Waterloo (1815 Sunderland ship)

Waterloo was launched in 1815 at Sunderland. She traded with Hamburg, Trieste, and Tobago, before sailing to the Cape of Good Hope with emigrants. She was lost at Fish Hoek on 25 October 1821; the wreckage and cargo was sold there on 6 November.

History
Great Britain
Name: Waterloo
Namesake: Battle of Waterloo
Builder: Sunderland[1]
Launched: 1815[1]
Fate: Wrecked 25 October 1821
General characteristics
Tons burthen: 215[1] (bm)

Career

Waterloo first appeared in Lloyd's Register (LR) in 1815 with J.Hann, master, Grenville, owner, and trade London–Hambro.[1]

On 25 May 1817, Waterloo, Hann, master, arrived at Trieste from London. On 28 October she arrived at Barcelona from Odessa.[2]

Year Master Owner Trade Source
1818 Hann
J.Pratt
Greenwell London–Trieste
London–Havana
LR
1820 Proom
I.Leland
Grenville London–Tobago
London–CGH.[3]
LR

LR for 1822 showed Waterloo with D[avid] [Thomson] Lyon, master, J&P Nichols, owners, and trade London–CGH.[4]

On 9 February 1821 Waterloo, Lyon, master, sailed from Portsmouth for the Cape. She was carrying 61 settlers under the auspices of the Government Settler Scheme. (Twenty eight vessels left that year and the next with settlers for South Africa.)[5] She arrived at the Cape on 24 May.

Fate

On 25 October 1821 Waterloo, Lyon, master, was driven ashore at Fish Hook Bay, Cape of Good Hope. The next day she was a total wreck.[6] Her crew were rescued.[7] She was carrying whale oil, some of which was also saved.[8]

At the time, there was a whale oil factory at Fish Hoek (or Visch Hoek). After she wrecked an auction on the beach of what was left of the cargo she had been loading and of her masts, rigging, and whatever else was left.[9] Early in November the Cape Town Gazette and African Adviser published a notice that on 6 November there would be a sale on the beach at Fisch Hoek Bay of Waterloo's masts, yards, sails, rigging, boat, provisions, furniture, material and damaged cargo saved from the wreck, as well as her anchors and cables, and that part of her cargo that had not been recovered.[10]

The remains of the wreck now lie in some seven meters of water.

One source assigns this Waterloo's fate to a different Waterloo.[11]

Citations and references

Citations

References

  • Cobern, Joy (2003). Fish Hoek: Looking Back. Fish Hoek Publishing & Printing.
  • Hackman, Rowan (2001). Ships of the East India Company. Gravesend, Kent: World Ship Society. ISBN 0-905617-96-7.
  • Theal, George McCall, ed. (1903). Records of the Cape Colony from August 1822 to May 1823. 15. Government of the Cape Colony.
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