The Northern Whale Fishery: The Isabella and Swan | |
History | |
---|---|
United Kingdom | |
Name | Isabella |
Builder | Kingston upon Hull |
Launched | 1813 |
Fate | Wrecked 14 June 1835 |
General characteristics | |
Tons burthen | 374, or 380, [1] or 382, or 385 [2] (bm) |
Armament | 8 × 18-pounder carronades |
Isabella was launched in Kingston upon Hull in 1813. She initially sailed as a transport, and then as a merchantman trading with Canada. In 1817 the British Admiralty hired her as one of two vessels that would go on an expedition to search for a Northwest Passage. The expedition was unsuccessful. In 1820 she underwent two maritime mishaps, only one of which was substantive. From 1824 until she wrecked in the ice in June 1835 she was a whaler in the northern whale fishery (Davis Strait and Greenland).
Isabella first appeared in Lloyd's Register (LR) in 1813. [1]
Year | Master | Owner | Trade | Source & notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1813 | Haslewd | W.Moxon | Hull transport | LR |
1816 | Haslewd A.Haigh | W.Moxon | Hull transport | LR |
1818 | A.Hague Galloway | W.Moxon | Cork transport | LR |
1819 | Galloway C.Brady | Moxon & Co. | London–Disco Hull–Pictou | LR; good repair 1818 |
1820 | C.Brady J.Todd | Moxon & Co. | Hull–Pictou | LR; good repair 1818, small repairs 1819, & large repair 1820 |
Discovery expedition (1818-1819): The Lloyd's Register data does not recognize that the Admiralty hired Isabella in 1817 for a discovery expedition in 1818. She sailed with another hired vessel, Alexander. The two vessels was under the command of Commander John Ross, who was sailing in Isabella, and their task was to explore Baffin Bay. They accompanied the Davis Strait whalers. [3]
Of Isabella's crew of 54 men, four officers were clearly from the navy, as were her six marines. The other officers and men were probably civilians, as were Benjamin Lewis (the master and Greenland pilot), and Thomas Wilcox (the mate and also a Greenland pilot). [2] (Generally when the navy hired a vessel, it would put a naval officer in command, but keep on the master and crew.) There were also three supernumeraries — Captain Sabine and a sergeant from the Royal Artillery (Sabine being the scientific observer), and the Eskimo Sacheous, who was being repatriated. [2]
The expedition left the Thames on 18 April 1818 and arrived at Lerwik on 30 April. By 1 June it was on the eastern side of Davis Strait. [4] The expedition followed the coast of Baffin Bay without making any new discoveries.
On 24 June the expedition was at 70°44′N54°22′W / 70.733°N 54.367°W when it became trapped in ice, and Alexandria grounded. The expedition only got free with the assistance of four nearby whalers. [5] In late July Ross named Melville Bay and Melville Monument for Viscount Melville, who had given Ross his first commission. [6]
In mid-November Isabella and Alexander were reported to have arrived in Brassa Sound, Lerwick. Neither had lost any crew nor had any ill. [7] The expedition did not find any passage to north west, but it did result in whalers knowing that they could work their way out of Davis Strait along the west side, and that there were whales in the fjords and inlets along the way. [8]
On 6 January 1820 Isabella, Brady, master, was driven ashore at Spurn Point. A lifeboat rescued the crew, but it was feared that she would be wrecked. She was on a voyage from Miramichi Bay to Hull, Yorkshire. [9] Isabella was later refloated and taken in to Hull. [10]
On 16 July Isabella, Todd, master, was sailing from Hull to Quebec when she ran ashore on a reef of rocks near Lopness. She was gotten off with apparently trifling damage and proceeded on her voyage. [11]
Year | Master | Owner | Trade | Source & notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1824 | J.Todd | Moxon & Co. | Hull–Quebec | LR; large repair 1820, & repairs 1821, 1822, & 1823 |
In 1824 Thomas Carlill purchased Isabella to sail her out of Hull as a whaler to Davis Strait. [12]
Year | Master | Owner | Trade | Source & notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1825 | Humphrey | Captain & Co. | Hull–Greenland | LR; large repair 1820, & repairs 1823 & 1824 |
The data in the two tables below is from Coltish. [13]
Year | Master | "Fish" (Whales) | Tuns whale oil |
---|---|---|---|
1824 | Humphrey | 11 | 145 |
1825 | Humphrey | 7 | 80 |
In 1825 she struck a submerged rock in the Davis Strait. She was badly damaged but survived to continue whaling. [14]
Year | Master | "Fish" (Whales) | Tuns whale oil |
---|---|---|---|
1826 | Mackenzie | 8 | 99 |
1827 | Humphrey | 23 | 243, or 250 |
1828 | Humphrey | 17 | 235 |
1829 | Humphrey | 10 | 131 |
1830 | Humphrey | 5 | 94 |
1831 | McKenzie | 1 | 12 |
1832 | McKenzie | 42 | 272, or 275; one of the two best fished Hull vessels [15] |
1833 | [R. Wallis] Humphrey[s] [12] | 27 | 180 |
1834 | Humphrey | 13 | 90 |
In 1833 Isabella rescued John Ross, whose ship Victory had become beset by ice on Ross's second Arctic expedition. [16] [17] Isabella and William Lee had spent the season in company andstayed on in the region after the other vessels there had left. Isabella and William Lee sailed about 100 miles further into Lancaster Sound than any other whaler had ever gone. Ross stated that Humphreys was looking for Ross, expecting to find that Ross and his men had been lost. [18] Humphreys disputed Ross's claim, stating that he, Humphreys, had been looking for whales. William Lee was still in company when Ross's boats reached Isabella. [19] After Humphreys rescued Ross, Isabella continued whaling for about another month. [18]
Captain Robert Carlill sailed Isabella to Davis Strait in 1835. She was wrecked there on 14 June 1835 by ice. Lee rescued her 35 crew on 17 June. [20] [21] Some members of the crew were badly frost-bitten. Lee was lost on 1 July; her crew too were saved. [lower-alpha 1]
Captain Carlill and part of his crew went into Lively Harbour to secure passage home via Danish packet brigs. [22]
HMS Hecla was a Royal Navy Hecla-class bomb vessel launched in 1815. Like many other bomb vessels, she was named for a volcano, in this case Hekla in southern Iceland. She served at the Bombardment of Algiers in 1816. Subsequently, she took part in three expeditions to the Arctic. She then served as a survey vessel on the coast of West Africa until she was sold in 1831. She became a merchantman and in 1834 a Greenland whaler. She was wrecked in 1840.
