Mercury's origins are obscure. She may have been launched in New York in 1774, possibly under another name. In 1793 she made one voyage as a slave ship in the Atlantic triangular slave trade. A French privateer captured Mercury, but the Royal Navy recaptured her.
Career
A Mercury of 126 ton (bm) first appeared in Lloyd's Register (LR), in 1793.[2]
Year
Master
Owner
Trade
Source
1793
Lockhart
J.Taylor
London–Antigua
LR
Capture (1793): Captain George Hauit sailed from Liverpool on 1 January 1793. Mercury gathered slaves at Bance Island. She sailed from Africa on 7 August.[1]
The French privateer Liberty, of Bordeaux, captured seven slave ships before July 1793: Mercury, Hewitt, master, Echo, Union, Little Joe, Prosperity, Hazard, and Swift, Roper, master. Mercury was captured off Cape Mount.[3][a]
The cutter HMS Seaflower recaptured Mercury.[5] In December 1793 Lloyd's List reported that Mercury, Hewitt, master, had arrived at Barbados.[6][b]
Captain Hewitt purchased the recaptured Mercury.[5]
Notes
^There was a Liberté, privateer from Bordeaux, that was commissioned in February 1793 under Jacques Laventy with 16 to 20 guns. She was sold in Guadeloupe in June 1793 by a Mister Mehy, and operated under a Captain Le Bas until 1794.[4]
^The Transatlantic Slave Trade database reports that after her capture: "Slaves embarked, transhipped or no further record". It does not note the arrival in Barbados.[1]
Demerliac, Alain (1999). La Marine de la Révolution: Nomenclature des Navires Français de 1792 à 1799 (in French). Éditions Ancre. ISBN9782906381247. OCLC492783890.
Williams, Gomer (1897). History of the Liverpool Privateers and Letters of Marque: With an Account of the Liverpool Slave Trade. W. Heinemann.
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