Duke of Montrose was at Madeira on 10 August. She left Rio de Janeiro on 16 October and Bahia on 28 October. She arrived back at Falmouth on 11 December. [12]

Duke of Montrose, "Blauvelt", master, left Falmouth on 11 March 1811, bound for New York. She was at Halifax on 20–25 April, and New York between 1 and 15 May. She was Halifax again between 26 and 31 May, and arrived back at Falmouth on 25 June. [5]

Captain Blewitt sailed from Falmouth on 20 July 1811, bound for Brazil. Duke of Montrose was at Madeira on 1 and 2 August. She left Rio de Janeiro on 6 October and Bahia on 24 October. She arrived back at Falmouth on 13 December. [12]

On 6 June 1812 Duke of Montrose, Blewit, master sailed from Falmouth. She was at Madeira on 16 and 17 June. There she took on the Townsend packet's passengers and mail for Brazil; Townsend returned to Falmouth. Duke of Montrose arrived at Rio de Janeiro on 25 July and left on 14 August. She arrived at Falmouth on 20 October. [12]

Captain Aaron G. Blewitt sailed from Falmouth on 14 December 1812. Duke of Montrose was at Lisbon on 23 December, and Madeira between 3 and 5 January 1813. On 11 January she had a six-hour running fight with an American Privateer off the Canary Islands. Eventually the privateer sailed off. Duke of Montrose was at Bahia between 28 and 30 January. [12] On 5 February she arrived at Rio de Janeiro from Bahia and Falmouth. She left Rio de Janeiro on 26 February. She arrived back at Falmouth on 2 May. [12]

Captain Bluett (or Blewett) sailed from Falmouth on 13 May 1813.

2nd capture: During the War of 1812 the British Admiralty wrote to the United States Government that Great Britain would not accept as valid cartel agreements made on the high seas. On 10 June 1813, USS President captured the outward-bound Falmouth packet Duke of Montrose, Captain Aaron Groub Blewett, which managed to throw her mails overboard before President could send a prize crew aboard. President made a cartel of Duke of Montrose, putting all of President's prisoners from three earlier captures on board and then sending her and her now 79 passengers and crew into Falmouth under the command of an American officer. [13] She arrived back at Falmouth on 16 June.

There the British government refused to recognize the cartel agreement that Blewett, his crew, and passengers had signed. Rather than turn Duke of Montrose over to the Agent for American Prisoners, the British government instructed Blewett to resume command of his ship and prepare her to sail again. [13]

The day before her capture, Duke of Montrose had repelled an attack by an American privateer schooner of 14 guns after a two-hour engagement. [14]

On 4 December 1813 Duke of Montrose arrived at Falmouth from Lisbon and Scilly.

3rd capture: Acting Captain John Forester (or Foster) sailed from Falmouth on 28 July 1813, bound for Brazil. Duke of Montrose was at Madeira between 7 and 11 August. She left Rio de Janeiro on 17 October and Bahia on 12 November. [12] (She brought with her some of the prisoners that the USS Essex had taken when she had captured the Falmouth packet Nocton and taken to Valparaiso.) On 12 December the French frigates Sultana and Étoile captured Duke of Montrose at 33°36′N23°57′W / 33.600°N 23.950°W / 33.600; -23.950 , [15] after a five-hour chase. Her captors threw Duke of Montrose's guns, ammunition, and stores overboard and then allowed her to sail to England. [12] Before they left, the French put on Duke of Montrose the prisoners they had taken from several captures. The French had captured the Falmouth packet Little Catherine on 25 November. John Vivian, her captain, was senior to Forester in the Packet Service so he took command of Duke of Montrose. He brought with him most of his crew and two passengers. The French also put on board the crews of the transport Diana and the brig Lucia. [16]

Duke of Montrose arrived at Falmouth on 21 December. [15]

