Henry Dundas (1793 ship)

Henry Dundas was launched at Kirkcaldy in 1793 but does not appear under that name until 1810. An American privateer captured her but then released her in April 1814. She disappeared, presumed foundered with the loss of all hands, after having been last seen in December.

History
Great Britain
Name: Henry Dundas
Namesake: Henry Dundas, 1st Viscount Melville
Owner:
  • 1810:Captain & Co.
  • Thereafter: various
Builder: Kirkcaldy[1]
Launched: 1793
Fate: Foundered 1814
General characteristics
Tons burthen: 95[2][1] (bm)
Propulsion: Sail
Armament: 6 × 3&4-pounder guns[1]

Career

Henry Dundas was lengthened and rebuilt in 1802. However, she only enters Lloyd's Register in 1810, and the Register of Shipping in 1811. In 1810, her master is J. Brown, and her trade is Lieth—Teneriffe.[2]

Thereafter, Lloyd's Register and the Register of Shipping give not entirely consistent reports of masters, owners, and trades.

Year Master Owner Trade Source
1811 J.Brown Fotheringham Greenock—Gibraltar Lloyd's Register
1811 J.Brown Capt. & Co. Lieth—Teneriffe
London—Madeira
Register of Shipping[1]
1812 J.Brown Cassell & Co. Greenock—Malta Lloyd's Register
1812 Brown Capt. & Co. London—Madeira Register of Shipping
1813 J. Beatson
T. Rockwood
Cassell & Co. London—Malta Lloyd's Register
1813 J. Beatson Capt. & Co. London—Heligoland Register of Shipping
1814 Rockwood
T. Davidson
Cassell & Co. Greenock-Lisbon Lloyd's Register
1814 Rockwood
T. Davidson
Capt. & Co. London—Heligoland
London—Madeira
Register of Shipping

The American warship Rattlesnake captured Henry Dundas on 31 April 1814, but released her after Rattlesnake had divested Henry Dundas of the most valuable part of her cargo. Henry Dundas had been on her way to Lisbon.[3]

Fate

Henry Dundas departed on 4 December from Portsmouth, Hampshire, for São Miguel Island, Azores. There was no further trace of her, and she was presumed to have foundered with the loss of all hands.[4]

Lloyd's Register for 1816 still carried her, but with the addendum, "missing".[5] She did not appear in the 1817 volume. The Register of Shipping continued to carry her, with unchanged information, till at least 1820. Still, she did not appear in Lloyd's List after the announcement that she was missing.

Citations and references

Citations

References

  • Coggeshall, George (1856). History of the American Privateers, and Letters-Of-Marque. New York.
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