History
United Kingdom
NameCumbrian
NamesakeCumbria
OwnerWright, Brandon & Co.(1819)[1]
BuilderQuintin Blackburn, South Shields[2]
Launched24 January 1803
FateCondemned 14 September 1814
General characteristics
Tons burthen374, or 375[1][3] (bm)
Complement50 (1834)
Armament
  • 1813: 8 × 18-pounder carronades
  • 1816:2 × 6-pounder guns + 8 × 18-pounder carronades

Cumbrian was launched at Shields in 1811. Initially, during the last years of the Napoleonic Wars, Cumbrian was a transport. After the end of the war she became a West Indiaman. In 1817 she made one voyage to Bengal, sailing under a licence from the British East India Company (EIC). In 1819 she became a whaler, sailing from Kingston upon Hull to the northern whale fishery (Greenland (Gr) and Davis Strait (DS)). From 1835 on she left whaling and started trading more widely, to North America, Bombay, and Africa. She was driven ashore in August 1844, refloated, and subsequently condemned.

Career

Cumbrian first appeared in the Register of Shipping (RS) in 1811.[4]

Year Master Owner Trade Source & Notes
1811 T.Smith Blackburn Shields transport RS
1816 T.Smith Blackburn Shields transport
London–Jamaica
RS

Cumbrian, Smith, master, was reported to have arrived at Jamaica on 2 May 1816. She was back at Deal on 13 February 1817, and Gravesend two days later.

In 1813 the EIC had lost its monopoly on the trade between India and Britain. British ships were then free to sail to India or the Indian Ocean under a license from the EIC.[5]

In 1817 Cumbrian, J.Brodie, master, sailed to Fort William, India under a licence from the EIC.[6] She sailed from Deal on 29 May 1817, bound for Bengal. On 8 July she stopped at Tenerife and the next day resumed her voyage. Prior to 12 June 1818 she was at the Cape of Good Hope, having come from Bengal. She was off Dover on 3 September.

Cumbrian first appeared in Lloyd's Register (LR) in 1818.

Year Master Owner Trade Source & Notes
1818 T.Smith Blackburn London–Jamaica LR
1819 T.Smith
Johnson
Blackburn
Wright & Co.
London–Jamaica
Hull–Davis Strait
LR; large repair 1819

From 1819 to 1835 Cumbrian sailed from Hull as a whaler, hunting whales at Greenland or Davis Strait. The data in the table below is from Coltish.[7]

Year Master Grounds "Fish"
(Whales)
Tuns whale oil
1819 Johnson DS 5 64
1820 Johnson DS 13 177
1821 Johnson Gr 28 214 (+12 tons of bone[8]
1822 Johnston DS 8 102

On 26 June 1822, ice crushed Lady Forbes; all the crew survived. Captain William Manger, of Lady Forbes transferred to Cumbrian. On the following Sunday, Captain Johnson asked Manger to raise the Bethel Flag and conduct a prayer service for the seamen from all the nearby whalers.[9]

Year Master Owner Trade Source & Notes
1823[lower-alpha 1] Johnston DS 23 236
1824 Johnston DS 6 85
1825 Johnston DS 6 70
1826 Munro DS 3 40
1827 Munroe[lower-alpha 2] DS 18 264, or 280
1828 Munroe DS 16.5 264
1829 Munroe DS 11 149
1830 Munroe DS 0 (clean) 0
1831 Munroe DS 1 12
1832 Munroe Gr 3 39
1833[lower-alpha 3] Dring, Jr. DS 25 275
1834 Dring, Jr. DS 5 61 (48 tuns train oil + 150 butts blubber, 2 tons of fins)
1835 Dring, Jr. DS 0 or 1

Cumbrian ceased whaling in 1835. In her some 17 years in the trade she had averaged about 10 fish a year, for a total take of a little more than 170 whales.

Year Master Owner Trade Source & Notes
1835 R.Dring Wright & Co. Hull–"N.W.F." (Northern Whale Fishery) LR; large repair 1821 & 1826, and small repair 1831
1839 R.Dring Wright & Co. Liverpool–Petersburg
Hull
LR; large repair 1821 & 1826, small repair 1834, damages repaired 1837 & 1838, and large repair 1840
1840 R.Dring Wright & Co. Hull
London–Bombay
LR; large repair 1821 & 1826, small repair 1834, damages repaired 1837 & 1838, and large repair 1840
1844 R.Dring Wright & Co. Hull LR; large repair 1826 & 1840

On 12 January 1843 Cumbrian sailed for Madras and Bengal. She put back four days later with the loss of her sails and quarter-boat, and with one man having been washed overboard. On 22 September she sailed from Calcutta for London.

Fate

Cumbrian was driven ashore on 28 August 1844. She was refloated seventeen day later and resumed her voyage to Sierra Leone. She arrived on 2 October and was condemned.[14] LR for 1844 carried the annotation "Condemned" by her name.[15]

Notes

  1. Lubbock has a detailed list of all 23 whales taken, complete with their measurements.[10]
  2. Lubbock reproduces the content of Cumbrian's logbook for 10–15 August 1827. On Saturday, 11 August, she killed three whales. The next three days were taken up with removing the flesh, and the three days after that with taking off the blubber. In all, the three whales yielded 123 butts of blubber.[11] Cambrian was the best fished ship of the season. At the time it was believed that this was the largest cargo in the annals of Arctic whaling.[12]
  3. Although Cumbrian was not the best fished ship, she was a full ship.[13]

Citations

  1. 1 2 Lubbock (1937), p. 466.
  2. Tyne Built Ships: Cumbrian.
  3. Hackman (2001), p. 266.
  4. RS (1811), "C" supple. pages.
  5. Hackman (2001), p. 247.
  6. LR (1818), "Licensed and India Ships".
  7. Coltish (c. 1842).
  8. Lubbock (1937), p. 228.
  9. Lubbock (1937), pp. 245–246.
  10. Lubbock (1937), pp. 254–255.
  11. Lubbock (1937), pp. 3–4.
  12. Lubbock (1937), pp. 271 & 273.
  13. Lubbock (1937), p. 296.
  14. "Ship News". The Times. No. 18791. London. 11 December 1844. col F, p. 7.
  15. LR (1844), Seq.No.910.

References

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