On 25 November two French frigates, one of them Sultane, captured Little Catherine as she was sailing from Passages. [lower-alpha 3] The French took off Little Catherine's crew and abandoned her. On 28 November HMS Hotspur picked her up at sea. [lower-alpha 4] Hotspur found her plundered, all but two of her guns thrown overboard, with her sails set, but her rudder free so that she drifted at the mercy of wind and waves. Captain the Honourable Jocelny Percy of Hotspur put a crew on board who took her into Penzance. A gale on the 30th upset her and put her on her beam ends, where she lay waterlogged. [20]

On 4 June 1814, Duke of Montrose arrived at Jamaica from Falmouth. She returned to Falmouth on 6 August. On 15–16 July she had encountered a hurricane that she and her escort simply had to ride out. [21]

Captain Blewett sailed from Falmouth on 11 September 1814, bound for Halifax. She was at Halifax between 21 October and 3 November. She returned to Falmouth on 19 November. [5]

Fate

Duke of Montrose was lost at Barbadoes on 29 April 1815, the day that she arrived there from Falmouth. [22] She had put her mail on a boat not long before she was lost. [23]

Notes

  1. The French had 73 men on Dominica, including 16 soldiers. Impériale had a crew of 65 men and was armed with one 9-pounder gun and two 2-pounder guns. [2]
  2. A first-class share was worth £31 4s 0½d; a sixth-class share was worth 9s 5¼d. [10]
  3. One source gives the name of the companion frigate as Otter, [16] but the French navy had no vessel by that name at any time between 1786 and 1861. [17] Newspaper accounts identified the second frigate as Étoile. [18]
  4. A first-class share of the salvage money was worth £46 10sd; a sixth-class share, that of an ordinary seaman, was worth £9 6s 2d. [19]

Citations

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 LR (1813), "Falmouth Packets".
  2. "Ship News". Aberdeen Journal (Aberdeen, Scotland), 30 July 1806; Issue 3055.
  3. 1 2 Norway (1894), pp. 71–78.
  4. "No. 15937". The London Gazette . 15 July 1806. p. 886.
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 Olenkiewicz, John S. (5 July 2013), BRITISH PACKET SAILINGS FALMOUTH <> NORTH AMERICA: 1755 - 1840. Accessed 20 October 2019.
  6. Lloyd's List 17 July 1807, №4170, SAD Data.
  7. Lloyd's List 4 March 1808, №4253.
  8. Norway (1894), pp. 78–79.
  9. "Ship News". Morning Post (London, England), 7 October 1808; Issue 11760.
  10. "No. 18562". The London Gazette . 27 March 1829. p. 576.
  11. Howat (1984), p. 24.
  12. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 John S. Olenkiewicz, British Packet Sailings Falmouth <> Brazil. Accessed 19 October 2019.
  13. 1 2 Dudley (1985), pp. 157–9.
  14. Lloyd's List 29 June 1813, №4782.
  15. 1 2 Lloyd's List 24 December 1813, №4832.
  16. 1 2 Howat (1984), p. 17.
  17. Winfield & Roberts (2015).
  18. "INTERMINABLE WAR". Morning Post (London, England), 23 December 1813; Issue 13392.
  19. "No. 17149". The London Gazette . 29 June 1816. p. 1252.
  20. "AMERICA". Royal Cornwall Gazette, Falmouth Packet & Plymouth Journal (Truro, England), 4 December 1813; Issue 545.
  21. "Ship News". Morning Post (London, England), 10 August 1814; Issue 13589.
  22. "The Marine List". Lloyd's List (4978): 78 v. 9 June 1815.
  23. "Multiple Commerce Items". Lancaster Gazette and General Advertiser, for Lancashire, Westmorland, &c. (Lancaster, England), 10 June 10, 1815; Issue 730.

Related Research Articles

Sir John Sherbrooke was a successful and famous Nova Scotian privateer brig during the War of 1812, the largest privateer from Atlantic Canada during the war. In addition to preying on American merchant ships, she also defended Nova Scotian waters during the war. After her conversion to a merchantman she fell prey to an American privateer in 1814. She was burnt to prevent her reuse.

Duke of York was a three-masted brig launched in 1817 at Bideford as a Falmouth packet, sailing between Falmouth, Cornwall, and Jamaica. In 1836 she brought settlers to South Australia for the South Australia Company. She was wrecked in 1837.

