History | |
---|---|
Great Britain | |
Builder | France |
Launched | 1778 |
Acquired | 1780 by purchase of a prize |
Fate | Probably lost in 1799; last listed 1801 |
General characteristics | |
Tons burthen | 460, or 480, 483, [1] or 494, [2] or 49419⁄94 [3] or 500, or 600 [4] (bm) |
Length |
|
Beam | 31 ft 7+1⁄2 in (9.6 m) |
Depth of hold | 13 ft 8 in (4.2 m) |
Complement | 20 [1] |
Armament |
|
Notes | Two decks |
Tartar was built in France in 1778, almost surely under another name. She was taken in prize and appears under British ownership in 1780. After a short career as a privateer, she made a voyage between 1781 and 1783 as an extra East Indiaman for the British East India Company (EIC). She then became a whaler in the northern whale fishery (Greenland and Davis Strait). After whaling she traded with the Baltic and then served as a London-based transport. She was probably lost in 1799, and was last listed in 1801. If Tartar is the vessel lost in 1799, in 1796 French warships captured her, but the Royal Navy quickly recaptured her.
Missing volumes and missing pages in extant volumes result in Tarter having first appeared in Lloyd's Register (LR) in the 1781 volume. [4] One source reports that Tartar was built in France in 1778 and taken in prize the same year. Then John Fiott, St. Helier, Jersey, purchased her and used her as a privateer until the EIC took her up. [3] The only Tartar appearing in LR in 1778 owned by a Fiott was Tartar, of 200 tons (bm), and reported as "old". Her trade was given as Straits [of Gibraltar]–London. [5] There is no mention of a Tartar, Fiott, master in 1779 or 1780, but that may be due to missing pages. Unfortunately, Tartar was a common name for privateers, In 1778 and 1779 newspapers mention British privateers named Tartar from Alderney, Bristol, Cork, Dover, Falmouth, Folkestone, Hastings, Liverpool, London, and Penzance. There was also at least one American one, from Savannah.
The first mention in the press of what is almost surely the Tartar of this article was in March 1780. The item stated that the ship Tartar, of 600 tons (bm), was fitting out on the Thames as a private ship of war of 32 guns and 250 men. The command of the frigate Tartar had been given to Captain Fiott. [6] Tartar had acquired a letter of marque on 17 January 1780.
In May 1780 Lloyd's List reported that Tartar, Fiot, master, had taken and sent into Dartmouth Catharina Maria, a Dutch ship sailing from Alicant to Havre-de-Grace with a cargo of barilla, etc. [7] On 15 June, Tartar Fiott, master, during a fog, fell in with French squadron consisting of seven ships of the line and three frigates that chased him. He was able to escape into Lisbon. [8] [9]
On 1 September 1780 Tartar, Fiott, master, arrived at Dartmouth, from Lisbon.
Year | Master | Owner | Trade | Source |
---|---|---|---|---|
1781 | E.Fiott | DeGruchie | London–West Indies | LR |
In 1780 the EIC took up Tartar as an extra ship for one voyage. It had Batson repair her. [2]
Captain Edward Fiott sailed from Plymouth on 26 June 1781, bound for Madras and Bengal. On 18 September Tartar was at São Thomé and on 17 November St Helena. She reached Madras on 31 March 1782 and left on 14 May. [lower-alpha 1] She touched Ganjam on 19 May and arrived at Calcutta on 26 July. Homeward bound, she was at Culpee on 26 December. She was at St Helena between 29 March and 9 June 1783, and arrived back at the Downs on 7 August. [2] [11] [lower-alpha 2]
As of December 2022 it is unclear what Tartar was doing between her return from her voyage for the EIC and 1785-1786 when a new owner, Wilkinson, sailed her as a whaler in the Northern Whale Fishery.
Year | Master | Owner | Trade | Source & notes | Whales | Tuns blubber |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1786 | J.Dearon | Wilkinson | London–Greenland | LR | ||
1787 | J.Dodson A.M'Nilage | Wilkinson | London–Greenland | LR | 3 | 70 |
1788 | M'neilage | 4 | 10 | |||
1789 | M'nillage | Wilkinson | London–Davis Strait | LR; damage repaired 1787 | ||
1790 | M'nillage J.Knowles | Wilkinson | London–Davis Strait London–Memel | LR; damage repaired 1787 | ||
Wilkinson gave up on whaling and turned Tartar to trading.
