History | |
---|---|
France | |
Name | La Fortune |
Builder | Bordeaux |
Launched | 1800 |
Captured | 15 July 1800 |
United Kingdom | |
Name | Fortune, or La Fortune |
Acquired | circa 1801 b purchase of a prize |
Fate | Last listed 1816 |
General characteristics | |
Tons burthen | 492, [1] or 501, [1] or 513 [1] bm) |
Complement | |
Armament |
|
Fortune (or La Fortune) was a French privateer launched at Bordeaux in 1800 and taken that same year. She immediately made one voyage as a whaler and privateer. She then made two voyages as a slave ship in the triangular trade in enslaved people. After the end of the British enslaving trade Fortune continued to trade with Africa and with South America. She was last listed in 1816.
Fortune was a 400-ton privateer commissioned in Bayonne in February 1800 for a shipowner from Bordeaux. She was under a Captain Bastéré (or Bretée) with 17 officers and 163 to 186 men, with 22 guns. [3]
On 13 July 1800 HMS Ruby was escorting a convoy from St Helena to Great Britain when at 45°N29°W / 45°N 29°W when she sighted a strange sail that appeared to be a French privateer. Winds were light and next morning Ruby sighted the privateer some three miles ahead. Ruby was unable to catch the privateer, which made use of sweeps to remain just out of gunshot. Towards evening a breeze came up and Ruby succeeded in capturing the privateer at 1a.m. on 15 July. [2]
The privateer was La Fortune, of Bordeaux. She was a new vessel, strongly built, fully copper-fastened, and a good sailer. She was on only her second cruise. She had been out a month but had succeeded only in capturing the brig Fame, which had been sailing from Sierra Leone to London. La Fortune was armed with sixteen 18-pounder guns, four long iron 12-pounder guns, and two 36-pounder brass carronades. [lower-alpha 1] Captain Solomon Ferris, of Ruby recommended that the Navy acquire La Fortune. [2]
Fortune first appeared in the Register of Shipping in 1801. [4]
Year | Master | Owner | Trade | Source |
---|---|---|---|---|
1801 | Harlerow | Curtis & Co. | London–Southern fishery | RS |
Captain Sinclair Halcrow acquired a letter of marque on 9 October 1800. [1] By one account he sailed for the Southern Whale Fishery in 1801. [5] In January 1802 Fortune stopped in at Rio de Janeiro for water and food. [6] Halcrow was an experienced whaling captain, but open to other opportunities as well. On 21 March 1801, La Fortune privateer, Captain Halcrow, was in Saldanha Bay. She had taken five prizes: two Spanish brigs, a snow, a sloop, and a Hamburg ship carrying naval stores to Mauritius. [7] [lower-alpha 2] She returned to England on 8 April 1802. [5] In January 1803 Halcrow sailed Sea Horse on a whaling voyage.
The Register of Shipping and other sources carried Fortune as continuing to whale for some years. [6]
Year | Master | Owner | Trade | Source |
---|---|---|---|---|
1804 | Harlerow | Captain & co. | London–Southern fishery | RS |
From 1805 on Fortune made two voyages as an enslaving ship, operating from Liverpool.
1st slave voyage (1805–1806): Captain Charles Watt acquired a letter of marque on 1 April 1805. [1] He sailed from Liverpool on 25 April. Fortune started acquiring captves at the Congo River on 16 July. On 5 September the Liverpool ships La Fortune, Roehampton, and Kitty, were lying in the Congo River, together with the American ships Cleopatra, Africa, and Daphne. The Liverpool ships Roe, Sisters, Active, Rellena, and Clarendon were at Cabenda and Malemba. There was a report that a group of three French privateers of 16 to 22 guns might be in the area. [8]
Fortune left Africa on 10 November and arrived at Nassau, Bahamas, on 21 December. [9] Captain Watt had died on 14 December, shortly before she arrived at Nassau. [10] She sailed from Nassau on 29 March 1806 and arrived back at Liverpool on 2 May. Captain Hugh Bridson had replaced Watt, and at some point Captain R. Kelly had replaced Bridson. Fortune had left Liverpool with 67 crew members and suffered 11 crew deaths on the voyage. [9]
On this voyage the gross profit was £13,271 0s 1d. Of this, 2⁄3 accrued to Thomas Leyland. The costs for the voyage were £11,302 17s 4d. To the profit one must add £7,609 7s 6d sold on credit. [11]
The owners made a net profit of £9,47 10s 3d on the voyage. The profit per captive averaged £27 13s 2d. This result was highly satisfactory to the owners, if not to the captives. [12] [lower-alpha 3]
The captives had sold very slowly; 100 were left on the factors' hands on 31 July 1806. The last batch of these was sold in September. The result was a big bill for rent of store, doctor's attendance, provisions, brandy, wine, tobacco, heads and offals, oil, etc., for the captives. Captain Watt, the third mate, and six seamen had died on the voyage; two sailors drowned. The fifth or trading mate, and one of the men ran away. While she was at Nassau 34 seamen joined or were impressed on board Royal Navy ships on the station. [13]
2nd slave voyage (1807–1808): Captain Archibald Keenan acquired a letter of marque on 12 March 1807. He sailed on 26 April, sailing before 1 May, the day on which the Slave Trade Act 1807, which banned British vessels from participating in enslaving voyages, took effect. Fortune acquired captive at Bonny. She arrived at Kingston, Jamaica on 19 November with 343 captives. She sailed from Jamaica on 24 May 1808 and arrived back at Liverpool on 12 July.