French schooner <i>Impériale</i> (1805)

The French schooner Impériale was a 3-gun mercantile schooner-aviso of the French Navy commissioned at Guadeloupe on 23 September 1805. The Royal Navy captured her on 24 May 1806 and named her HMS Vigilant. The Navy renamed her HMS Subtle on 20 November 1806. She wrecked at Bermuda on 20 October 1807.

HMS Nimrod was a brig-sloop of the British Royal Navy, launched in 1812. She spent her war years in north American waters where she captured one small privateer, assisted in the capture of another, and captured or destroyed some 50 American vessels. After the war she captured smugglers and assisted the civil authorities in maintaining order in Tyne. She was wrecked in 1827 and so damaged that the Navy decided she was not worth repairing. A private ship-owner purchased Nimrod and repaired her. She then went on to spend some 20 years trading between Britain and Charleston, the Mediterranean, Australia, and India. She was last listed in 1851.

Little Catherine was launched in 1801 at Bermuda, probably under another name. She was condemned in prize in May 1809 at Barbados and entered British registry that year. At that time she traded between Liverpool and Africa. In 1813 she became a temporary packet sailing for the Post Office Packet Service from Falmouth, Cornwall. In 1813 the French Navy captured her and abandoned her after taking off her crew. The Royal Navy recovered her three days later. In 1814 an American privateer captured her but the Royal Navy recaptured her within two weeks. Her owner refused to pay salvage and turned her over to the Post Office which returned her to use as a Falmouth packet but renamed her Blucher, in honour of Prince Blucher who had helped defeat Napoleon at the Battle of Leipzig in 1813. The government sold Blucher in 1823. New owners returned her to the name Little Catherine and she continued to sail widely until she was last listed in 1845, having been sold to a Chinese owner. She was wrecked in October 1847.

Manchester was originally built at Falmouth in 1805, and served the Post Office Packet Service. Hence, she was generally referred to as a packet ship, and often as a Falmouth packet. In 1813 an American privateer captured her after a single-ship action, but the British Royal Navy recaptured her quickly. She returned to the packet trade until 1831 when she became a whaler, making one whaling voyage to the Seychelles. From 1835 she was a merchantman, trading between London and Mauritius. She was last listed in 1841.

Windsor Castle was launched at Yarmouth in 1804. She spent her entire 11-year career as a Falmouth packet, primarily on the Falmouth–Halifax–New York–Halifax–Falmouth route and the Falmouth–Leeward Islands–Falmouth route. She also sailed on some other voyages. She was involved in two notable single-ship actions. In the first, in 1807, she captured her attacker, a French privateer schooner, in a sanguinary encounter. In the second, in 1815, an American privateer captured her. A prize crew took her into Norfolk, Virginia, where she was sold at auction.

Argo was launched in 1802 in France, possibly under another name, and captured c.1804. She became a privateer and then a whaler. She made two complete whale hunting voyages in the British Southern Whale Fishery. A US Navy frigate captured her on her third whaling voyage.

Comet was launched in 1791 at Rotherhithe. At the outbreak of war with France, she briefly became a privateer before the British East India Company (EIC) chartered her for one voyage to bring back sugar, saltpeter, and other goods from Bengal. Between 1812 and 1821 she made three voyages as a whaler in the British southern whale fishery. Then between 1823 and 1840 she became a whaler based in Hull, whaling in the northern whale fishery. She returned to trade in 1841 and was lost on 1 December 1843 homeward bound from Quebec.

Grace was launched in New York in 1812. She was taken in prize circa 1814. She then became a Falmouth, Cornwall, packet, sailing for the Post Office. She primarily sailed to New York via Halifax and Bermuda, but also sailed to the Mediterranean and Brazil. She twice encountered American privateers, repelling one and outpacing the other. In 1821 she sailed on a seal and whale hunting voyage to the South Shetland Islands and the coast of Chile. She foundered in the South Atlantic circa May 1823 while homeward bound.

