History | |
---|---|
United Kingdom | |
Name | Perseverance |
Builder | Rotherhithe |
Launched | 1801 |
Fate | Broken up 1841 |
General characteristics | |
Tons burthen | 400, [1] or 412, or 414, [2] and later 423 [3] (bm) |
Propulsion | Sail |
Complement | |
Armament |
|
Perseverance (or Perserverance) was launched on the Thames in 1801. She then spent her entire career of 16 voyages as a whaler. Early in her career a French privateer captured her, but the British Royal Navy quickly recaptured her. Perseverance would herself later capture a vessel too. She was broken up in 1841.
Perseverance entered Lloyd's Register in 1801 with W. Stevers, master, Mellish, owner, and trade London–Southern Fisheries. [4]
Voyage #1 (1801–1802): Captain William Stavers received a letter of marque on 27 February 1801. [2] On 9 March he sailed Perseverance for Walvis Bay. She was at Walvis Bay in August, together with a number of other whalers such as Charming Kitty, Indispensable, and Elligood, and that they were generally successful. [5] Perseverance then was at St Helena on 19 September, and the coast of Brazil in December. She returned to England on 22 May 1802 with 160 tuns of oil. [3] [6]
In 1802, Perseverance was valued at £14,000. [6]
Voyage #2 (1802–1803): Stavers sailed on 31 August 1802 for the Brazil Banks, and was there in February 1803, together with Duchess of Portland and Ferret. War with France resumed in May 1803, increasing the risks to whalers and other merchant vessels. Stavers received a letter of marque on 29 June. [2] In October 1803, the French privateer Vaillant captured Perseverance. However, HMS Sirius recaptured her on 28 October. [7] On 4 November Perseverance was at St Helena and she returned to England on 29 November. [3] [8]
Voyage #3 (1804–1806): Captain William Irish received a letter of marque on 28 January 1804, [2] and sailed Perseverance from England on 3 February, bound for Timor. She was there by July. [3] Between 10 and 15 August 1804 she was among a number of whalers from London that were well at Timor, including Iris, Elliott, Eliza, and others. [9]
Homeward bound, she left St Helena on 31 January 1806, and arrived in England on 28 April. [3] [8]
Voyage #4 (1806–1809): Captain William Stavers received a letter of marque on 23 July 1806. [2] Perseverance was mentioned in the 1806 list. [8] He sailed from England on 9 August, bound for the Pacific Ocean. He was reported to have been round Cape Horn in March 1807. In June Perseverance captured the vessel Juno off the coast of Peru as Juno was sailing to Lima. Juno arrived at Portsmouth in early December. [10] In January 1808 Perseverance was at the Galapagos Islands. Homeward bound, she left St Helena on 11 December 1808. She returned to England on 31 January 1809. [3] [8]
Voyage #5 (1809–1811): Captain Thomas Williamson left England on 1 June 1809, bound for Peru. He returned on 9 August 1811 with over 1900 barrels of sperm oil. [3] The vessel and crew were mentioned in the Protection Lists for 1809, but no master was listed. [8]
Voyage #6 (1811–1814): After war with America broke out in July Captain Henry King received a letter of marque against the United States of America. He left England in late 1811 and returned on 4 May 1814. [3] Perseverance was at Coquimbo i 1813, where she was described as an armed British whaler. [8]
In 1813, the British East India Company (EIC) had lost its monopoly on the trade between India and Britain. British ships were then free to sail to India or the Indian Ocean under a licence from the EIC. [11] Perseverence's owners applied for a licence to sail to certain ports in the East Indies under the provisions for whalers. They applied on 16 August 1814, and received the licence on 18 August. [12]
Voyage #7 (1814–1816): King sailed again in August 1814, bound for Peru. He returned on 2 May 1816 with 400 casks of whale oil. [3]
Voyage #8 (1816–1818): William Stavers sailed from England on 5 October 1816. He died during the voyage, killed by the strike of a whale's tail. [3] Stavers was in a whale boat on the Brazil Banks and trying to kill a cachalot. A strike from the whale's fluke killed one oarsman, and threw Stavers into the sea, where his body floated, insensible. His body was retrieved and brought back on Perseverance. Though there wee no external marks of injury, all attempts to revive him were futile. [13] William Stavers' son, Thomas Reed Stavers, was serving on Perseverance as a boatsteerer, and it was he that pulled his father's body from the sea. [14]
Thomas Cooksey replace Captain Staver as master. Perseverance returned to England on 23 July 1818 with 550 casks. [3]
Voyage #9 (1818–1821): Captain Alexander Luke sailed from England on 7 October 1818 and returned on 17 April 1821 with 600 casks. [3]
Voyage #10 (1821–1824): Captain Luke, or J. Lieke was master of Perseverance in 1821. He sailed from England on 16 August 1821, bound for the Pacific. He returned on 9 January 1824 with 520 casks. [3]
Voyage #11 (1824–1827): Captain William Mott sailed from England on 5 May 1824. Perseverance was at Honolulu on 21 May 1826. She returned to England on 6 May 1827 with 580 casks. [3]
Voyage #12 (1827–1829): Captain Underwood left England on 3 August 1827, bound for Peru. At some point command changed to Mayle. Perseverance returned to England on 4 September 1829 with 530 casks. [3]
Voyage #13 (1829–1831): Captain "Male" left England on 3 December 1829 and returned on 21 October 1831. [3]
Voyage #14 (1832–1835): Captain Male/Mole left England on 25 March 1832, bound for Peru. He probably returned in late 1835.
