Lady Penrhyn (1786 ship)

Lady Penrhyn
History
Great Britain
NameLady Penrhyn
NamesakeLady Penrhyn (née Anne Susannah Warburton),[1] the wife of Richard Pennant, 1st Baron Penrhyn, of the Penrhyn Estate in Llandygai, North Wales.[2] The word Penrhyn itself is Welsh for headland or peninsula.
Owner
  • Sir William Curtis (Curtis & Co.)[3]
  • William C. Sever
Port of registryLondon
BuilderEdward Greaves, River Thames
Launched1786
Captured1811 and burnt
General characteristics [4]
Tons burthen322,[5] or 332, or 332294,[6] or 360[3] (bm)
Length
  • Overall: 103 ft 5 in (31.5 m)
  • Keel: 82 ft 3+12 in (25.1 m)
Beam27 ft 6+12 in (8.4 m)
Depth of hold12 ft 0 in (3.7 m)
PropulsionSails
Sail planShip rig
Armament10 × 9-pounder carronades[5]

Lady Penrhyn was a slave ship built on the River Thames in 1786.

Lady Penrhyn was designed as a two-deck ship for use in the Atlantic slave trade, with a capacity of 275 slaves.[7] She was part-owned by William Compton Sever, who served as ship's master on her voyage to Australia,[3] and by London alderman and sea-biscuit manufacturer William Curtis.[8]

For her first voyage she transported convicts to New South Wales as part of the First Fleet. On her voyage back to Britain she was the first European vessel to pass by the Kermadec Islands, and the Penrhyn Atoll in the Cook Islands.

She also carried a cargo for the British East India Company (EIC). The French captured her in the West Indies in 1811 and scuttled her.

Voyage to Australia

Lady Penrhyn, William Sever, master, left Portsmouth on 13 May 1787, and arrived at Port Jackson, Sydney, Australia, on 26 January 1788. She carried 101 female convicts, and three officers and 41 other ranks of the New South Wales Marine Corps, as well as her crew. She was part of a convoy of eleven ships, the First Fleet, which brought over 1000 convicts, marines, and seamen to establish European settlement in Australia.

John Turnpenny Altree was surgeon to the convicts, and Arthur Bowes Smyth was surgeon to the crew. Bowes Smyth then took charge of the prisoners on the ship when Altree fell ill at Tenerife and in Governor Arthur Phillip's opinion had proved unequal to the task.[9]

The list of stores unloaded from Lady Penrhyn on 25 March at Port Jackson has been widely quoted in books on the First Fleet. In Sydney Cove 1788 by John Cobley[10] the amount of rice unloaded is given as 8 bram. This amount has been repeated in various books on the First Fleet. Bram, however, is not a unit of measurement and the original log entry lists the amount of rice as 8 barrels.[11]

Lady Penrhyn also carried the first horses brought to Australia. These are believed to have consisted of one stallion, one colt, three mares, and two fillies from Cape Town, South Africa.[12]

Return voyage

Having discharged her convicts in New South Wales, Lady Penrhyn then was under contract to George Mackenzie McCaulay, an alderman of the City of London, to go to the "North West Coast of America to Trade for furrs & after that to proceed to China & barter the Furrs &ca for Teas or other such Goods..."[13] Her owners had obtained a license to sail to the northwest coast from the South Sea Company, which still maintained its ancient monopoly rights over British trade to the eastern Pacific.[14] Accordingly, she departed Sydney Cove on 5 May 1788 and sailed north with the intention of purchasing furs in Kamchatka for resale in China. Her course was chosen to minimise interaction with Russian vessels, as non-Russian trade in Kamchatka furs was considered by Russia to be smuggling.[15]

On 31 May, Sever sighted the Kermadec Islands (Māori: Rangitāhua), and named Macauley Island after McCaulay and Curtis Island after William Curtis.[16] The poor condition of the ship, and sickness among her crew, compelled Lady Penrhyn to turn back from this voyage when she had gone only as far as Matavai Bay, Tahiti, where the crew recovered and the ship was repaired. Sever then sailed to and named Penrhyn Island—the atoll of Tongareva in the Cook Islands—on 8 August, arriving at Macao on 19 October 1788, and proceeding upriver to Canton (now Guangzhou) to take on a cargo of tea.[17]

