Mornington (1799 ship)
History | |
---|---|
United Kingdom | |
Name: | Mornington |
Namesake: | Possibly Richard Wellesley, 1st Marquess Wellesley |
Owner: | Thomas Patrickson |
Launched: | 1792,[1] India |
Fate: | Burnt 1816 |
General characteristics | |
Tons burthen: | 668,[2] or 700,[1] or 770[3] (bm) |
Complement: | 120[2] |
Armament: | 16 x 9-pounder guns,[2] |
Mornington was a British merchant vessel built at Calcutta, of teak, by J. Gilmore & Co. for Fairlie and Co. She made three voyages under charter to the British East India Company (EIC). On the third French privateers twice captured her and Royal Navy vessels twice recaptured her. She is last listed in 1808.
Career
- EIC voyage #1 (1799-1801)
Under the command of Captain James Carnegy (or Carnageie), Mornington left Calcutta on 30 December 1799. She was at Saugor on 23 January 1800, reached St Helena on 8 June, and arrived at The Downs on 9 September.[4]
On 3 December 1800 Mornington sailed from England for Bombay and Bengal.[1]
- EIC voyage #2 (1801-02)
Captain George Kelso was in the Hugli River on 19 May 1801. On 23 June Mornington was at Kedgeree, and on 19 July Saugor. By 30 October she had reached the Cape of Good Hope, and by 20 November she was at St Helena. She arrived at The Downs on 19 January 1802.[4]
- EIC voyage #3 (1803-04)
Captain Kelso sailed for Madras on 16 May 1804. She left Bengal on 5 July in company with the country ship Anna, and the Maria, Northampton, and Princess Mary.[5] The French privateer Nicholas Surcouf in Caroline captured Mornington on 14 August 1804. However, HMS Phaeton recaptured Mornington, before Captain Fallonard of the brig Île de France recaptured Mornington.[6][Note 1] The British recaptured Mornington yet again as she was reported at St Helena on 6 October,[5] and completed her voyage on 18 December 1804.[1]
- Later career
Captain George Kelso received a letter of marque for Mornington on 22 February 1805.[2] Lloyd's Register of 1808 carries the Mornington, of 750 tons, built nine years earlier in Calcutta. It gives her master as "Kelso", and her owners as Fairlie & Co.
Mornington was reported at St Helena on 23 September 1810.[8] Captain David Dunlop, of the Mornington, was reported to have died at Calcutta on 22 September 1809.[9] From then on Mornington appears in lists of vessels based at Calcutta.
Fate
Mornington sailed for Bengal on 24 June 1815.[10] She burnt off Nursapore (Narsapuram: 16°26′N 81°41.49′E / 16.433°N 81.69150°E) in October 1815.[11]
Notes, citations and references
- Notes
- ↑ Circa April 1804 HMS Duncan captured Île de France. Then on 15 May 1806, the French frigate Sémillante recaptured Île de France, but scuttled her as she was "of low value and a poor sailer".[7]
- Citations
- 1 2 3 4 Hackman (2001), p.232/9.
- 1 2 3 4 Letter of Marque, 1793-1815; p.78
- ↑ Lloyd's register (1815)
- 1 2 National Archives (United Kingdom): Mornington.
- 1 2 Lloyd's List, n° 4513 - accessed 12 October 2015.
- ↑ Austen (1935), p.94.
- ↑ Demerliac (1800-1815), p.327, n° 2811.
- ↑ Lloyd's List, n° 4511 - accessed 12 October 2015.
- ↑ The Scots Magazine, Or, General Repository of Literature, History, and Politics, Volume 71, p.398.
- ↑ Register of Shipping for 1817 (1818), p. 1806, (Gregg Press).
- ↑ Phipps (1840), p.98.
- References
- Austen, Harold Chomley Mansfield (1935) Sea Fights and Corsairs of the Indian Ocean: Being the Naval History of Mauritius from 1715 to 1810. (Port Louis, Mauritius:R.W. Brooks).
- Demerliac, Alain (2003). Nomenclature des navires français (in French). 1800-1815. Nice: Éditions A.N.C.R.E.
- Hackman, Rowan (2001) Ships of the East India Company. (Gravesend, Kent: World Ship Society). ISBN 0-905617-96-7
- Phipps, John Phipps (of the Master Attendant's Office, Calcutta) (1840) A Collection of Papers Relative to Ship Building in India ...: Also a Register Comprehending All the Ships ... Built in India to the Present Time .... (Scott). (Google eBook)