Year | Master | Owner | Trade | Source |
---|---|---|---|---|
1808 | A.Kennan L.Hall | Seyland W.Brown | Liverpool–Africa | RS; repairs 1808 |
Captain Lawrence Hall acquired a letter of marque on 24 November 1808. [1]
Year | Master | Owner | Trade | Source |
---|---|---|---|---|
1810 | L.Hall | W.Brown | Liverpool–South America | RS; repairs 1808 |
Captain Alexander Williams acquired a letter of marque on 16 April 1810.
The RS did not recognize the change in masters from Hall to Williams until its 1813 issue.
Year | Master | Owner | Trade | Source |
---|---|---|---|---|
1813 | L.Hall A.Williams | W.Brown | Liverpool–South America | RS; repairs 1808 |
Fortune was last listed in LR in 1816. [14]
Year | Master | Owner | Trade | Source |
---|---|---|---|---|
1816 | A.Williams | W.Brown | London–Trieste | LR; repairs 1808 |
The last mention of her in the press was on 4 June 1816. She had returned to Liverpool from Trieste and then Havana with a cargo that included 50 kegs of quicksilver, 62 tierces of sugar, 327 tons of logwood, 13 tons of fustic, 35 oars, 24 planks, and 60 spars. [15]
Will was a ship launched at Liverpool in 1797 for Aspinal & Co., who were one of Liverpool's leading slave-trading companies. She made numerous voyages between West Africa and the Caribbean in the triangular trade in enslaved people, during which she several times successfully repelled attacks by French privateers. Will apparently foundered in a squall in July 1806, shortly before the passage of the Slave Trade Act 1807 abolished the slave trade for British subjects.
Otter was launched at Liverpool in 1797, initially as a West Indiaman. She made seven voyages as a slave ship in the triangular trade in enslaved people. During her career she captured one merchantman and recaptured another. She was lost in 1807 on her way back to Britain from her seventh enslaving voyage.
Governor Dowdeswell was launched in 1798 in Spain or France under another name. The British captured her in 1800. New owners in Liverpool renamed her and employed her as a slave ship for five voyages in the triangular trade in enslaved people. With the end of the British slave trade in 1807, new owners employed her as a whaler. She made one complete whaling voyage to the Pacific but the Spanish seized he during her second whaling voyage there.
Hannah was built at Liverpool in 1795. She made four voyages as a slave ship in the triangular trade in enslaved people. She was lost in 1801 as she was returning home after having delivered her captives on her fourth voyage.
Hannah was built at Liverpool in 1797. She made three voyages as a slave ship in the triangular tradein enslaved people. She then made one voyage as a whaler in the British southern whale fishery. Next, she became a West Indiaman and was lost in 1811.
Horatio was launched in 1800 at Liverpool. She made four voyages as a slave ship in the triangular trade in enslaved people. During two of these voyages she was captured and recaptured. Shortly before the British slave trade ended she left the slave trade and sailed between Britain and South America and as a West Indiaman. She was wrecked in 1817.
Angola was launched in 1799 at Lancaster. She became a Liverpool-based slave ship that had made four voyages carrying captives from West Africa to the West Indies. The French had captured her in 1804 on her fifth voyage. Her captors renamed her Tigre, but the Royal Navy recaptured her late in 1804.
Goodrich was a brig launched in Bermuda in 1793. She made three voyages as a slave ship in the triangular trade in enslaved people between 1795 and 1799. She then became a general merchantman and was wrecked in 1808.
Bolton was launched at Liverpool in 1792. She then made 10 voyages as a slave ship in the triangular trade in enslaved people. During her career she repelled one attack by a French privateer, was captured on a later voyage by another before being recaptured by the Royal Navy, and then was captured on her tenth voyage by yet another privateer after Bolton had gathered her captives but before she was able to deliver them to the West Indies. Bolton returned to British ownership, first sailing as West Indiaman, before embarking on an 11th enslaving voyage. She blew up on the African coast in 1806 after some of the captives aboard her succeeded in taking her over and setting fire to her.
