Lapwing (1762 EIC packet)

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History
Flag of the British East India Company (1707).svg Great Britain
NameLapwing
Namesake Lapwing
OperatorBritish East India Company
BuilderFrance [1] </ref>
Launched1762 [1]
FateSold 1765
General characteristics [2]
Tons burthen120, [1] [3] or 190 [2] [(bm)
Complement25, [1] or 30
Armament2 guns + 2 swivel guns, [1] or 10 guns

Lapwing was a packet ship built in France in 1762 that the British East India Company acquired. She made two round-trips to India for the company, with the EIC selling her in 1765 in Bengal on her third voyage.

Contents

EIC voyages

EIC voyage #1 (1762–63)

Captain John Griffin (or Griffen) left Britain on 5 April 1762, bound for Madras. He returned on 12 March 1763. [3]

EIC voyage #2 (1763–64)

Captain Griffin left Plymouth on Plymouth on 5 April 1763. Lapwing reached Johanna on 22 July, and arrived at Madras on 20 August. Homeward bound, she reached the Cape on 14 November, St Helena on 6 December, and Torbay on 1 February 1764, before arriving at The Downs on 13 February. [2]

EIC voyage #3 (1764–65)

Captain John Griffin started on 28 March 1764, bound for Bengal, [3] but did not leave Portsmouth until 3 June. By 6 December Lapwing had reached Acheh. On 23 January 1765 she arrived at Ingeli, a point on the west side of the Hooghli Estuary. On 4 April she was at Calcutta. The EIC sold Lapwing there in 1765. [2] [3]

Citations

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 Lloyd's Register (1764). Letter "L".
  2. 1 2 3 4 British Library: Lapwing (2).
  3. 1 2 3 4 Hardy (1800), p. 218.

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References