Between her 14th and 15th voyages, Perseverance's ownership changed as Joseph Somes acquired her. [3]
Voyage #15 (1836–1838): Captain T. Craddock sailed from England on 24 January 1836, bound for Peru. He returned on 16 April 1838 with 40 casks (21 tuns) of oil. [3]
Voyage #16 (1838–1841): Captain William Brown Nicholson sailed from England on 23 July 1838. Perseverance was reported at Mindano, Samboayana, and "Buutan". She returned on 30 July 1841 with 243 tuns of oil. [3]
Perseverance was broken up on her return from her last voyage. [15]
Cyrus was a whaler launched at Salem in 1800. She performed one whaling voyage for French owners before a British letter of marque captured her in 1803. From 1804 on, she performed 17 whaling voyages for British owners in the almost half a century between 1804 and 1853. The first five were for Samuel Enderby & Sons. Between 1 August 1834 and 2 June 1848 her captain was Richard Spratly, namesake of Spratly Island and the group of islands and reefs known as the Spratly Islands. She apparently made one last voyage in 1854, but then no longer traded. She was last listed in Lloyd's Register in 1856.
Seringapatam was built in 1799, of teak, as a warship for Tippu Sultan, the ruler of Mysore. However, the British stormed his citadel at Seringapatam that year and he was killed in the action. The vessel was sailed to England in the hopes that the Admiralty would buy it. The Admiralty did not, and British merchants bought her to use as a whaler. She made six voyages to the Southern Atlantic and the Pacific until 1813, on her sixth voyage, when during the War of 1812, a US frigate captured her. She served briefly as a tender to the frigate before mutineers and British prisoners recaptured her and sailed to Australia. After her return to her owners, she returned to whaling until 1846, making another nine voyages. She then sailed between London and New South Wales until 1850. In the 1850s and 1860s she sailed to Aden and Hamburg, ending her years trading between Shields and Quebec. She is no longer listed in 1870.
Indispensable was a sailing ship built in France and launched in 1791. She was captured in 1793 at the outbreak of the French Revolutionary Wars and thus came into British hands, keeping her name. She performed two voyages for the British East India Company (EIC) between 1793 and 1797. During this period and later she made two voyages transporting convicts to New South Wales. Amongst her notable events were the discovery of Indispensable Strait (1794), the capture of a Spanish vessel (1798), and the rescue of some castaways (1814). She later went on serve as a whaler in the South Seas until autumn 1827. She ceased trading after this last voyage and was broken up by April 1830.
DuBuc was a vessel captured in 1797 and sold that year for mercantile use. She initially became a West Indiaman, but then the whaling company Mather & Co. purchased her. She made four voyages for them, being condemned at Hobart in October 1808.
Serpent was a French navy brig of the Palinure class, launched in 1807 at Paimbeouf (Nantes) as Rivolli, but renamed. HMS Acasta captured her in 1808 in the Caribbean and the British Royal Navy took her into service there as HMS Pert but renamed her Asp. The navy disposed of her in 1814. She then made five voyages as a whaler, and wrecked in December 1828 on her sixth voyage.
Cumberland was launched in 1800 and sailed as a West Indiaman until 1807 or 1808 when she was sold to Enderbys. She then made five voyages as a whaler in the British southern whale fishery. Enderbys sold Cumberland and she proceeded to sail between England and Australia. In 1827 she sailed from Hobart and was never seen again. It later transpired that pirates had captured her off the Falkland Islands and killed her crew and passengers.
