Atalanta_(1798_ship)

<i>Atalanta</i> (1798 ship)

Atalanta (1798 ship)

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Atalanta was launched in Holland in 1795, perhaps under another name. She was captured in 1798, and thereafter traded generally as a British merchantman. She was brig-rigged.[lower-alpha 1] Between 1801 and 1804 she made two voyages as a slave ship in the triangular trade in enslaved people, and may have been temporarily captured during the second. She then became a West Indiaman. Next, between 1808 and 1814, she made two voyages as a whaler in Australian and New Zealand waters. After the whaling voyages she traded more widely, especially to the Baltic. She was last listed in 1833.

Quick Facts History, Great Britain ...

Career

Atalanta first appeared in Lloyd's Register (LR) in 1798.[1]

More information Year, Master ...

1st enslaving voyage (1801–1802): Captain Robert Wilson acquired a letter of marque on 13 June 1801.[4] Atlanta sailed from Liverpool on 17 July 1801, bound for West Africa. She arrived at Kingston, Jamaica on 13 April 1802 with 92 captives. She sailed from Kingston on 13 June 1802 and arrived back at Liverpool on 18 October. She had left Liverpool with 34 crew members and she had suffered nine crew deaths on the voyage.[7]

2nd slave voyage (1803): Captain Robert Wilson acquired a letter of marque on 27 July 1803.[4] Atalanta sailed from Liverpool on 8 August 1803.[8] On 25 June 1804 the French privateer Grand Bonaparte, of 20 guns and 200 men, captured Atalanta, Wilson master after an engagement of one hour. The French took her into Guadeloupe.[9]

It is not clear that the capture took place. If it did, Atalanta returned to British ownership quickly by means that are currently obscure. Common means were recapturing, ransoming, or purchase. Ownership of Atalanta changed between her capture and her return to service.

More information Year, Master ...

1st whaling voyage (1808–1811): Atalanta, Josh(or Joseph) Morris, master, sailed from Gravesend on 4 December 1808, bound for Rio de Janeiro and arrived there on 4 February 1809. She arrived at Port Jackson on 25 July, bringing merchandise. She sailed for the fisheries on 16 October,[10] or 23 October.

In March 1810, sailors from five whaling ships (Atalanta, Diana, Experiment, Perseverance, Speke, and New Zealander) in Bay of Islands, launched a punitive attack on some Māoris following the massacre of the crew of Boyd. The attack resulted in the deaths of between 16 and 60 Māori and one sailor.[11]

Atalanta returned to Port Jackson from the River Derwent on 29 August 1810 with 125 tons of right whale oil. She left for England on 28 October.[10] She arrived back at London with 125 tons of black oil.[2][3]

2nd whaling voyage (1811–1814): Captain Morris sailed from Gravesend on 17 August 1811, bound for Rio de Janeiro. She sailed from Portsmouth on 4 September, bound for the South Seas. Atalanta, Morris, master, arrived at Port Jackson on 19 March 1812 with a cargo of sundries.[10] A different newspaper account reports that Atalanta reached Rio on 30 November and sailed from there on 1 January 1812. By this account she arrived at Port Jackson on 12 May after stopping in the River Derwent.[12]

Atalanta left for the fisheries on 21 July 1812. She returned to Port Jackson from the fisheries on 22 July 1813 with a cargo of sperm oil. She left on 8 September,[10] bound for Norfolk Island and the fishery.[lower-alpha 2] Atalanta, Morris, master, arrived back at Deal on 18 November 1814 and Gravesend on 24 November.

More information Year, Master ...

Fate

Atalanta was last listed in 1833.

Notes

  1. Some volumes of Lloyd's Register refer to her as a snow, similar to a brig.[6]
  2. Lloyd's List reported that the USS Essex had captured the South Seasman Atalanta, but that was Atlantic, sometimes referred to Atalanta.

Citations

  1. "Letter of Marque, p.51 - Retrieved 25 July 2017" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 20 October 2016. Retrieved 27 October 2018.
  2. "LIVERPOOL, MAY 2", 5 May 1804, Lancaster Gazetter (Lancaster, England) Volume 3, Issue: 151.
  3. "Arrival of Vessels at Port Jackson, and their Departure". Australian Town and Country Journal, Saturday 3 January 1891, p.16. 3 January 1891. p. 16. Retrieved 9 July 2021.

References


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