History | |
---|---|
United Kingdom | |
Name | Margaret |
Builder | J. Gilmour & Co., Calcutta [1] |
Launched | 1804 |
Captured | 1808 |
France | |
Name | Entreprenant |
Acquired | 1808 by capture |
Fate | Currently unknown |
General characteristics | |
Tons burthen | 250, [2] 275, [3] </ref> [1] or 269, [4] or 270, [5] or 2759⁄94 [6] (bm) |
Propulsion | Sail |
Sail plan | Brig |
Armament |
|
Notes | Teak-built |
Margaret was launched at Calcutta in 1804 and cost 59,000 sicca rupees to build. [8] Shortly after her launch she sailed to England for the British East India Company (EIC). Captain Benjamin Fergusson sailed from Calcutta on 3 December 1805. She was at Saugor on 14 February 1806. She reached Saint Helena on 29 April and arrived at The Downs on 24 June. [2]
In England she was admitted to the Registry of Great Britain on 6 August. A government report states that she became a West Indiaman, [3] </ref> but there is no confirmatory evidence. Despite having been admitted to the British registry, Margaret does not appear in Lloyd's Register . She does appear in the Register of Shipping in 1809 with Ferguson, master and owner, and trade London–India. [4]
The French captured Margaret in the Persian Gulf in 1808. [1] Captain H. Wilson reported that the French naval felucca Entreprenante (or Entreprenant), Lieutenant Pierre Bouvet, captured Margaret on 9 February 1808. The felucca initiated the chase the day before at point about 63 miles SSW of Bombay as Margaret was bound for Basra. and after a long chase and an exchange of fire, Wilson struck to Entreprenant. [9] [10]
The French immediately put their captives on Entreprenant, and took over Margaret (or Marguerite), which they then sailed to Île de France. [9] When he switched his vessels, Bouvet called his prize Entreprenant as well. [11]
Margaret/Entreprenant arrived at Port-Napoleon, Île de France, in April. One French source describes her as a brand new 10-gun brig of the British East India Company. Her fate subsequent to her arrival at Île de France is blurry. She may have been sold into commerce in November. [7]
When Bouvet put Wilson and his crew on board the felucca, Bouvet did not mention that the felucca also had on board the crew of a local vessel Entreprenant had captured off Kutch. After the French left, these men came on deck armed and forced Wilson and his men into the forecastle, where they remained in captivity for six days on minimal rations of biscuits and water. Eventually their captors left Wilson and his men at Danou. [9]
Note: It is possible that the sources are conflating two Margarets. The British Library gives Margaret's origin as Chittagong, her managing owners as Downie & Maitland, and her burthen as 250 tons, but her master as Benjamin Fergusson. The other sources, which are not entirely independent of each other, give her owner and master as Benjamin Fergusson, her origin as Calcutta, and her burthen as 275 tons. Phipps is in the second group, but also reports that there was a Margaret, of 300 tons (bm), launched at Chittagong in 1794. [12] A report from 1809 lists a Margaret, of 250 tons, owned by Downie and Maitland, with John Kitson, master. [13]
Pierre-François-Henri-Étienne Bouvet de Maisonneuve was a French Navy officer and privateer.
Entreprenant was a French ship, the third under the same name and with the same captain in the period 1807–1810. She served in the East Indies until the British captured her in 1810 and then had her broken up as unfit for further service.
Mornington was a British merchant vessel built of teak and launched in 1799 at Calcutta. She made three voyages under charter to the British East India Company (EIC). On the first of these her non-European crew suffered a high mortality rate on the voyage back to India. On the third French privateers twice captured her and Royal Navy vessels twice recaptured her. She was a transport for the British invasion of Java in 1811. A fire destroyed her in 1815.
HMS Swallow was an 18-gun Albatross-class brig-sloop of the British Royal Navy, launched in 1795 and sold in 1802. During her naval career she captured a number of French privateers while on the Jamaica station. After her sale she became an armed whaler sailing under a letter of marque. As a privateer she captured two French whaling vessels but then is no longer listed after 1810.
Porcher was launched in 1799 at Calcutta. She made one voyage for the British East India Company (EIC) from Bengal to England. A French privateer captured her in 1802, which gave rise to a case in French courts about the validity of the capture given the impending Treaty of Amiens. The French courts condemned her in prize and new owners in Bordeaux named her Ville de Bordeaux. The British recaptured her in 1804. Thereafter she traded between England and India as a licensed ship. In 1809 she sailed to England where in 1810 new owners renamed her Cambridge. As Cambridge she made three voyages for the EIC as an extra ship. In 1818 she was again sold with her new owners continuing to sail her to the Far East as a licensed ship. She then made two more voyages to India for the EIC. In 1840 she was sold to an American trading house at Canton, and then to the Qing Dynasty, which purchased her for the Imperial Chinese Navy. The British Royal Navy destroyed her on 27 February 1841 during the Battle of First Bar at the onset of the First Opium War.
