History | |
---|---|
Great Britain | |
Name | William and Ann |
Owner | |
Launched | 1759 (or 1742),[1] King's Yard (possibly Ipswich) |
Fate | Last listed 1857 |
General characteristics | |
Tons burthen | 370, or 376,[2] or 388, or 3881⁄14[3] (bm) |
Draught | 16 feet (4.9 m) |
Sail plan | Ship rig |
Armament | 1812: 6 × 6-pounder guns[2] + 2 × 18-pounder carronades[1] |
Notes | Two decks |
William and Ann (or William and Anne), was built at a King's Yard (naval dockyard) in 1759, under another name. From 1786 until 1791 she was a whaler in the northern whale fishery. In 1791 she transported convicts to New South Wales and then began whale hunting around New Zealand; she returned to England in 1793. Circa 1801 she again became a whaler in the northern whale fishery, sailing from Leith. She continued whaling until 1839. She then began trading widely, to Bahia, Bombay, Archangel, Spain, Honduras, and the Mediterranean. She was last listed in 1857, having been in service for over 90 years.
Career
She was lengthened and raised in 1767, becoming 370 tons; a new upper part and thorough repairs were undertaken in 1785. She first appeared in Lloyd's Register (LR) as William and Ann in 1786.[4] Her immediate previous name was Ipswich. Missing volumes of LR and missing pages in extant volumes of LR have so far made it impossible to trace her back through name changes to her origins in the Royal Navy. Repairs to fix previous repair work were undertaken in 1789. Further repairs were undertaken in 1791, when she was sheathed and doubled.
Year | Master | Owner | Trade | Source |
---|---|---|---|---|
1786 | H.Gilbert | W.Gilson & Co. | London–Greenland | LR; thorough repair 1785 |
1790 | H.Gilbert | Sims & Co. | London–Greenland | LR; thorough repair 1785 |
1791 | H.Ollburg E.Bunker |
St.Barbe & Co. | London–Davis strait | LR; thorough repair 1785, damages repaired 1789, & good repair 1791 |
1792 | E.Bunker | St.Barbe & Co. | London–Botany Bay | LR; thorough repair 1785, damages repaired 1789, & good repair 1791 |
Under the command of Master Eber Bunker, she departed Plymouth as part of the third fleet on 27 March 1791, and arrived on 28 August 1791 in Port Jackson, New South Wales.[5] She embarked 188 male convicts, of whom seven died during the voyage.[6]
Captain Bunker then conducted the first recorded visit by a whaling ship to New Zealand, calling in at Doubtless Bay in 1791 while hunting sperm whales in the South Pacific.[7] William and Anne was reported off the coast of Peru in 1792. She returned to Sydney and thence sailed to England. She was reported off the coast of Brazil in March 1793.[8] She returned to England on 20 May 1793 with 68 tuns of sperm oil and 8468 seal skins.[9]
Year | Master | Owner | Trade | Source & notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1794 | J.Cowon | St.Barbe & Co. | London–Botany Bay | LR; thorough repair 1785, damages repaired 1789, & good repair 1791 |
1797 | J.Cowan | St.Barbe & Co. | London–Botany Bay | LR; thorough repair 1785, damages repaired 1789, & good repair 1791 |
1798 | J.Caitline | Mather & Co. | London transport | LR; thorough repair 1785, damages repaired 1789, & good repair 1791 |
1801 | J.Caitline T.Hanson |
Mather & Co. | London transport London–Greenland |
LR; thorough repair 1785, damages repaired 1789, & good repair 1791 |
1802 | T.Hanson R.Kellie |
Mather & Co. | London–Greenland | LR; thorough repair 1785, damages repaired 1789, & good repair 1791 |
In April 1802 William and Ann, Kelly, master, sailed from Leith for Davis Strait, but had to put back into Stromness, leaky.[10]
Year | Master | Owner | Trade | Source & notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1803 | R.Kellie B.Lyons |
Woods & Co. | London–Davis Strait Leith–Davis Strait |
LR; thorough 1785, damages repaired 1789, & good repair 1791 |
1804 | B.Lyons | Woods & Co. | London–Davis Strait Leith–Davis Strait |
LR; damages repaired 1789, good repair 1794, & repairs 1802 |
1807 | B.Lyons Davidson |
Wood & Co. | Leith–Davis Strait | LR; damages repaired 1789, good repair 1794, & repairs 1802 |
1808 | Davidson | Wood & Co. | Leith–Davis Strait | Register of Shipping; damages repaired 1789, & good repair 1791, & repairs 1802 |
1812 | Davidson | Wood & Co. | Leith–Davis Strait | Register of Shipping; repairs 1808 & large repair 1810 |
Year | Master | Where | "Fish" (Whales) |
Tuns whale oil |
---|---|---|---|---|
1809 | Davidson | Davis Strait | 19 | Full |
1810 | Davidson | Davis Strait | 6 | |
1812 | Davidson | Davis Strait | 18 | Full |
1813 | Davidson | Davis Strait | 8 | |
1814 | Davidson | Davis Strait | 7 | |
The data below for the period between 1814 and 1839 comes primarily from Coltish,[11] though amended or corrected with reports in the contemporary press.
