Shah Ardaseer (1786 ship)

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History
British-Red-Ensign-1707.svgGreat Britain
NameShah Ardaseer
Builder Bombay Dockyard
Launchedc.1786
FateBurnt 13 September 1809
General characteristics
Tons burthen8601394, [1] or 868, [2] or 900 [3] (bm)
Armament2 × 9-pounder guns + 22 × 12-pounder guns "Of the New Construction"
NotesThree decks; teak built [3]
Naval Ensign of Great Britain (1707-1800).svgGreat Britain
NameHMS Arrogant
Acquired7 August 1810
FateSold 1842
General characteristics
Tons burthen1,439 [4] (bm)

Shah Ardaseer was built at Bombay, probably in 1786 (see below). English transliterations of her name show her as Shah or Shaw + Adaseer, or Ardaseer, or Ardasier, or Adasier, or Ardasheer, or Ardeseer, or Ardesir. A fire on 13 September 1809 at Bombay burnt her. She then may have been recovered, repaired, and enlarged to become the hulk HMS Arrogant, which was moved to Trincomalee in 1822 and sold there in 1842.

Contents

Career

Shah Ardaseer was built in Bombay in 1784, [5] 1786, [6] or 1787, [7] [8] [9] or 1788; [10] [11] although there are more citations for 1787, it is not clear that they represent independent information. She was primarily a "country ship", that is, she primarily traded east of the Cape of Good Hope, thus not trespassing on the British East India Company's monopoly on the trade between Britain and the Far East.

Shaw Addesseer was among several vessels reported as arriving at Canton from Bombay in July 1789 and returning in December, under Captain Ramsay [12] James Callander, formerly master of Sultan, then commanded her to China, departing Bombay 22 May 1790. [13] Callander and his partner Collins had a trading business based in Calcutta, and for the following four years Callander commanded her voyages between Calcutta, Madras and other ports in the Bay of Bengal, carrying sundry goods but at least once troops. [14]

Shaw Ardasier gained wider fame in 1793 when dramatic reports reached London of the killing by a tiger of a son of Sir Hector Munro of Novar, while the ship was lying off Saugur Island at the mouth of the Hooghly River. [15] The Calcutta Gazette carried the story, but also reported that Shaw Ardasier had arrived at Madras on 4 January "after a quick and pleasant voyage". [16]

A reference to Ardesier as being in Batavia in November 1793, returning from Botany Bay under Captain Bampton, [17] probably confused her with Shah Hormuzeer, which Bampton navigated through Torres Strait in that year. [18]

Callander of Shah Ardaseer was listed among the captains of a proposed China fleet in May 1794, [19] but when the fleet eventually sailed in July her master was J. Nimmo. [20] Callander instead took Eliza to Penang, but in August 1794 Revenge, a French privateer, captured her and sent her to Mauritius. In turn HMS Resistance captured Revenge; Callander returned to Madras on Resistance. [21] Thereafter Callander was master of Betsey until accumulating debts forced him to flee Calcutta, and Betsey and its contents were auctioned. [22] [23]

In 1798 Shaw Ardasher's master was W[illiam] Dawson and her owner Dady Nasserwanjee. [24]

Notwithstanding its status as a country ship, Shaw Ardasher did visit England. She entered the Registry of Great Britain on 31 August 1799. [1] Ardaseer then appeared in Lloyd's Register (LR) in 1800 with Maughan, master, Adamson, owner, and trade London–India. [3] (LR and the Register of Shipping carried this data unchanged into 1806.)

On 29 December 1799, Shaw Ardaseer, Smith, master, sailed from Gravesend, bound for India. [25]

Lloyd's List reported on 30 May 1800 that Shaw Ardrasier had run down and sunk Westmoreland, Ayre, master. Westmoreland was on a voyage from Newcastle upon Tyne to Grenada. Her crew was saved. [26]

The government in India, in preparation for sending an expedition to the Red Sea, engaged three country ships, Shaw Ardesir, Cumbrian, and Minerva, and commissioned them on terms that would permit them to share in prize money. [27]

Shah Ardasheer then served as a transport to support General Sir David Baird's expedition to the Red Sea, [28] which in turn had the objective of supporting General Sir Ralph Abercrombie at the battle of Alexandria.

In 1803 Shaw Ardeseer appeared in a list of vessels registered at Bombay. Her master was Thomas Maughan, and her owner Dady Nasserwanjee. [29] She spent much of her time sailing between Bombay and Canton in the cotton trade.

On 10 January 1805 Ardaseer shoaled on a bank at 10°35′N107°45′E / 10.583°N 107.750°E / 10.583; 107.750 . [30]

Fate

In September 1809 Shah Ardasheer was at Bombay loading a cargo for London. Her owners had arranged insurance of £124,440 for her and her cargo for the voyage. The insurance policy was completed on 27 December 1809. [31] However, by that time she had already burnt at Bombay.

