Arbuthnot (schooner)

At least three British privateer schooners bore the name Arbuthnot during the American Revolutionary War. They were probably named for Admiral Mariot Arbuthnot, who commanded the British Royal Navy's North American station at that time.

One schooner that bore the name Arbuthnot was a warship. In 1781, the armed schooner Arbuthnot, tender to HMS Allegiance, captured two American vessels that it sent into Halifax for adjudication by the Vice admiralty court there: Two Brothers (8 February), and Swallow (20 February).[11]

Notes, citations and references

Notes

  1. A common usage at the time referred to three classifications: the gun proper, which had a barrel weight of 150 lbs per pound of shot, the double-fortified gun, which had a barrel weight of 200 lbs per pound of shot, and the medium gun, which had a barrel weight of 100 lbs per pound of shot. By comparison, a carronade would have a barrel weight of 65 lbs per pound of shot.[8]

Citations

  1. "No. 12286". The London Gazette. 9 April 1782. p. 3.
  2. "American Prizes, April 1780". American War of Independence at Sea. Retrieved 2008-09-11.
  3. American War of Independence at Sea - Argo Pennsylvania Brig (Ridge)
  4. American War of Independence at Sea - Fair American Pennsylvania Brig (Decatur Jakways Eldridge)
  5. Lehman (2002), p.49.
  6. Yarsinke (2007), p.140.
  7. Lloyd's List №1401.
  8. Simpson (1886), vol. 73, Issue 437, p.882.
  9. Lloyd's List №1434.
  10. Hough, Granville W. American maritime units and vessels and their supporters during the Revolutionary War, 1775-1783, Including French and Spanish) (A)..
  11. Vice admiralty court (1911), pp. 80 & 87.

References

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