Year | Master | Where | "Fish" (Whales) |
Tuns whale oil |
---|---|---|---|---|
1814 | Davidson | Greenland | 11 | 77 |
1815 | Davidson | Davis Strait | 8 | 55 |
1816 | Davidson | Davis Strait | 8 | 60 |
1817 | Davidson | Davis Strait | 4 | 29.5 |
1818 | Davidson | Davis Strait | 0 | 0 |
1819 | Wake | Davis Strait | 7 | 42.5 |
Wake | 1820 | Davis Strait | 17 | 83.5 |
1821 | Wake | Greenland | 1 | 8.5 |
1823 | Wake | Greenland | 32 | 127 (Full) |
1824 | Wake | 5 | 31.5 | |
1825 | Wake | 3 | ||
1826 | Wake | Davis Strait | 4 | 25.5 |
1827 | [William] Smith[3] | 27 | 240 | |
1828 | Smith[3] | 10 | 54 | |
1829 | Smith[3] | 14 | 76 | |
1830 | Smith[3] | 0 | Clean | |
1831 | Liston | 8 | 50 | |
1832 | Liston | 39 | 136.5 | |
1833 | Liston | 12 | 160 | |
1834 | Liston | 11 | 75.5 | |
1835 | Liston | 1 | 8 | |
1836 | Stratton | |||
In 1836 the whaler Swan became beset in ice and overwintered in Davis Strait, drifting with the ice. William and Ann was the first whaler to sight Swan, on 14 May. Swan was then some 30 miles west of Disco and Captain Stairton's men refused to got to Swan's assistance on the grounds that Swan was far off and they weren't paid to do so. She was only able to get free because the crews of five whalers came upon her and sawed 3000 feet of heavy ice to get her out. (One of the five may have been William and Ann.[12])
Year | Master | Where | "Fish" (Whales) |
Tuns whale oil |
---|---|---|---|---|
1837 | Stratton | 2 | 15 | |
1837 | Stratton | 10 | 80 | |
1839 | Stratton | DS | 5 | 22.5 |
Year | Master | Owner | Trade | Source |
---|---|---|---|---|
1839 | J.Straiton Pearson |
Woods | Leith–Davis Strait Leith–Hull |
LR; large repairs 1823 & 1828, and small repairs 1810, 1833, &1834 |
1840 | Pearson | Woods | Leith–Hull Hull–Bahia |
LR; large repairs 1823 & 1828, and small repairs 1810, 1833, & 1834 |
1841 | Pearson | Woods | Hull–Bahia Hull–Bombay |
LR; small repairs 1840 & 1842 |
1842 | Pearson | Woods | Hull–Bombay London–Archangel |
LR; small repairs 1840 & 1842 |
1843 | Pearson | Woods | London–Archangel Hull–Cape of Good Hoop |
LR; small repairs 1840 & 1842 |
1845 | Pearson Creser |
Woods | Hull–Cape of Good Hoop Liverpool |
LR; small repairs 1840, 1842, & 1845 |
1846 | Creser Davis |
Woods | Liverpool Liverpool–Africa |
LR; small repairs 1840, 1842, 1845, & 1846 |
1847 | S.Davis | Woods Denham |
London | LR; almost rebuilt 1823, small repairs 1846 & 1848 |
1848 | J.Scott | Denham | London–Spain | LR; almost rebuilt 1823, small repairs 1846 & 1848– |
1851 | J.Scott | Denham | Shields–Spain | LR; almost rebuilt 1823, small repairs 1848 & 1851 |
1853 | J.Scott | Denham | London–Honduras | LR; almost rebuilt 1823, small repairs 1848 & 1851 |
1854 | Denham | London | LR; almost rebuilt 1823, small repairs 1848 & 1851 | |
1856 | W.Magub | R.Magub | Cardiff–Mediterranean | LR; almost rebuilt 1823, small repairs 1851 & 1854 |
1857 | W.Magub | R.Magub | LR | |
Citations
- 1 2 RS (1812), Seq.No.W314.
- 1 2 Lloyd's Register (1812), seq. no. W280.
- 1 2 3 4 5 Jones (1975), p. 460.
- ↑ LR (1786), Seq.No.W117.
- ↑ Bateson (1959), pp. 115–6.
- ↑ Bateson (1959), p. 122.
- ↑ "The Register (Adelaide), Tuesday 26 January 1926. p. 12". Retrieved 20 July 2011.
- ↑ Clayton (2014), p. 245.
- ↑ "British Southern Whale Fishery database – Voyages: William and Anne".
- ↑ "The Marine List". Lloyd's List. No. 4247. 16 April 1802. hdl:2027/uc1.c2735020. Retrieved 2 December 2020.
- ↑ Coltish (c. 1842).
- ↑ "Arrival of the Swan Whaler". (7 July 1837) Hull Packet (Hull, England), issue: 2744, p.3.
References
- Bateson, Charles (1959). The Convict Ships. Brown, Son & Ferguson. OCLC 3778075.
- Clayton, Jane M (2014). Ships employed in the South Sea Whale Fishery from Britain: 1775–1815: An alphabetical list of ships. Berforts Group. ISBN 9781908616524.
- Coltish, William (c. 1842). An account of the success of the ships at the Greenland and Davis Straits fisheries 1772-1842 inclusive.
- Jones, A.E.G. (1975). "Captain William Smith and the Discovery of New South Shetland". Geographical Journal. 141 (3): 445–461. doi:10.2307/1796478. JSTOR 1796478.
- William and Ann