HMS Rattler (1783)

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Plans for HMS Rattler
History
Naval Ensign of Great Britain (1707-1800).svgGreat Britain
NameHMS Rattler
Ordered28 December 1781
BuilderFrancis S. Willson, Sandgate [1]
Laid downMarch 1782
Launched22 March 1783
CompletedBy 21 July 1783 at Chatham
CommissionedApril 1784
ReinstatedOctober 1789
FateSold out of service 1792
British-Red-Ensign-1707.svgGreat Britain
NameRattler
Owner
  • 1792: Enderby & Sons
  • 1795:Charles John Wheeler et al.
  • 1798:Sinclair Halcrow
  • 1800:Thomas Wilson
Acquired1792 by purchase
FateWrecked June 1830
General characteristics [1]
Class and type Echo-class sloop sloop
Tons burthen317, [2] or 3414894, or 343 [3] [4] bm
Length
  • Overall: 101 ft 4 in (30.9 m)
  • Keel: 83 ft 4+12 in (25.4 m)
Depth of hold12 ft 10 in (3.9 m)
PropulsionSails
Sail plan ship-rigged
Complement
  • Royal Navy:125
  • Mercantile service
    • 1797:30
    • 1800:30
Armament
  • Royal Navy
    • Upper deck: 16 × 6-pounder guns
    • QD: 4 × 12-pounder carronades [3]
    • Fc: 2 × 12-pounder carronades [3]
  • Mercantile service
    • 1797: 14 × 6&4-pounder guns [3]
    • 1800: 10 × 6-pounder + 4 × 9-pounder guns + 2 × 18-pounder carronades [4] [3]
  • 1805: 8 × 6-pounder guns + 2 × 18-pounder carronades

HMS Rattler was a 16-gun sloop of the Royal Navy. Launched in March 1783, she saw service in the Leeward Islands and Nova Scotia before being paid off in 1792 and sold to whaling company Samuel Enderby & Sons. She made two voyages as a whaler and two as a slave ship before she was condemned in the Americas as unseaworthy in 1802. She returned to service though, sailing as a whaler in the northern whale fishery, sailing out of Leith. She continued whaling until ice crushed her in June 1830.

Contents

Construction

Rattler was one of six Echo-class sloops constructed in the early 1780s, principally for service in the imperial colonies. She was ordered in December 1781, to be constructed at Sandgate by shipwright Francis C. Willson, and launched on 22 March 1783. [1]

Construction costs were £7,211, comprising £3,572 in builder's fees, £3,182 for fittings and £457 in dockyard expenses. [1] [lower-alpha 1]

Rattler was built to the same technical drawings as the five other Echo-class ships, namely Brisk (1784), Calypso (1783), Echo (1782), Nautilus (1784), and Scorpion (1785). The class was designed to be 16-gun ship sloops with quarterdecks and forecastles. [6]

All the Echo-class used the same plans for frame, [7] inboard profile, [8] lines, [9] stern, [10] and upper and lower decks

Caribbean service

Rattler was commissioned in April 1783 for service in the British Leeward Islands under Commander Wilfred Collingwood, assisting in enforcement of Great Britain's Navigation Acts against American trading vessels. On arrival in the Caribbean, Rattler joined the British fleet under the command of Captain Horatio Nelson, and including HMS Mediator whose captain was Wilfred Collingwood's brother Cuthbert. [11]

In 1787 she was laid up to remove her copper bottom and replace it with wooden sheathing, despite the weaker protection this offered against infestation by shipworm. [1] While the ship was being refitted Commander Collingwood was taken ill and died on 21 April 1787 en route to a hospital at Grenada. [lower-alpha 2] Rattler returned to sea later in April under Lieutenant James Wallis. [1] After six months service Rattler returned to Britain for further refit and repair and was paid off. [1]

Rattler was recommissioned in October 1789 under Lieutenant William Hope. He sailed her for Nova Scotia on 26 March 1790. In June 1790 Commander Jeremiah Beale replaced Hope. [1]

