History | |
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Great Britain | |
Name | Nimble |
Launched | 1781 |
Fate | Wrecked circa 1804 |
General characteristics | |
Tons burthen | |
Complement | |
Armament |
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 in the triangular trade in enslaved people. 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 wrecked in 1804 or so after she had delivered her captives to St Thomas.
Nimble first appeared in Lloyd's Register (LR) in 1786. [2] Her career before then is currently obscure.
Year | Master | Owner | Trade | Source & notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1786 | Gardner | Montgomery | London–Southern Fishery | LR |
1st whaling voyage (1786): Captain Francis Gardner sailed in 1786 for the Brazil Banks. Nimble arrived in the Downs on 5 July 1786 from the Brazils.
2nd whaling voyage (1787): Captain Gardner gathered 30 tuns of sperm oil, 16 tuns of whale oil, 10 cwt of whale bone. [3] In April 1787 Nimble, Gardiner, master, was reported at Trindade with 30 tons of sperm oil and 20 tons of "black oil". [4]
3rd whaling voyage (1788): Captain Gardner gathered 51 tuns of sperm oil. [3] Nimble, Gardner, master, arrived back at the Downs on 21 July 1788.
4th whaling voyage (1789): Captain Gardner was reported to have been at 5°S8°E / 5°S 8°E (about 270 miles west of Pointe-Noire), with about 250 barrels of sperm oil. Nimble returned to Gravesend on 3 October 1789 with 25 tuns of sperm oil, 70 tuns of whale oil, and 42 cwt of whale bone. [3]
5th whaling voyage (1790–1791): Captain Gardner sailed Nimble in late 1789 or early 1790. Lloyd's List reported on 22 January 1790 that Nimble, Gardner, master, was on shore at Leigh (possibly Leigh-on-Sea), while on her way to the South Fishery. [5] She was gotten off with little damage and returned to Gravesend. [6] On 27 February 1790 she was at the Downs on her way to the South Seas. She returned to Gravesend on 16 February 1791. [3]
6th whaling voyage (1791–1792): Captain Gardner sailed on 28 May 1791. Nimble returned on 27 July 1792. [3]
It is not clear where Nimble was between late 1792 and mid-1795. The data in LR was unchanged from 1792 to 1794.
Year | Master | Owner | Trade | Source |
---|---|---|---|---|
1795 | Dickon | A.Gibbon | London–South Seas | LR; raised and almost rebuilt 1786, & good repair 1795. |
7th whaling voyage (1795–1796): Captain Christopher Dickson acquired a letter of marque on 7 July 1795. [1] At some point thereafter Dickson (or Dixon) sailed for the Brazil Banks. Nimble returned to Britain on 19 April 1796 with 111 tuns of whale oil and 80cwt of whale bone. [3]
Year | Master | Owner | Trade | Source |
---|---|---|---|---|
1796 | Richardson Barton | A.Gibbon | London–South Seas | LR; raised and almost rebuilt 1786, & good repair 1795. |
8th whaling voyage (1796–1797): Captain Richardson sailed from London on 10 June 1796. A Nimble, Hook, master, was reported off Brazil in January 1797. Nimble, Maddick, master, returned to Gravesend from the South Seas on 28 April. [3]
9th whaling voyage (1797–1798): Captain Holland Barton sailed from Deal, bound for the South Seas via Portsmouth, on 17 August 1797. Nimble, Barton, master, returned to Gravesend from the South Seas on 21 October 1798. [3]
Year | Master | Owner | Trade | Source & notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1799 | H.Burton J.Blake | A.Gibbon Illegible | London–Southern Fishery Liverpool–Africa | LR; raised and almost rebuilt 1786, & good repair 1795. |
The changed data in the online copy of LR for 1799 was hand-written, in ink, in an 18th/19th century style. [7] Immediately subsequent issues of LR and the Register of Shipping showed Nimble still sailing to the South Seas. This led at least one source to show her still engaged in whaling. [8] However, ownership had changed to Liverpool and she had become a slave ship.
