Irlam (1825 ship)

Irlam was launched in 1825 at Liverpool for Barton & Co., which had lost two earlier vessels named Irlam: Irlam (1800 ship) in 1812, and Irlam (1813 ship) in 1824. The current Irlam was smaller than her predecessors, but was employed in the same trade, Liverpool–Barbados.

United Kingdom
Name: Irlam
Owner: Barton & Co.[1]
Builder: Liverpool[1]
Launched: 1825[1]
Fate: Wrecked 11 August 1831
General characteristics
Tons burthen: 299[1] (bm)

Irlam entered Lloyd's Register in 1826 with D. Campbell, master, Barton & Co., owner, and trade Liverpool–Barbados.[1] Her listing in the Register of Shipping in 1826 has the same information.

In 1831 her master was J. Taylor.[2]

Irlam was wrecked on 11 August 1831 in the Great Barbados Hurricane of 1831.[3] Sixteen vessels, barks, brigs, brigantines, and schooners were driven ashore. Irlam was one of the two barks driven onshore.[4] All the vessels, with the exception of two mail boats and a schooner, were totally lost.[5]

Citations and references

Citations

  1. Lloyd's Register (1826), Seq. №I165.
  2. Register of Shipping (1831), Seq.№I159.
  3. "Dreadful Shipwreck". The Belfast News-Letter (9831). 2 September 1831.
  4. "Dreadful Hurricane At Barbadoes." Times [London, England 27 Sept. 1831: 3. The Times Digital Archive. Web. 12 Mar. 2018.]
  5. Bayley (1833), pp. 708-9.

References

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