Disposal:Rattler was paid off in 1792. She was sold at Woolwich to Messrs. Enderby & Sons on 6 September 1792. [1]

Mercantile service

Rattler underwent refitting in Perry's Blackwall Ship Yard. She first appeared in Lloyd's Register (LR), in the volume for 1792. [2]

YearMasterOwnerTradeSource & notes
1792James ColnetS.EnderbyLondon–Southern fisheryLR; repairs 1792

1st whaling voyage (1792–1794): Captain McCowen sailed from London on 12 November 1792. [13]

She left Portsmouth on 4 January 1793, with Captain James Colnett, master, bound for waters off Peru. James Colnett had been a lieutenant in the Royal Navy, but on half-pay. He had experience in the North Pacific, which made him attractive to Enderby. He wanted to return to active service and the Admiralty suggested that if he did this voyage it would return him to active service and recommend him for promotion. [14]

In its voyage, the only British vessel encountered was the sealer Butterworth. Rattler sailed as far north as Cape St Lucas in Baja California. On the way she visited most of the western islands from Cape Horn north. The big discovery was the Galapagos Islands, which offered safe anchorages, and tortoises that represented fresh meat, and plentiful sperm whales. Colnett redoubled Cape Horn in August 1794, on her way back to England. [14]

Rattler returned to England on 18 November 1794. Rattler returned with a poor cargo of only 48 tuns of sperm oil but with a detailed chart of the western side of South America and the Galapagos. [13]

Enderby's sold Rattler and new owners sailed her as an enslaving ship.

1st slaving voyage (1795–1796): Captain Robert Bibby sailed from London on 27 April 1795. Rattler arrived at the Gold Coast on 3 July 1795. She embrked captives at Cape Coast Castle and Anomabu and left Africa on 9 April 1796. She arrived at Kingston on 18 June. There she landed 468 Captives. She arrived back at London on 16 October. [15]

2nd whaling voyage (1798–1800): Captain Sinclair Halcrow acquired a letter of marque on 23 December 1797. [3] He sailed from England in 1798. He returned to London on 24 June 1800. [13]

2nd enslaving voyage (1800–1801): Captain Thomas Wilson acquired a letter of marque on 17 November 1800. [3] He sailed from England on 25 December, bound for the Gold Coast. [16] Rattler returned to Falmouth after having been chased on 1 February 1801 off Finisterre and having been forced to separate from her convoy and escort, HMS Fly. [17]

Rattler arrived on the West Coast of Africa on 1 April 1801. She embarked captives slaves at Cape Coast Castle and Accra and delivered them to Demerara, where she arrived in October. She landed some 280-300 captives. [16] Rattler, late Wilson master, sailed from Demerara for London but around the end of January 1802 had to put into Grenada leaky. There she unloaded her cargo. [18]

Rattler was condemned at Grenada as unseaworthy. [19] The Register of Shipping for 1802 carried the annotation "Condemned" by her name. [4]

However, Rattler returned to service, becoming a whaler in the northern whale fishery, sailing out of Leith.

YearMasterOwnerTradeSource & notes
1802F.Wilson
J.Wright
Captain & Co.London–AfricaLR; repairs 1792, & new sides 1800
1803J.WrightBalleanie (or Ballenie)Leith–Davis StraitLR; repairs 1792, new sides 1800, damages repaired 1803

On 25 July 1804, Rattler, Wright, master, returned to Leith with a full ship, having taken 10 "fish" (whales) in the Davis Strait. [20]

YearMasterOwnerTradeSource & notes
1805J.Wright
J.Davidson
Balleanie (or Ballenie)Leith–Davis StraitLR; repairs 1792, new sides 1800, damages repaired 1803
YearMasterWhereWhales Tuns whale oil
1805DavidsonDavis Strait5
1806DavidsonDavis Strait8 large
1807Davis Strait13
1808Davis Strait3 or more
1809StoddartDavis StraitFull
1810Stoddart16
181111
1812StoddartDavis Strait
1813Stoddart1
1814StodartGreenland746
1815StodartDavis Strait640.5
1816StodartDavis Strait1166.5
1817StodartDavis Strait755
1818StodartDavis Strait533
1819StodartDavis Strait5