Queen Charlotte was built in Emsworth in 1801. She was a regular packet ship for the Post Office Packet Service, sailing out of Falmouth. She made several voyages across the Atlantic between late 1802 and 16 May 1805 when she was captured. She came back into British hands around 1806. The Post Office took her into temporary service between 1812 and 1817. She then became a whaler off Peru in 1818. She remained in the Pacific Coast of South America until she was condemned there in 1820 as unseaworthy; she was last listed that same year. She may have been repaired and have continued to trade on the coast until 1822.

Townshend Packet was launched at Falmouth in 1800 as a packet for the Post Office Packet Service. She made numerous voyages between Falmouth and Lisbon and also sailed to the West Indies, Brazil, and the Mediterranean. She had two engagements with American privateers. In the first the Americans captured her, but then released her. In the second she repelled her attacker. A French frigate captured her in 1814 and then sank her.

Lady Mary Pelham was launched in 1811 as a packet based in Falmouth, Cornwall for the Post Office Packet Service. She repelled attack by privateers in 1812 and 1813, the latter being a notable and controversial engagement with an American privateer. Another American privateer captured her in February 1815 in the West Indies. New owners retained her name and between 1815 and at least 1824 she continued to sail to the Continent and South America.

Express Packet was built in France in 1807, probably under another name, and taken in prize circa 1808. From 1809 she sailed as a packet for the Post Office Packet Service out of Falmouth, Cornwall. In 1812 an American privateer captured here in a notable single ship action, but then returned her to her captain and crew after plundering her. Express stopped sailing as a packet in 1817 and then made one more voyage to Spain, after which she disappeared from online records.

Ann was launched in America in 1800, possibly under another name. She transferred to the United Kingdom in 1805. Between 1810 and 1813 she became a temporary packet operating out of Falmouth, Cornwall for the Post Office Packet Service. American privateers twice captured her in 1813 in single ship actions.

Tartar was launched on the River Thames in 1787. Initially, she traded between London and Smyrna. Between 1792 and 1794 she made one voyage to Bengal and back carrying dispatches for the British East India Company (EIC). On her return she became a packet for the Post Office Packet Service, sailing from Falmouth, Cornwall. In June 1796 she was bringing mail from New York back to Falmouth when a French privateer captured her.

Harriot (or Harriott}was launched in Liverpool in 1786. For many years she was a West Indiaman, sailing between Liverpool and Barbados. In 1796 a French frigate captured her, but the British Royal Navy quickly recaptured her. She became a slave ship. At the beginning of her of her first slave trading voyage a French privateer captured her, and again the Royal Navy quickly recaptured her. She made five slave trading voyages in all. Thereafter she traded with South America. She was last listed in 1814 with stale data.

Harriot was launched in 1784 on the Thames as a West Indiaman. Her owners may have intended to send her to the South Seas as a whaler in 1786, but there is no evidence that she actually made such a voyage. A new owner renamed her Dominica Packet around 1787. She then spent her career primarily sailing between Britain and the West Indies. During her career she, together with two other Liverpool letters of marque, captured a valuable Spanish merchantman. Later, Harriot captured a Dutch East Indiaman. A Baltimore privateer captured Dominica Packet in 1813, but the British Royal Navy quickly recaptured her. She foundered circa January 1821.

Vittoria was a schooner launched at Baltimore in 1811 under another name. British owners acquired her in 1813, probably as a prize, and renamed her. She became a privateer sailing out of Guernsey and captured at least three vessels trading between the United States and France. She disappeared from online records circa 1814, though she remains listed to 1818 with data unchanged from 1813. A French privateer may have captured her in 1814.

Prince Adolphus was launched in 1795 at Falmouth, Cornwall as a packet sailing for the Post Office Packet Service. She was involved in two notable incidents. In 1798 a French privateer captured her, but Prince Adolphus was ransomed in a transaction that required an amendment to a Bill before Parliament. In 1805 her crew mutinied in Falmouth before she set off on a cruise. The mutiny, subsequently joined by the crew of another packet, led the Post Office temporarily to move the packet service from Falmouth to Plymouth. An American privateer captured Prince Adolphus in 1812.

References