Prince of Wales (1786 ship)
History | |
---|---|
United Kingdom | |
Name: | Prince of Wales |
Owner: | John Mather |
Port of registry: | London |
Builder: |
|
Launched: | 1779 |
Fate: | Last listed 1810 |
General characteristics | |
Type: | Barque |
Tons burthen: | 296,[1] or 300,[2][3] or 310,[4] or 318,[5][6] or 333,[7] or 335,[8] or 350,[9][10] (bm)[Note 1] |
Length: | 103 ft (31.4 m)[11] |
Beam: | 29 ft 3 in (8.9 m)[12] |
Propulsion: | Sails |
Sail plan: | Ship rig |
Boats & landing craft carried: | longboat |
Complement: | |
Armament: |
Prince of Wales was a transport ship in the First Fleet, assigned to transport convicts for the European colonisation of Australia. Accounts differ regarding her origins; she may have been built and launched in 1779 at Sidmouth, or in 1786 on the River Thames. Her First Fleet voyage commenced in 1787, with 47 female convicts aboard, and she arrived at Botany Bay in January 1788. On a difficult return voyage in 1788–1789 she became separated from her convoy and was found drifting helplessly off Rio de Janeiro with her crew incapacitated by scurvy.
After Prince of Wales' return to Britain her owners deployed her as a whaler in the South Seas fisheries. She was later used as a privateer under a letter of marque, before performing a voyage as a slave ship. After a period under French control, she returned to Britain and was used to carry trade goods between London, the West Indies and the Mediterranean. The last records of her existence date to 1810; her fate thereafter is unknown.
Origins
Prince of Wales was a square-sterned barque measuring between 300 and 350 tons burthen, being 103 feet (31 m) long and 31 feet (9.4 m) wide and with a height between decks of 5 feet 8 inches (1.73 m) amidships and 5 feet 9 inches (1.75 m) fore and aft.[7][11]
Sources vary as to her origins. By one account, she was built in 1779 at Sidmouth, as a West Indiaman under the command of ship's master James Johnston.[13] By another account, she was built on the River Thames in 1786, by the firm Christopher Watson and Company of Rotherhithe, which had also built HMS Sirius.[14] Both accounts give her initial owner as Cornhill merchant John Mather, who had previously purchased and disposed of Captain Cook's Endeavour after that vessel had returned from Botany Bay.[15][16] A Lloyd's Register entry from 1787 also records that Mather owned a vessel named Hannibal, which had been renamed from Prince of Wales.[4]
Voyage to Australia
The south London shipbroker William Richards contracted Prince of Wales in 1787 for the First Fleet voyage. Richards selected her after consultation with Royal Marine officers Watkin Tench and David Collins.[18] Both officers would sail with the Fleet to Australia, Tench as a captain of marines, and Collins as judge-advocate for the new colony. She was the second-smallest of the First Fleet transports after Friendship, and the last to be contracted to join the voyage.[11]
The Navy Board assigned Prince of Wales to the First Fleet on 2 March 1787 under the immediate command of ship's master John Mason, and the overall command of naval officer and future Governor of New South Wales, Arthur Phillip aboard Sirius.[19] She was the last transport added to the Fleet before it sailed.[20]
She left Portsmouth on 13 May 1787 with a crew of around 25, and was accompanied by the other vessels of the Fleet: five transports, three storeships and two Royal Navy vessels. The 24-gun post ship HMS Hyaena accompanied the Fleet through the Channel as fleet escort, departing when the ships reached Atlantic waters.[21] Prince of Wales arrived in Tenerife on 5 June, where she was resupplied. A second resupply took place in August in the Portuguese port of Rio de Janeiro, including the delivery aboard Prince of Wales of quantities of fresh fruit and vegetables, seeds, and some rum for the marines.[22] Prince of Wales then turned southeast with the Fleet, reaching Cape Town in October and entering the Great Southern Ocean on 13 November for the last leg of the voyage to Australia.[23] The first death among the crew occurred on the night of 24 November when a seaman fell overboard from the topsail yard and could not be rescued.[24] A week later a second seaman, Yorgan Younginson, drowned after being washed overboard in heavy seas.[25]
By mid-December the ship's supply of flour and butter for the voyage had been exhausted and Philip authorised Mason to broach the stores set aside for the future colony in order to continue to feed the convicts.[26] A month later, on 20 January 1788, Prince of Wales reached Australia's Botany Bay. Six days later she sailed for Sydney Cove as part of the relocation of the convict settlement to Port Jackson.[27] Leaving Botany Bay she collided with Friendship, losing her mainmast staysail and topsail, but the damage was swiftly repaired and she was able to enter Port Jackson in line with her fellow transports.[28] There she landed 49 convicts, 31 marines and 23 civilians.
