Ocean (1790 ship)

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History
British-Red-Ensign-1707.svgGreat Britain
NameOcean
Launched1790, Plymouth [1]
Captured1797
FateRecaptured 1798
General characteristics
Tons burthen41 [1] (bm)
Sail plan Sloop

Ocean was a sloop launched in 1790 at Plymouth. Circa 1792 the Sierra Leone Company purchased her and sailed her in support of their colony. In 1793, the Company sent her on a voyage along the coast to trade for African commodities that she brought back to Freetown for re-export. The Company judged the experiment a success and the next year it sent several more vessels to do the same. The French captured Ocean in August 1796; the Royal Navy recaptured her in January 1798. As of May 2024, her subsequent fate is obscure.

Contents

Career

Ocean first appeared in Lloyd's Register (LR) in 1791. [1]

YearMasterOwnerTradeSource
1791F.GarveyCaptain & Co.Dublin–WaterfordLR
1792F.Garvey
Abraham Low
Captain & Co.
Sierra Leone Company
Lisbon–Plymouth
Cork–Africa
LR

In October 1793, the Sierra Leone Company sent Ocean to cruise from Bissau to Cape Mesurado. Her mission was to visit the forts on the way to purchase African commodities and bring them back to Freetown. There the company would warehouse them until it could export them on vessels visiting Freetown. [2]

The trial apparently was a success. In April 1794 the company expanded the program. [2]

YearMasterOwnerTradeSource
1795A. LockSierra Leone CompanyLondon–AfricaLR
1796S.RoweSierra Leone CompanyLondon–Sierra LeoneLR

In August 1796, the French privateers Africane and Carmagnole captured Ocean, Macaulay, master, off the coast of Africa. [a] The report stated that they had also captured Speedwell, Payne, master, Manchester, Kendall, master, and Atlantic, Rae, master. [5] [b]

Macaulay was the brother of the governor of the Sierra Leone settlement, Zachary Macaulay. The news of the capture of the vessels, including Ocean, reached the governor at Freetown on 3 September. [6] A few days later Macaulay's brother arrived at Freetown, together with the letters he had been carrying when taken, and a letter from the captain of Africain. [7] An American trader in enslaved people named McLeod, purchased Ocean at Gorée. [8]

In late 1797 or early 1798 HMS Daedalus and HMS Hornet captured six French vessels off Gorée: [9] Two of these were

Daedalus and Hornet, were working with the letter of marque slave ships Ellis and St Anne to find and defeat "Renaud's Squadron". They shared by agreement in the proceeds of the recapture of Quaker (December 1797) and Ocean (January 1798). [10] [11]

The disposition of Ocean after her recapture is obscure. Ocean was no longer listed in Lloyd's Register in 1798.

Notes

  1. As of January 2023 it is not clear which vessels Aricane/Africaine and Carmagnole were. The most complete source on French privateers has no suitable candidates. [3] One source reports that a French privateer named Carmagnole brought prizes captured from the British and the Spanish into Charleston between late 1794 and February 1796. Carmagnole disappeared from the Charleston records and was believed to have become one of Victor Hugues' privateers at Guadeloupe. She was described as a schooner of eight guns. [4]
  2. Manchester and Speedwell were slave ships on their way to acquire enslaved people for the triangular trade. Atlantic and Ocean were not.
  3. It was common for vessels to shuttle captives between ports to get a better price for the trans-Atlantic trade.

Citations

  1. 1 2 3 LR (1791), Seq.no.O61.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Scanlan (2017), p. 42.
  3. Demerliac (1999).
  4. Jackson (1969), pp. 84, & 104–105.
  5. "The Marine List". Lloyd's List. No. 2887. 6 January 1798.
  6. Macaulay (1900), pp. 150–151.
  7. Macaulay (1900), p. 152.
  8. Macaulay (1900), pp. 174–175.
  9. "No. 14096". The London Gazette . 6 March 1798. p. 205.
  10. "No. 15138". The London Gazette . 25 May 1799. p. 509.
  11. "No. 15510". The London Gazette . 28 August 1802. p. 922.

References