One source reported that Rattler, of Leith, Stoddart, master had been wrecked during what for Leith had been a disastrous year. [21] She was wrecked, but not until 1830. [22]

YearMasterWhereWhales Tuns whale oil
1820StodartGreenland1489
1821StodartGreenland1472.5
1822StodartGreenland1275
1823StodartGreenland954
1824StodartDavis Strait9 (or 7)54 (or 90)
1825StodartDavis Strait16
1826StodartDavis Strait317.5
1827Stodart12.5 (or 8)86 (or 110)
1828StodartDavis Strait1593.5
1829StodartDavis Strait7 (or 9)41.5
1830StodartDavis Strait00
YearMasterOwnerTradeSource & notes
1830StodartWhite & Co.Leith–Davis StraitLR; repairs 1825

Fate

Rattler, Stodart (or Stoddard), master, was lost on 25 or 28 June 1830, crushed by ice. [23]

This was the worst year in the history of British Arctic whaling. Leith alone lost two of its seven whalers, one vessel returned "clean", i.e., it had not caught anything, and the remaining four vessels had only four whales (50 tons of whale oil) between them. [22]

Notes

  1. This equates to a historic opportunity cost of £815,300 in 2014 terms. [5]
  2. Letter from Captain Horatio Nelson to Captain Cuthbert Collingwood, 3 May 1787, cited in Newham Collingwood. [12]

Citations

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Winfield (2007), p. 287.
  2. 1 2 LR (1792), Seqq.No.R251.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 "Letter of Marque, p.83 - accessed 25 July 2017" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 20 October 2016. Retrieved 27 October 2018.
  4. 1 2 3 Register of Shipping (1802), Seq.№54.
  5. "Purchasing Power of British Pounds from 1264 to Present". MeasuringWorth. 2009. Retrieved 14 August 2014.
  6. Plan showing the inboard profile, upper deck, and lower deck
  7. "Frame plan". Archived from the original on 22 November 2016. Retrieved 21 November 2016.
  8. "Inboard profile plan". Archived from the original on 22 November 2016. Retrieved 21 November 2016.
  9. "Lines plan". Archived from the original on 22 November 2016. Retrieved 21 November 2016.
  10. "Stern plan". Archived from the original on 22 November 2016. Retrieved 21 November 2016.
  11. Tracy (2006), p. 90.
  12. Newnham Collingwood (1828), p. 12.
  13. 1 2 3 British Southern Whale Fishery voyages: Rattler.
  14. 1 2 Mawer (1999), p. 87.
  15. Trans Atlantic Slave Trade Database voyage #83289: Rattler.
  16. 1 2 Trans Atlantic Slave Trade Database voyage #83290: Rattler.
  17. Lloyd's List №4144.
  18. Lloyd's List №4245.
  19. Lloyd's List №4258.
  20. Lubbock (1937), p. 166.
  21. Lubbock (1937), p. 215.
  22. 1 2 Lubbock (1937), p. 284.
  23. "Davis' Straits Fishing". The Aberdeen Journal. No. 4318. 13 October 1830.

Related Research Articles

Eight ships of the Royal Navy have borne the name HMS Rattler:

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.

Samuel Enderby & Sons was a whaling and sealing company based in London, England, founded circa 1775 by Samuel Enderby (1717–1797). The company was significant in the history of whaling in the United Kingdom, not least for encouraging their captains to combine exploration with their business activities, and sponsored several of the earliest expeditions to the subantarctic, Southern Ocean and Antarctica itself.

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.