Captain Sever left Whampoa on 8 January 1789 and Lady Penrhyn crossed the Second Bar on 14 January. She reached St Helena on 19 May and arrived at The Downs on 10 August.[4]

Later service

In 1789 Lady Penrhyn was sold to Wedderburn & Co., London and used in a regular run to Jamaica.[18]

In 1795 she was one of a fleet of transports that carried British troops to the Caribbean to serve as reinforcements against the risk of an attack by Revolutionary France.[19]

Year Master Owner Trade Source & notes
1795 T.Hayman Curling London–Jamaica LR
1800 J.Spence
H.Mason
Hayman & Co.
Law & Co.
London–Jamaica
London–Grenada
LR
1805 T.Burgess Law & Co. London–Grenada LR
1810 T.Burgess Law & Co. London–Grenada LR; large & damage repair 1804;
thorough repair 1809[5]

Fate

On 22 July 1811 the French privateer Duc de Dantzig captured Lady Penrhyn while she was sailing from London to Grenada. Her captor set her on fire, scuttling her.[6]

Lloyd's List reported that the privateer Duc de Dantzig, of 14 guns (18-pounder carronades) and 128 men, of Nantes, had captured Thames, Clark, master, on 17 July, and Lady Penrhyn, Burgess, master on 22 July. Thames had been sailing from London to St Vincent's, and Lady Penrhyn from London to Grenada. Both vessels were in ballast, and Duc de Danzig burnt them after taking off the people on board them. She then captured the schooner Ann, which had set out from Barbados to Demerara. Duc de Dantzig put her prisoners aboard Ann and let her proceed; Ann arrived at Barbados on 26 July.[20]

See also

Citations

  1. ^ "Anne Susannah Warburton (1745–1816), Lady Penrhyn | Art UK".
  2. ^ "Lady Penrhyn". First Fleet Fellowship Victoria Inc. 2011.
  3. ^ a b c Lloyd's Register (1786), sup. seq. no. L65.
  4. ^ a b British Library: Lady Penrhyn.
  5. ^ a b c LR (1810), Seq.№L48.
  6. ^ a b Hackman (2001), p. 139.
  7. ^ "News". General Evening Post. No. 8194. London: M. Say. 9 May 1786. p. 6. Retrieved 25 September 2014.
  8. ^ Byrnes, D. "The Blackheath Connection: The Phantom First Fleet to Australia". Retrieved 3 July 2012.
  9. ^ "Smyth, Arthur Bowes (1750–1790)". Smyth, Arthur Bowes. Australian National University. Retrieved 12 December 2013. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  10. ^ Cobley, John, 1914-1989. Sydney Cove, 1788. London: Hodder and Stoughton, 1962.
  11. ^ "Lady Penrhyn Log 1786-1788". Australian Joint Copying Project Reel 5777, Piece 4376, Part 9. Retrieved 13 July 2020.
  12. ^ Bain Ike, (chief exec.) The Australian Encyclopaedia, p. 1679, Horses, Australian Geographic Pty. Ltd., 1996
  13. ^ Smyth, Cf. Fidlon and Ryan p. 86
  14. ^ South Sea Company Court of Directors Minutes, 8 and 10 March 1787, South Sea Company Papers, British Library, Add MS 25521; cited in Edouard A. Stackpole, Whales and Destiny, Amherst, U. Mass., 1972, p. 118
  15. ^ Letter from Newton Fowell, midshipman HMS Sirius, to John Fowell, 12 July 1788. Cited in Irvine (ed.) 1988, p.81
  16. ^ Hīroa (1953), p. 36
  17. ^ Smyth, "Voyage"; Fidlon and Ryan, Journal.
  18. ^ "Ship News". The Star. No. 2483. London: J. Mayne, Temple Bar. 29 July 1796. p. 4. Retrieved 6 September 2014.
  19. ^ "Authentic Port News". Lloyd's Evening Post. London: T. Spilsbury & Son. 22 July 1795. p. 88. Retrieved 26 September 2014.
  20. ^ Lloyd's List, n° 4594.

References

Further reading

  • Gillen, Mollie, The Founders of Australia: a biographical dictionary of the First Fleet, Sydney, Library of Australian History, 1989.
  • Bateson, Charles (1959). The Convict Ships. Brown, Son & Ferguson. OCLC 3778075.

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