Suffolk was launched in 1803 at Calcutta and at some point prior to 1810 was renamed General Wellesley. She made one voyage for the British East India Company (EIC) but an American privateer captured her in December 1814 on the outbound leg of her second EIC voyage. In January 1815 she stranded on the Charleston Bar and became a total loss.
Hope was launched in 1804 at Calcutta. She made one voyage for the British East India Company (EIC). She continued to trade around India until a French frigate captured her in 1808. She apparently returned to English hands and was renamed Madras Merchant. She was then sold in 1816 at Manila.
Arran was launched at Calcutta in 1799. In 1800, she sailed to Britain for the British East India Company (EIC). On her return voyage, she suffered a major outbreak of illness while between England and the Cape. She then traded between England and India and around India until she was lost in June 1809 while sailing to Basra from Bengal.
Clyde was launched at Calcutta in 1802 and cost sicca rupees 76,000 to build. In 1803 Clyde was listed as belonging to the port of Calcutta with George McCall, master, and Gilmore & Wilson, owners.
Lucy Maria or Lucy and Maria was launched at Calcutta in 1801. She made one voyage to England carrying rice from Bengal on behalf of the British East India Company (EIC). She was seized at Amboyna in 1804 and then sailed as the Dutch ship Victoria. The British recaptured her in 1806 and new owners renamed her Troubridge and later renamed her Lucy Maria. As Troubridge she served as a transport for two invasions, that of Mauritius in 1810 and Java in 1811. She was broken up in 1821.
For the invasions of Île Bourbon and Île de France (Mauritius) the British government hired a number of transport vessels. Most of the transports were "country ships". Country ships were vessels that were registered in ports of British India such as Bombay and Calcutta, and that traded around India, with Southeast Asia, and China, but that did not sail to England without special authorization from the EIC. In addition, some were "regular ships" of the British East India Company (EIC), and some were "extra ships". Regular ships were on a long-term contract with the EIC, and extra ships were vessels the EIC had chartered for one or more voyages.
Marian was launched at Calcutta in 1800. She made one voyage from Calcutta to England for the British East India Company (EIC) in 1801.
Sir William Burroughs was a merchant vessel launched in 1803 at Calcutta. A French privateer captured her in 1807 and the British recaptured her in 1810. She made one voyage for the British East India Company (EIC) in 1812. She is last listed in 1820.
Auspicious was built in 1797. The British East India Company (EIC), chartered her for a voyage to Bengal and back. At Calcutta a fire almost destroyed her. She was rebuilt there some years later. She served as a transport vessel in the British government's expedition to the Red Sea in 1801. She then sailed to England, again under charter to the EIC. In 1811 she sailed to Bengal to remain. She was sold in 1821 either to Malabars or Arabs.
Entreprenant was the first of a sequence of three vessels of the French Navy in 1807-1810 under the same name and with the same captain. She was a patamar launched in 1807 at Île de France. She cruised in Indian waters against British shipping. Her captain in 1808 turned her over to her prisoners from a capture. After he left, one set of prisoners captured her from another and she then disappears from further records.
The French ship Généreux was originally the Portuguese merchantman Ouvidor Pereira. Captured by Entreprenant in 1809, the French navy took her into service as Généreux. In 1814 she was renamed Loire. She was decommissioned at Brest in July 1838 and struck from the lists in August before being broken up.
Sullimany, was built at Demaun between 1795 and 1799, registered in Bombay after 1803, and was still sailing c.1840. She was originally a country ship. A French privateer captured her in 1799, but an East Indiaman fortuitously recaptured her shortly thereafter. She also served as a transport in two British military campaigns.
Aurora was launched in 1790 at Calcutta. The first 10 years of her career are currently obscure. In 1801 she made a voyage to England for the British East India Company (EIC), and then was briefly registered in England. She returned to India to continue to sail as a "country ship" until she was sold to Portuguese or Spanish owners in 1811. She returned to British ownership circa 1816 and made a second voyage for the EIC, this time from China to England. She returned to English registry and made one voyage to India under a license from the EIC. She then switched to sailing between Liverpool and Quebec and was lost in the Atlantic around 1822.
During the Age of Sail many merchant ships were named Ganges, after the Ganges river in India.
Ganges was launched at Calcutta in 1806. In 1807 or 1809 a French privateer captured her. The British Royal Navy recaptured her the next year. She assumed British Registry in 1812, but had traded out of London since late 1810 or early 1811. By 1820 she was trading between London and Bengal. She was last listed in 1846.
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