Bristol Packet (1801 ship)

Bristol Packet was a wooden full-rigged ship built in New England in 1801 that was lost in 1808. A wreck, believed to be of Bristol Packet lies in sand on Madbrain beach at Minehead in Somerset, England. The wreck has been scheduled as an ancient monument.[1][2]

Bristol Packet
History
United Kingdom
Name: Bristol Packet
Owner: A. Harris
Port of registry: Liverpool
Builder: New England
Launched: 1801
Fate: Wrecked at Minehead in 1808
General characteristics
Tons burthen: 249 bm
Length: 98 ft (30 m)
Draught: 15 ft (4.6 m) fully laden
Propulsion: Sails
Sail plan: Full-rigged ship

History

The ship was built in 1801 in New England. She enters Lloyd's Register in 1802 with Daniel Orr, master, A. Harris, owner, and trade Bristol-Boston.[3]

The 1808 Lloyd's Register stated that she had been surveyed at Dublin in April 1806 and was registered at Liverpool. Three vessels with the same name were included in the register, although the other two were sloops. Lloyd's Register gave her master's name as W. Day (changing to J. Barns).[4]

His Majesty's cutter Nile, Lieutenant James Lloyd, recaptured the American ship Bristol Packet, William Day, master, on 5 February 1807.[5] A Spanish privateer had captured Bristol Packet as she was sailing from Liverpool to Philadelphia. Nile took her into Falmouth.[6]

Bristol Packet, Day, master, was lost on a coastal voyage from Teignmouth to Bristol in February 1808.[7]

Wreck

A wreck that is believed to be that of Bristol Packet lies in the intertidal zone on Madbrian sands off Minehead where it has been exposed at different times including between February 2014 and July 2015 when a visual survey was undertaken and the exposed parts of the wreck photographed.[8] The position of the wreck indicates it was driven on its beam ends onto the sands.[1][9] The date of the vessel is confirmed by comparison of the way it was built of pine and larch, incorporating both treenails and copper fastenings, with other vessels of the same period.[1] Bristol Packet is known to have had pine topsides.[4]

gollark: I keep thinking that my 802.11 parser is broken and then finding that I just have really weird network traffic somehow.
gollark: ... I just typed `macron entry` instead of `hashset entry rust`.
gollark: Or one (1) IPv6 address.
gollark: They can also contain rational numbers if they want to.
gollark: The base is a pointer to another float, and Macron floats are actually 256 bits.

References

  1. "Wreck at Minehead, possibly the Bristol Packet". National Heritage List for England. Historic England. Retrieved 25 December 2016.
  2. "Shipwreck exposed by storms at Madbrain Sands in Minehead handed protected status". Somerset County Gazette. 19 December 2016. Retrieved 25 December 2016.
  3. Lloyd's Register (1802), Seq. №B16,
  4. "1807 - B. Issue 4229". Lloyd's Register of Shipping. Retrieved 25 December 2016.
  5. "No. 16243". The London Gazette. 4 April 1809. p. 458.
  6. "Lloyd's Marine List". Lloyd's List (№4128). 20 February 1807.
  7. "Lloyd's Marine List – Feb. 16. 1808". Caledonian Mercury (13441). 20 February 1808.
  8. Broadbent, Dan. "Storms uncover shipwreck on Minehead beach" (PDF). South Somerset Archaeological Research Group. Retrieved 28 December 2016.
  9. "35391: Shipwreck (possibly the Bristol Packet), E of Minehead". Somerset Historic Environment Record. South West Heritage Trust.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.