Eliza was a French prize that made nine voyages as a whaler between 1802 and 1822. She is last listed in 1824.
Perseverance was launched in Virginia in 1797 and was registered in Great Britain in 1799. A privateer captured her in 1800, but the British Royal Navy recaptured her within days. She traded with Baltimore, Brazil, and the Mediterranean. She made one voyage as a whaler that resulted in pirates taking her in 1821, killing her master and at least some of her crew, and burning her.
Cornwall was launched in 1794 as a West Indiaman. In a little more than three years later she had left on the first of three whaling voyages to the Southern Whale Fishery. On her first whaling voyage she captured a Spanish ship and fought off a French privateer. After her third whaling voyage Cornwall returned to the West Indies trade. Around 1817 new owners sent her to India where a Parsi merchant purchased her. She traded in the Persian Gulf and the Indian Ocean, and also participated as a transport in a naval expedition to the Persian Gulf. She was last listed in 1824.
Renown was launched in 1794 at New Bedford, Massachusetts. She made four voyages from Nantucket as a whaler. In 1813, while she was on her fifth American whaling voyage, she became the first American whaler that British whalers captured in the South Seas. She was sold in London and under the name Adam became first a London-based transport and then a whaler in the British southern whale fishery. She made four whaling voyages and was wrecked in 1825 at the outset of her fifth British whaling voyage.
Governor Dowdeswell was launched in 1798 in Spain or France under another name. The British captured her in 1800. New owners in Liverpool renamed her and employed her as a slave ship for five voyages in the triangular trade in enslaved people. With the end of the British slave trade in 1807, new owners employed her as a whaler. She made one complete whaling voyage to the Pacific but the Spanish seized he during her second whaling voyage there.
Charlton, was built in America. She first appeared in British-origin online records in 1803. She made three complete voyages as a whaler. She was on her fourth voyage when the U.S. Navy captured her. After her captors released her she returned to England and then disappears from easily accessible online records.
Policy was launched at Dartmouth in 1801. She was a whaler that made seven whaling voyages between 1803 and 1823. On her second whaling voyage, in 1804, she was able to capture two Dutch vessels. On her fourth voyage the United States Navy captured her, but the British Royal Navy recaptured her. She was lost at Tahiti in 1824 on her eighth whaling voyage.
Brook Watson was launched in 1796, probably in Holland but possibly in Denmark. She became a prize in 1801 and by 1802 was a whaler in the British Southern Whale Fishery. She made two whaling voyages between 1802 and 1806. She then became a West Indiaman and was last listed in 1809 or 1810.
Aurora was launched at Whitby in 1789. Between 1799 and 1806 she made four voyages as a whaler to the British southern whale fishery. She was last listed in 1809 with stale data since her whaling voyages.
Spring Grove was a Spanish vessel, launched in 1801, that had been taken in prize in 1806 and that her new owners had renamed. She made six voyages as a Southern Whale Fishery whaler before she wrecked in 1824 on the outbound leg of what was to have been her seventh voyage.
Venus was launched at Deptford in 1788 and made 15 voyages as a whaler in the British southern whale fishery. Of 812 whalers in the British southern whale fishery database for which there was data, she had the fifth highest number of whaling voyages. She was last listed in 1823.
Comet was launched in 1791 at Rotherhithe. At the outbreak of war with France, she briefly became a privateer before the British East India Company (EIC) chartered her for one voyage to bring back sugar, saltpeter, and other goods from Bengal. Between 1812 and 1821 she made three voyages as a whaler in the British southern whale fishery. Then between 1823 and 1840 she became a whaler based in Hull, whaling in the northern whale fishery. She returned to trade in 1841 and was lost on 1 December 1843 homeward bound from Quebec.
Thames was a Spanish vessel launched in 1804, almost certainly under a different name, and captured circa 1805. She became a whaler, making eight whaling voyages between 1805 and 1826. Although the registers carried Thames for some years after her return from her eighth voyage, there is no evidence that she ever sailed again.
Grand Sachem was launched at Newburyport, Massachusetts in 1801. She was registered at Bideford in 1803, but until 1815 sailed from Milford Haven. Between approximately 1803 and 1822, she made eight voyages as a whaler in the British southern whale fishery. She was last listed in 1822 and was broken up in 1826.
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