William was a merchant vessel built in France in 1770 or 1771. From 1791 she made numerous voyages as a whaler in the southern whale fishery. She also made one voyage in 1793 transporting supplies from England to Australia. She then resumed whaling, continuing until 1809.

Speedy was a whaler launched on the Thames in 1779. She also made voyages to New South Wales, transporting female convicts in 1799. She made two voyages transporting slaves in 1805 and 1806, and was captured in January 1807 on her way into London after having delivered her slaves to Antigua in 1806.

Butterworth was launched in 1778 in France as the highly successful 32-gun privateer Américaine, of Granville. The British Royal Navy captured her early in 1781. She first appeared in a commercial role in 1784 as America, and was renamed in 1785 as Butterworth. She served primarily as a whaler in the Greenland whale fisheries. New owners purchased her in 1789. She underwent a great repair in 1791 that increased her size by almost 20%. She is most famous for her role in the "Butterworth Squadron", which took her and two ship's tenders on an exploration, sealing, otter fur, and whaling voyage to Alaska and the Pacific Coast of North America. She and her consorts are widely credited with being the first European vessels to enter, in 1794, what is now Honolulu harbour. After her return to England in 1795, Butterworth went on three more whaling voyages to the South Pacific, then Africa, and then the South Pacific again. In 1802 she was outward bound on her fourth of these voyage, this to the South Pacific, when she was lost.

Rockingham was launched in America in 1767 as Almsbury. By 1768 Samuel Enderby & Sons were her owners and her name was Rockingham. From 1775 Enderbys were using her as a whaler, and she made eight whaling voyages for them under that name. In 1782 Enderbys renamed her Swift, and as Swift she then performed ten whaling voyages on the Brazil Banks and off Africa until through 1793. She was still listed in Lloyd's Register as whaling until 1795.

Fonthill was a ship built in France in 1781 and was probably taken in prize in 1782. Fonthill sailed as a West Indiaman between 1783 and 1791, then became a whaler southern whale fishery and made four whaling voyages between 1791 and 1799. On her third voyage she took back from Cape Town a Dutch captain whose vessel had been captured bringing in arms and ammunition from Batavia to stir up unrest against the British at the Cape. After refitting, in 1800, Fonthill became a whaler in the northern whale fishery. Fonthill was last listed, with stale data, in 1810, but whose last reported whaling voyage took place in 1806.

There have been several ships named Hope:

Duchess of Portland was launched at Bristol in 1783. She was primarily a West Indiaman. However, she made one voyage as a slave ship in the triangular trade in enslaved people, and two as a whaler in the British Southern Whale Fishery. She then became a transport. The US Navy captured her in 1812. She was in ballast and her captors burnt her.

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.

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.

Tamerlane was launched in 1769 in Bermuda. She first appeared in British records in 1788 and then carried out three voyages as a whaler in the Britishsouthern whale fishery. Next, she made one voyage as a slave ship in the triangular trade in enslaved people. French frigates captured and burnt her in 1794.

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. She was captured and condemned at Lima, Peru in March-April 1809 as a smuggler.

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. 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 sold in 1804 at St Thomas after she had delivered her captives.

HMS Spy was a Bonetta-class sloop launched at Rotherhithe in 1756 for the Royal Navy. The Navy sold her in 1773. From 1776, or perhaps earlier she was a transport. Then from 1780 to 1783, as Mars, she was first a privateer and then a slave ship, engaged in the triangular trade in enslaved persons. Between 1783 and 1787 her name was Tartar, and she traded with the Mediterranean. From 1787, as Southampton, she was a whaler in the British southern whale fishery. She made at least four complete whaling voyages and was last listed in 1792.

Gibraltar was launched in 1776 in France, almost certainly under another name. Between 1787 and 1795, she was a whaler in the northern whale (Greenland) fishery. A French privateer captured her in February 1796 as she was on her way to the fishery, and burnt her. Her loss led the British government to increase the protection of the outward-bound whaling fleet.

Several ships have been named Lucy.

References