Matilda (1790 ship)

Matilda was a ship built in France and launched in 1779. She became a whaling ship for the British company Camden, Calvert and King, making a whaling voyage while under the command of Matthew Weatherhead to New South Wales and the Pacific in 1790.[2]

History
Kingdom of France
Launched: 1779[1]
Kingdom of Great Britain
Name: Matilda
Acquired: 1790
Fate: Wrecked in 1792
Notes: Three decks. Copper sheathing.[1] Underwent a good repair in 1791
General characteristics
Tons burthen: 460[1] (bm)
Draft: 18 ft (5.5 m)[1]
Sail plan: Full-rigged ship

She enters Lloyd's Register in 1791 with Weatherhead as master, Calvert & Co., as owners, and trade London—Botany Bay.[1] That year, either owned or leased by Samuel Enderby & Sons, she transported convicts from England to Australia as part of the third fleet.

She departed Portsmouth on 27 March 1791 and arrived on 1 August in Port Jackson, New South Wales.[3] She embarked 250 male convicts, 25 of whom died during the voyage.[4] Nineteen officers and men of the New South Wales Corps provided the guards. On her arrival at Port Jackson the ship required repairs.

After he had delivered his convicts, Weatherhead took Matilda whaling in the New South Wales fishery or off Van Diemen's Land.[5]

New South Wales records show Matilda as leaving for India in November.[6] She apparently sailed via the Marquesas Islands. Other records have Matilda leaving Port Jackson on 28 December, bound for Peru.[7]

Loss

Suzanne Bambridge, great-granddaughter of James O'Connor, painted by Paul Gauguin in 1891.

Matilda was wrecked on 25 February 1792[8][9] on a shoal, later named Matilda Island.[10] (Frederick Beechey of HMS Blossom (1806), who discovered the wreckage in 1826, confirmed that Matilda Island was actually Moruroa.[11]) The crew were saved and returned to Tahiti on 5 March 1792.[7]

The survivors, 21 crew members and one convict stowaway, were later rescued. Captain William Bligh, on HMS Providence, picked up some at Matavai Bay, while Jenny and Britannia rescued others.[12] Six (James O'Connor, James Butcher, John Williams, William Yaty, Andrew Cornelius Lind and Samuel Pollend) refused to return, and chose to settle in Tahiti.[13]

Citations and references

Citations

References

External links
gollark: You can't really do applied maths without knowing the pure maths backing it.
gollark: It does help you with things, and people find it fun.
gollark: I like it because you don't have to worry about stuff like "units" and "error bars" and in many cases even "numbers".
gollark: You vaguely remind me of my former maths teacher, who seemed really weirdly enthusiastic about (some) maths.
gollark: However, gnobody, universities are not able to instantly teach maths[citation needed] so that is not *that* relevant. Although I suppose you'll probably like learning it full-time from very good mathers™ more, you can do SOME mathy stuff now.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.