Duckenfield Hall was launched on the Thames in 1783. She spent most of her career trading with the West Indies. She made one voyage for the British East India Company (EIC) between 1797 and 1798. In 1819 she became a Greenland whaler. She was wrecked in the Orkney Islands in 1820 while returning from a whaling voyage.
Brunswick was launched at Hull and initially was a Greenland whaler. Her owner withdrew her from the northern whale fishery in 1836 and then deployed her sailing to New York and Sierra Leone. She was apparently on a voyage to India when she was wrecked on 7 April 1842.
Cicero was launched at Hull in 1819 as a Greenland whaler, hunting bowhead whales. She made six full voyages to the Greenland whale fishery and was lost in July 1826 on her seventh.
Andrew Marvel was launched at Hull in 1812. From 1812 to 1835 she was a Greenland whaler, hunting bowhead whales in the northern whale fishery. Thereafter she became a merchantman. She foundered in September 1843 while on a voyage from Hull to Saint John, New Brunswick.
Earl Fauconberg was launched at Whitby in 1765. From 1784 on she made numerous voyages as a Greenland whaler. She was lost there in 1821.
Aurora was launched at Kingston upon Hull. She traded with the Baltic until 1803 when she became a Greenland whaler. She was lost in 1821 on her 18th voyage to the northern whale fishery.
Lord Wellington was launched in 1810 at Hull, England. She made 20 voyages to Davis Strait and Greenland as a northern whale fishery whaler. She was lost in June 1834 on her 21st voyage.
Gardiner and Joseph was launched at Hull in 1802. She made seven voyages as a whaler in the northern whale fishery until she was wrecked in November 1808.
Gardiner and Joseph was launched at Hull in 1810. She made 11 voyages to Greenland or Davis Strait as a whaler in the northern whale fishery. She then traded briefly between Hull and North America. She foundered on 9 October 1824.
Jane was launched at Kingston upon Hull in 1813 as a West Indiaman. Between 1818 and 1836 she was a whaler in the northern whale fishery. She then became a merchantman and was wrecked in 1866.
Hebe was launched at Hull in 1809. She initially sailed as a West Indiaman, but then sailed to the Mediterranean. In 1813 a privateer captured her but the Royal Navy quickly recaptured her. Between 1816 and 1819 she made two voyages to India, sailing under a license from the British East India Company (EIC). On her return new owners sailed her as a whaler. She was wrecked on 10 March 1821 on her second whaling voyage to the British northern whale fishery.
Princess Charlotte was launched in 1814 at South Shields. She initially sailed as West Indiaman. Then between 1818 and 1819 she made a voyage to India and one to Ceylon, both under a license from the British East India Company (EIC). On her return in 1819, Princess Charlotte became a whaler in the northern whale fishery. She continued whale hunting until ice crushed her on 14 June 1856.
Home Castle was launched in Aberdeen in 1811. From 1813 on she was a whaler in the British northern whale fishery. She was lost in 1829 while whaling in Davis Strait.
William Lee was launched in 1831 in Hull as a whaler in the Northern Whale Fishery. Her owners sold her in 1836 after six whaling voyages and she traded more widely, to Russia, Calcutta, and North America. She was wrecked in December 1847.
Cumbrian was launched at Shields in 1811. Initially, during the last years of the Napoleonic Wars, Cumbrian was a transport. After the end of the war she became a West Indiaman. In 1817 she made one voyage to Bengal, sailing under a licence from the British East India Company (EIC). In 1819 she became a whaler, sailing from Kingston upon Hull to the northern whale fishery. From 1835 on she left whaling and started trading more widely, to North America, Bombay, and Africa. She was driven ashore in August 1844, refloated, and subsequently condemned.
Gibraltar was launched in 1776 in France, almost certainly under another name. Between 1787 and 1795, she was a whaler in the northern whale (Greenland) fishery. A French privateer captured her in February 1796 as she was on her way to the fishery, and burnt her. Her loss led the British government to increase the protection of the outward-bound whaling fleet.
Zephyr was a vessel built at Hull in 1796. She initially traded with the Baltic, though for a year or so she was a London-based transport. From 1810 she made 27 voyages as a whaler in the northern whale fishery. She returned to mercantile trade and was last listed in 1853.
William was launched at Kingston upon Hull in 1811. She made 19 complete voyages to Davis Strait and Greenland in the British northern whale fishery, but was lost to ice on her 20th. Her loss gave rise to an interesting case in claims for salvage.
Lady Forbes was launched at Leith in 1799. She became a West Indiaman, sailing under a series of letters of marque. She survived a major hurricane and an attack by pirates. From 1819, she was a whaler in the British northern whale fishery. She made three annual whaling voyages before she was lost in 1822 when ice crushed her.
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