Year | Master | Owner | Trade | Source & notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1791 | J.Knowles | Wilkinson | London–Memel | LR |
1792 | J.Knowles W.Wallace | Wilkinson | London–Memel | LR; damage repaired 1787 & good repair 1792 |
1793 | Wallace | Captain & Company | London–Ostend | LR; damage repaired 1787 & good repair 1792 |
1793 | Wallace | Captain & Company | London–Ostend | LR; damage repaired 1787 & good repair 1792 |
Captain Thomas Gooch acquired a letter of marque on 28 July 1794. [1]
Year | Master | Owner | Trade | Source & notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1795 | T.Gooch | J. Hadfield | London transport | LR; damage repaired 1787 & good repair 1792 |
Gooch last appeared as master of Tartar on Lloyd's List 's ship arrival and departure (SAD) data in April 1795. It reported that she had arrival in Gibraltar from Plymouth and then had reached Corsica. Although Gooch does not appear in LR as Tartar's master Ashington first appeared in the SAD data in end-March, sailing for the West Indies. LR has no listing for a Tartar with Ashington, master.
In December 1796 as Tartar, Ashington, master, was returning to London from Demerara, two French warships (probably from the French expedition to Ireland (1796)), captured her off Cape Clear. [12] HMS Virginie and Jason, [13] and possibly also HMS Unite, recaptured her and sent her into Plymouth. Tartar arrived there on 13 January 1797. [12]
In October 1797, the West Indiaman Tartar, Ashington, master, carried men of the 42nd Regiment of Foot and officers of the 18th, or Royal Irish Regiment, to join their units at Gibraltar. [14]
In November 1798, Tartar arrived at Gibraltar after having been chased by a fleet of Spanish gunboats. [15] She had left Portsmouth on 7 October, bound for Lisbon, Portugal, and the West Indies.
In 1799 Tartar, Ashington, master, sustained damage as she crossed the bar at Demerara. She was subsequently condemned there. [16]
Tartar was last listed in LR in 1801 with data unchanged since 1795.
Princess of Wales was launched at Stockton in 1795. She made three voyages as an "Extra ship", i.e., under charter, for the British East India Company (EIC). On her return she became a West Indiaman. A privateer captured her in 1803 as she was coming back to England from Jamaica, but British privateers immediately recaptured her. She continued sailing to Jamaica though later, under a new owner, she traded more widely. She probably foundered in 1828, and is last listed in 1830.
Ceres was launched at Kolkata in August 1793 as Lutchmy and renamed in 1794. She sailed to England in 1798 and became a West Indiaman. She was condemned at Barbados in 1806. New owners returned her to service, first as a West Indiaman and then as an East Indiaman. She was damaged at Mauritius in 1818 and although she was listed until 1824, it is not clear that she sailed again after the damage she sustained in Mauritius.
Isabella was launched in France in 1791 as the East Indiaman St Jean de Lone. Two British privateers captured her in 1793. She was sold in prize and renamed Isabella. She initially sailed as a West Indiaman and then between 1795 and 1798 made two voyages to India as an "extra" ship for the British East India Company (EIC). Afterwards, she returned to the West Indies and Baltic trades and was last listed in 1809, but with data stale since c.1802.
Caroline was a merchant vessel launched at Shoreham in 1804 as a West Indiaman. She spent almost her entire career sailing to the West Indies, and endured two maritime mishaps during that period, one at Sierra Leone. She sailed to Batavia in 1824 under a license from the British East India Company (EIC). From Batavia she sailed to Sincapore, where she was condemned.
Brilliant was launched at Whitehaven in 1807. Initially, she was a West Indiaman. Then from 1816 she started sailing to India under a license from the British East India Company (EIC). She grounded in February or on 10 March 1821 at Coringa while sailing from London to Bengal. She was refloated, repaired, and sold locally.
Clarendon was built in 1807 at Whitehaven. Between 1808 or so and 1813 she sailed as a West Indiaman between London and Jamaica. In 1814 she sailed for Batavia under a license from the British East India Company (EIC). The privateer Young Wasp captured Clarendon off the Cape of Good Hope, on 6 January 1815, and she arrived at Baltimore on 15 April.
Tartar was launched on the River Thames in 1787. Initially, she traded between London and Smyrna. Between 1792 and 1794 she made one voyage to Bengal and back carrying dispatches for the British East India Company (EIC). On her return she became a packet for the Post Office Packet Service, sailing from Falmouth, Cornwall. In June 1796 she was bringing mail from New York back to Falmouth when a French privateer captured her.