In the night of 13 September 1809 Shah Ardasheer caught fire. An alarm was raised and Mr. Kempt, the chief officer, hailed the warships around her for help. Captain Wainright of HMS Iphigenia, responded with 100 men, buckets, and an "engine". HMS Chiffonne and Teignmouth also sent men. Despite their efforts, Ardaseer could not be saved. Unable to stop the fire, the rescuers scuttled her in the harbour. [32] Lloyd's List reported that she had burnt in Bombay Harbour and that half her cargo had been on board. [33]

HMS Arrogant

From 1804 to 1810, when she was broken up, HMS Arrogant had sat in Bombay harbour as a floating battery, receiving ship and then sheer hulk. The Admiralty ordered the purchase of the mercantile Ardaseir. [4] Admiral Drury renamed the purchased vessel HMS Arrogant and decided to use her as a floating hospital. [34]

There is no record of the construction at Bombay Dockyard of an Ardesir in 1810. [35] This raises the possibility that Arrogant was Shah Ardasheer raised and rebuilt, which would also account for the increase in burthen.[ original research? ]

HMS Arrogant was registered as a third rate in 1827. She was moved to Trincomalee on 19 November 1822. (She may have been hulked there earlier as she described in 1819 as a hulk there. [11] ) She was sold in 1842.

Citations

  1. 1 2 House of Commons (1814), p. 86.
  2. Mathison, John (1802). "A List of Merchant Ships belonging to the Port of Bombay". А New Oriental Register, and East India Directory for 1802. Leadenhall Street, London: Black's and Parry. p. 218. Retrieved 21 April 2022.
  3. 1 2 3 LR (1800), Seq.№530.
  4. 1 2 Winfield (2008), p. 403.
  5. Hackman (2001), p. 243.
  6. Reports... (1809), p.242
  7. Phipps (1840), p. 168.
  8. Low (1877), p. 538.
  9. Wadia (1986), p. 334.
  10. Bulley (2000), p. 181.
  11. 1 2 "The Asiatic Journal for November 1819: Comparative Strength of Ships built in Different Parts of India (Bombay Gazette)". The Asiatic Journal and Monthly Register for British India and its Dependencies. Vol. 8. Leadenhall Street, London: William H. Allen and Company. 1819. p. 447. Retrieved 21 April 2022.
  12. "The Calcutta Gazette" . Calcutta. 11 February 1790. pp. 1–8.
  13. "The Calcutta Gazette" . Calcutta. 24 June 1790. Retrieved 21 April 2022.
  14. "The Calcutta Gazette" . Calcutta. 5 July 1792. Retrieved 21 April 2022.
  15. Seton-Karr, Walter Scott (1865). ""The 3rd January 1793: Extract from a letter from a passenger on board the "Ardaseer," dated Cox's Island, December 22nd, 1792"". Selections from Calcutta Gazettes of the Years 1789, 1790, 1791, 1792, 1793, 1794, 1795, 1796, and 1797: Showing the Political and Social Condition of the English in India, Seventy Years Ago. Vol. 2. Calcutta: O. T. Cutter, Military Orphan Press. pp. 359–360. Retrieved 21 April 2022. when, in the midst of our merriment, surrounded by dandees cutting wood, and ourselves not a little noisy, an exceeding large and ferocious royal tiger rushed in among us from the jungle at our backs, and, to the unspeakable horror and grief of us all, seized on the much-regretted Munro, and carried him off, though neither of us were three yards distant at the time.
  16. "The Calcutta Gazette" . Calcutta. 24 January 1793. Retrieved 21 April 2022.
  17. "Calcutta Gazette" . Calcutta. 6 February 1794. Retrieved 21 April 2022.
  18. Kaye, Stuart (1997). "Historical Background of the Torres Strait: British Exploration to the 1860s". The Torres Strait. Springer Netherlands. p. 33. ISBN   9789041105066 . Retrieved 21 April 2022. In fact, the next transit of Torres Strait was by two merchantmen, the Shah Hormuzeer under William Bampton and the Chesterfield under M. B. Alt, both bound from Sydney to India in 1793.
  19. "The Madras Courier" . Madras. 23 May 1794. Retrieved 21 April 2022.
  20. "The Calcutta Gazette" . Calcutta. 28 August 1794. Retrieved 21 April 2022.
  21. "The Calcutta Gazette" . 18 September 1794. Retrieved 21 April 2022.
  22. "The Calcutta Gazette" . Calcutta. 22 September 1796. Retrieved 21 April 2022.
  23. Robb (2011), p. 213.
  24. The Bombay Almanack, and Register, for ... 1798. The British Library, London: John Turner. 1798. p. 108. Retrieved 21 April 2022.
  25. Lloyd's List (LL) №4011, Ship arrivals and departure (SAD) data.
  26. "The Marine List". Lloyd's List (4054). 30 May 1800.
  27. Bulley (2000), p. 69.
  28. House of Commons (1814), p. 655.
  29. "List of Merchant Vessels". East-India register and directory. 1803. Princeton University: Cox, Son and Baylis. 1803. p. 270. Retrieved 21 April 2022.
  30. "Cochin-China". The Naval chronicle v.29 (From January to June). Vol. 29. London: J. Gold. 1813. p. 429. Retrieved 21 April 2022.
  31. "Report from the Select Committee on Marine Insurance; (Sess. 1810): Appendix". Reports from Committees. Vol. 7. Bodleian Library, Oxford. 1824. p. 46. Retrieved 21 April 2022.
  32. "Loss of the Ship Ardeseer, by fire". The Naval Chronicle. Vol. 23. London: Joyce Gold. 1810. pp. 279–280. Retrieved 21 April 2022.
  33. "The Marine List". Lloyd's List. No. 4425. 23 January 1810. hdl:2027/hvd.32044105232938 . Retrieved 2 February 2021.
  34. Parkinson (1954), p. 356.
  35. Wadia (1986), pp. 338–339.

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References