William Heathcote was launched in Liverpool in 1800. She made one voyage as a slave ship in the triangular trade in enslaved people. Next, a French privateer captured her in a single-ship action, and the British Royal Navy recaptured her. She became a West Indiaman before she made an enslaving voyage, one of the last such legal voyages. zAfter British partiipation in the trans-Atlantic slave trade ended, she became a West Indiaman again; she sailed to Brazil and as a transport. She was wrecked in July 1816.
Harriot was launched in Spain in 1794, almost surely under another name, and taken in prize in 1797. She made two voyages as a London-based slave ship in the triangular trade in enslaved people. Under new ownership, she then made three voyages as a whaler in the British southern whale fishery. A privateer captured her as she was returning from her third whale-hunting voyage but the British Royal Navy recaptured her. After her recapture she became a merchantman. She was captured and condemned at Lima, Peru in March-April 1809 as a smuggler.
Agreeable was launched at Bermuda in 1786, probably under a different name. French owners acquired her at some point and sailed her as Agréable. In 1793 the British captured her. Subsequently, between 1793 and 1808, she made six voyages as a slave ship, alternating between the triangular trade in enslaved people, and sailing as a regular West Indiaman. French privateers captured her between the second and third voyages, and the third and fourth voyages, but each time the British Royal Navy recaptured her. In the case of the second capture she was in French hands long enough for them to send her out as a privateer. She herself captured an American vessel in 1808 as she was returning to Liverpool from her last slave voyage. After the end of British participation in the slave trade Agreeable traded more widely, particularly to South America. She was condemned at Buenos Aires in 1814 after running aground in the River Plate. She was repaired and continue to sail to Brazil until she returned to Liverpool in June 1819.
Nimble was built in Folkestone in 1781, possibly under another name. In 1786 Nimble was almost rebuilt and lengthened. Between 1786 and 1798 she made nine voyages as a whaler in the British Southern Whale Fishery. Between 1799 and 1804 she made four voyages from Liverpool as a slave ship. On her first voyage as to gather captives she detained a neutral vessel, an action that resulted in a court case. On her second voyage to gather captives, a French privateer captured her, but the Royal Navy recaptured her. She was sold in 1804 at St Thomas after she had delivered her captives.
Intrepid was launched in 1776, almost surely under another name. She appeared as Intrepid in British records from 1787; missing volumes of Lloyd's Register (LR) and missing pages in extant records obscure her earlier name(s) and history. She made one voyage as a whaler in the British southern whale fishery and two as a slave ship in the triangular trade in enslaved people. She also captured a Spanish merchant ship in a notable action. Otherwise she traded widely as a West Indiaman, transport, and to North and South America. She was wrecked in November 1816.
Trelawney or Trelawny was a ship launched at Bristol in 1781. Initially she was a West Indiaman. In 1791 she made one voyage as a slave ship in the triangular trade in enslaved people. She then made one voyage as a whaler in the British southern whale fishery. She was sold to Liverpool and then made two more voyages as an enslaving ship. She was damaged outbound on a fourth enslaving voyage and then disappears from online records.
Louisa was launched in France in 1794, probably under another name. She was taken in prize and between 1798 and 1804 she made five complete voyages as a slave ship in the triangular trade in enslaved people. She was lost in 1804 on the coast of Africa on her sixth voyage.
True Briton was launched at Liverpool in 1775. She made two voyages as a slave ship in the triangular trade in enslaved people. During the second of these voyages there was an unsuccessful insurrection by the captives she was carrying. Then in 1777–1778 she made another enslaving voyage, this time under the name John. On her return to Liverpool, she became the privateer Bellona, and succeeded in taking several prizes. Bellona then made three enslaving voyages. In 1786 her ownership changed, and so did her name. She became Lord Stanley, and under that name proceeded to make 11 more enslaving voyages. In 1794, at Havana, a deadly fever spread through the vessel, apparently after she had landed her captives. On her last voyage the captain acted with such brutality towards a black crew member that the man, who providentially survived, sued the captain when the vessel arrived at Liverpool and won substantial damages.
Aeolus was built in Liverpool. Between 1787 and 1806 she made 13 voyages as a slave ship in the triangular trade in enslaved people. On one voyage she repelled an attack by a French privateer in a single ship action. She was last listed in 1808.
Bud was launched at Liverpool in 1783. Between 1783 and 1800 she made 12 complete voyages as a slave ship in the triangular trade in enslaved people. In 1796 she repelled an attack by a faster, better armed, and more heavily crewed French privateer in a single ship action. Then in 1798, a French privateer captured her in another single ship action after Bud's short but sanguinary resistance. The Royal Navy quickly captured her, and her captor. On her 13th enslaving voyage she was condemned at Kingston, Jamaica after she had arrived with her captives.