Trial was launched at Calcutta as a packet for the British East India Company. She made two voyages to England. In 1782 she narrowly escaped being seized by mutineers. After her return to Calcutta in 1786 she became a pilot schooner for the Bengal Pilot Service. A French privateer captured her in 1797.
John Tobin was a ship launched in 1809 at Hull. In 1810 she recaptured a British vessel and in November 1812 she repelled an attack by an American privateer in a single ship action. From 1816 John Tobin made three voyages to India, sailing under a license from the British East India Company (EIC). She then sailed to Calabar, West Africa. She left there on 28 November 1821 and was never heard of again.
Nimble was built at Plymouth in 1813. Initially she engaged in a triangular trade between Africa, Brazil, and Britain. She then sailed between Britain and the eastern Mediterranean. She was twice plundered by pirates, once while on her way to Brazil and the some years later as she was on her way to Smyrna. In 1824 her owners had her lengthened. In 1828–1830 Nimble sailed to Mauritius under a licence from the British East India Company (EIC). She was last listed in 1833.
Chambers was a ship launched in Bristol in 1776. She spent most of her brief career as a West Indiaman. An American privateer captured her in October 1782 in a single ship action.
Mentor was launched in 1778 at Chester as a West Indiaman. She captured three vessels, including a valuable East Indiaman belonging to the French East India Company. She had an inconclusive single ship action with a French warship in 1779. She was wrecked in 1782.
Ranger was launched in 1776 in France, possibly as an East Indiaman for the French East India Company, and almost certainly under another name. From 1780 to 1786 she was a British vessel that was a transport and traded generally. In 1786–1787 she made one voyage for the British East India Company (EIC). From 1788 she traded between London and Ostend, and was last listed in 1793 with unchanged data. In 1788 she had sailed to the East Indies, perhaps with new owners from Ostend, and may have remained in the East Indies.
Belisarius was launched in Massachusetts in 1781. The British Royal Navy captured later that year and took her into service as HMS Bellisarius. She captured several American privateers, including one in a single ship action, before the Navy sold her in 1784. Her new owners sailed her as a merchantman between London and British Honduras. In 1787 she carried emigrants to Sierra Leone for the Committee for the Relief of the Black Poor, before returning to trading with Honduras. She was wrecked in September 1787.
Ranger was built in the Netherlands, reportedly for the Dutch East India Company, and almost certainly under another name. She was take in prize in 1796. She made one voyage as an East Indiaman for the British East India Company (EIC). She then traded to the West Indies and the Mediterranean before becoming a transport. French frigates captured her in 1810. The Royal Navy recaptured her almost immediately and used her to transport prisoners from Isle de France (Mauritius) to France. She then disappears from online records.
Tartar was launched at Bermuda in 1775, possibly under another name. By 1779 she was a privateer sailing out of Liverpool. She captured several prizes, first in the West Indies and then around England. Two French frigates captured her in October 1780.
Badger was launched in Liverpool in 1775. She made one voyage as a slave ship in the triangular trade in enslaved people. New owners renamed her Molly in 1778 and sailed her as a West Indian. In 1779 she repelled an American privateer in a sanguinary single ship action. Her owners renamed her Lydia. While trading with Tortola she captured one or two prizes. Lydia was herself captured in 1782.
Prince Regent was launched at Whitehaven in 1812. She initially sailed as a West Indiaman. Then from 1817 she made one voyage to India, sailing under a licence from the British East India Company (EIC). Afterwards, she traded across the Atlantic, primarily to the United States. She was last listed in 1839.
Woolton, was launched at King's Lynn in 1773 as Narr. By 1775 she was sailing between London and Liverpool as Woolton. A French privateer captured and ransomed her in September 1779. In 1781 she sailed briefly as a privateer and made one notable capture that involved a single ship action. After the war Woolton continued to trade primarily between London and Liverpool until she was wrecked in 1785.
Ponsonby was launched in 1796 at Liverpool. She initially traded between Liverpool and Dublin, and then between 1801 and 1804 disappeared from Lloyd's Register. She returned to the register in 1805 as she sailed as a privateer for two or so months, capturing two vessels. She then became a slave ship in the triangular trade on enslaved people. The French Navy captured her in late 1804 or early 1805 before she could embark any slaves.