1st voyage transporting enslaved people (1799–1800): Captain James Blake acquired a letter of marque on 12 March 1799. [1] In March, off Cape Finisterre, Blake stopped the Danish brig Rebecca by firing a warning shot and then ramming into her, putting his own men aboard. He held the Captain Brunn and a passenger overnight on Nimble and then let them return to Rebecca as Rebecca's papers were in order, proving her a neutral. On his return, Captain Brunn discovered that Blake and his men had vandalized Rebecca, and made off with portable valuables and a sack of silver. Brunn sued Blake before the King's Bench, but on 18 December 1801 the judge dismissed the suit on the grounds that there had been no personal injury; the jury agreed. The judge did suggest that Captain Brunn would receive redress in the Admiralty Court. [9]
On 4 April 1799 Captain Blake sailed from Liverpool, bound for Cabinda. [10] In 1799, 156 vessels sailed from English ports, bound for Africa to acquire and transport enslaved people; 134 of the vessels sailed from Liverpool. [11]
Nimble arrived at Kingston, Jamaica with 358 captives, having embarked 366, for a 2% mortality rate. She sailed from Kingston on 15 February 1800 and arrived back at Liverpool on 29 April. She had left Liverpool with 36 crew members and she suffered four crew deaths on her voyage. [10]
After the passage of Dolben's Act in 1788, masters received a bonus of £100 for a mortality rate of under 2%; the ship's surgeon received £50. For a mortality rate between two and three per cent, the bonus was halved. There was no bonus if mortality exceeded 3%. [12]
2nd voyage transporting enslaved people (1800–1801): Captain Thomas Nuttall acquired a letter of marque on 13 June 1800. He sailed from Liverpool on 24 July. [13] In 1800, 133 vessels sailed from English ports, bound for Africa to acquire and transport enslaved people; 120 of the vessels sailed from Liverpool. [11]
Nimble arrived in Demerara on 6 January 1801. [13]
In May Lloyd's List reported that the French privateer Braave had captured Nimble, Nuttell, master, as she was sailing from Demerara to Liverpool. HMS Révolutionnaire recaptured Nimble and Marina, another vessel that Braave had also taken. [14] [15] [lower-alpha 1]
In 1801, 23 British slave ships were lost. The source for this data does not show any losses on the homeward-bound leg of the voyages, [16] perhaps because Révolutionnaire had recaptured Nimble. During the period 1793 to 1807, war, rather than maritime hazards or resistance by the captives, was the greatest cause of vessel losses among British slave vessels. [17]
Nimble arrived back in Liverpool on 23 May. She had left Liverpool with 33 crew members and suffered four crew deaths on the voyage. [13]
3rd enslaving voyage (1801–1802): Captain Hugh Bowland sailed from Liverpool on 18 December 1801. [18] In 1801, 147 vessels sailed from English ports, bound for Africa to acquire and transport enslaved people; 122 of the vessels sailed from Liverpool. [11]
Nimble gathered her captives on the Windward Coast (Assini–Nunez). She arrived at Tortola with 226 captives on 2 August 1802. She delivered some slaves there and others at St Thomas. She sailed for Liverpool on 9 September and arrived there on 20 October. She had left Liverpool with 26 crew members and she suffered no crew deaths on the voyage. [18]
Year | Master | Owner | Trade | Source |
---|---|---|---|---|
1803 | T.Chamley T.Bridge | G.Cafe (or G.Case) | Liverpool–Africa | LR; raised and almost rebuilt 1786, good repair 1795, large repair 1803 |
4th enslaving voyage (1803–1804): Captain Thomas Bridge sailed from Liverpool on 26 May 1803, bound for Africa. [19] In 1803, 99 vessels sailed from English ports, bound for Africa to acquire and transport enslaved people; 83 of the vessels sailed from Liverpool. [11]
On 17 July 1804, Nimble, Bridge, master, was passing Barbados when she would have been captured had not Mary Ann accompanied her for three days.
Nimble arrived in St Thomas on 27 July 1804 with 257 captives. [19]
In September 1804 Lloyd's List reported that Nimble, Bridges, master, had arrived at St Thomas's from Africa and had sold her captives there. [20] The Trans Atlantic Slave Trade database reported that Nimble, Bridges, master, had been wrecked after she had disembarked her captives. She had left Liverpool with 41 crew members and had suffered 11 crew deaths on her voyage. [19]
The ship that became Mary Ann was built in 1772 in France and the British captured her c. 1778. Her name may have been Ariadne until 1786 when she started to engage in whaling. Next, as Mary Ann, she made one voyage transporting convicts to New South Wales from England. In 1794 the French captured her, but by 1797 she was back in her owners' hands. She then made a slave trading voyage. Next, she became a West Indiaman, trading between London or Liverpool to Demerara. It was on one of those voyages in November 1801 that a French privateer captured her.
The British Royal Navy purchased HMS Shark on the stocks in 1775. She was launched in 1776, and in 1778 converted to a fireship and renamed HMS Salamander. The Navy sold her in 1783. She then became the mercantile Salamander. In the 1780s she was in the northern whale fishery. In 1791 she transported convicts to Australia. She then became a whaling ship in the southern whale fishery for a number of years, before becoming a general transport and then a slave ship. In 1804 the French captured her, but the Royal Navy recaptured her. Although she is last listed in 1811, she does not appear in Lloyd's List (LL) ship arrival and departure (SAD) data after 1804.
Allison was launched in France in 1776, almost certainly under another name. The British captured her in 1795. Between 1796 and 1799 she made two whaling voyages to the British southern whale fishery. Then between 1799 and 1807 she made three voyages as a slave ship in the triangular trade in enslaved people. Between the first and the second a French privateer captured her, but British letters of marque recaptured her. The British slave trade was abolished in 1807 and thereafter Allison traded primarily as a coaster. After about 1840 she began to trade to America and Africa. She was lost c.1846.
African Queen's origins are uncertain. She was a foreign vessel, launched in 1789 or 1790, presumably under another name. She was taken in prize in 1796 and by 1797 she was sailing out of Bristol. She made one voyage to Africa during which she was captured and recaptured and then became a slave ship in the triangular trade in enslaved people. She made one voyage to the West Indies as a merchant ship, and one voyage as a whaler, but was damaged in 1801 as she returned home from that whaling voyage and apparently never sailed again.
Ariadne was built in 1795 at Newbury, Massachusetts, probably under another name. She in 1801 became a Liverpool-based slave ship in the triangular trade in enslaved people. She made two voyages transporting enslaved people before a French, and later a Dutch privateer, captured her in 1804 while she was acquiring captives on her third voyage. However, a Liverpool-based vessel recaptured her. Then in 1806, a French privateer captured her and took her into Guadeloupe while Ariadne was on her fourth voyage transporting captives.
Aurora was launched at Chester in 1793 as a West Indiaman. During her career first the French (twice) and then the United States' privateer captured her, but she returned to British hands. Between 1801 and 1808 she made four voyages from Liverpool as a slave ship in the triangular trade in enslaved people. Afterwards, she continued to trade widely until 1831.
Resolution was launched at Liverpool in 1776 as the West Indiaman Thomas Hall; she was renamed in 1779. She sailed briefly as a privateer. Then between 1791 and 1804 Revolution made some six voyages as a whaler. On one voyage, in 1793, a French frigate captured her, but Resolution was re-captured. In 1804 a new owner returned her to the West Indies trade. She does not appear to have sailed after early 1805.
Caroline was a ship launched in France in 1792, possibly under another name. She was taken in prize in 1794 and sailed first as a West Indiaman, then as a whaler in the British southern whale fishery, and finally as a slave ship in the triangular trade in enslaved people. She was lost in 1801, after she had delivered her captives to Kingston, Jamaica on her second voyage from Africa.
Fame was launched in India in 1786. She was sold to Portuguese owners. A French privateer captured but the Royal Navy recaptured her in 1794. She then became a West Indiaman, sailing from Liverpool. Between 1796 and 1804 she made three voyages as a slave ship in the triangular trade in enslaved people. She then returned to the West Indies trade. From 1818 on she was a whaler in the Greenland whale fishery, sailing from Whitby and then Hull. She burnt in 1823 while outward bound on a whaling voyage.
Spy was built in France in 1780, almost surely under another name, and taken in prize. The British East India Company (EIC) purchased her in 1781 and used her for almost two years as a fast packet vessel and cruiser based in St Helena. It then sold her and she became a London-based slave ship, making two voyages in the triangular trade carrying enslaved people from West Africa to the West Indies. She then became a whaler, making seven whaling voyages between 1786 and 1795. She was probably wrecked in August 1795 on a voyage as a government transport.
Alexander was launched in France or Spain in 1797, probably under another name, and taken in prize circa 1799, when she was lengthened and raised. She was registered at Liverpool in 1801 and proceeded to make six voyages as a slave ship in the triangular trade in enslaved people. She then sailed to Brazil and the West Indies and was last listed in 1809.
Resource was launched at Bermuda in 1792, possibly under another name, and sailed from Liverpool from 1798 on. She made four voyages as a slave ship in the triangular trade in enslaved people. The French Navy captured her in 1805 at the very beginning of her fifth voyage. However, the British recaptured her when her captors sent her into the Cape of Good Hope, not realising that the Royal Navy was capturing the Cape.
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. The Spanish seized her in the Pacific; she was condemned at Lima, Peru in March-April 1809, as a smuggler.
Harriot 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 in the triangular trade in enslaved people. 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.
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 Liverpool-based 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.
Ellis was a French prize, captured in 1797, possibly built that year also. Liverpool merchants purchased her. She made five complete voyages as a slave ship in the triangular trade carrying enslaved people from West Africa to the British West Indies. She was lost at sea on 23 April 1806 on her sixth voyage before she could take on any captives.
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.
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.
Chaser first appeared under that name in British records in 1786. She had been launched in 1771 at Philadelphia under another name, probably Lord North. Lord North became Cotton Planter, and then Planter, before she became Chaser. Between 1786 and 1790 Chaser made four voyages as a whaler in the British southern whale fishery. She then became a merchantman. In 1794 a privateer captured her but the Spanish recaptured her. She became a Liverpool-based Slave ship in the triangular trade in enslaved people. In 1796 she was condemned in West Africa on her first voyage in the triangular trade before she could embark any enslaved people.
Several ships have been named Lucy.