Convicts
Prince of Wales carried 49 female convicts on departure from Portsmouth. After five days at sea, 2 males were also brought across from Scarborough via Sirius, ringleaders of a failed mutiny. They remained aboard Prince of Wales for the remainder of the voyage to Australia.[21]
Convict health was comparatively good during the voyage, with a report by Governor Philip showing only nine cases of illness aboard Prince of Wales by the time she reached Tenerife, the least for any First Fleet transport.[Note 2] Indeed, Phillip wrote to Admiralty advising that "the convicts are not so sickly as when we sailed," though the women aboard Prince of Wales had no new clothing and were still in the ragged apparel they had worn in prison.[29] There was no ship's surgeon aboard but Chief Surgeon John White, periodically came on board from Sirius when weather and sailing conditions permitted.[30] As the Fleet headed toward Rio in July, humid conditions and heavy rains generated a "plague of bugs" below decks with more than a hundred insects found in one small sleeping area alone.[31] There were also reports of rats, fleas and lice, and an outbreak of scurvy in late December.[32]
Despite this, serious illness remained rare and the first convict death was from accidental causes rather than disease. On 24 July the ship's longboat fell from a boom and struck 22-year-old Jane Bonner in the head; she died from her injuries six days later.[30] A second convict, John Hartley, died of unknown causes on 5 August. [33] The fact that Hartley was flogged, as punishment for the alleged planned mutiny, may have contributed to his poor health and subsequent death. These two deaths compared favourably with those on other transports, particularly Alexander; Alexander recorded 30 deaths, a consequence of overcrowding and an overflowing bilge.[33][34]
Convict discipline was also well maintained, except for prostitution between the female convicts and the crew, which was rampant on Prince of Wales, Friendship and Lady Penrhyn.[35] The first recorded punishment of a convict aboard Prince of Wales was in October 1787, nearly nine months after she had sailed; six lashes for a woman caught stealing from her fellows while they were "at prayer."[36]
Marines
The ship also carried a contingent of 31 marines of the New South Wales Marine Corps, comprising lieutenants Thomas Davey and Thomas Timins, five non-commissioned officers, and 24 privates. Sixteen of the marines embarked with their wives, and there were six children. Discipline was poor. In June 1787 two marines were court-martialed for disobeying orders; one received 300 lashes. Later in the voyage, two sergeants refused to share a mess after one insulted the other's wife.[37] Drunkenness was also common. In June one drunken marine sergeant fell through an open hatchway and injured the pregnant wife of another marine, for which offence he was placed in legcuffs for two weeks and then transferred to Alexander. Then in late October, First Lieutenant James Maxwell, who had recently transferred aboard from Charlotte, was found incoherently drunk on duty and promptly returned to Charlotte.[38]
Two more children were born to the wives of marines during the voyage.[Note 3] In October 1787 the wife of marine drummer Benjamin Cook died from an unspecified illness and was buried at sea after a brief ceremony.[38]
James Scott, a Sergeant of Marines, wrote an account of the voyage in his journals, now held at the State Library of New South Wales[40]
Return to England
Prince of Wales remained anchored in Sydney Cove for five months after her voyage, while her stores were unloaded. A shipboard inspection during this time found her hull was rotten with shipworm and on 23 May 1788 she was careened on the beach for repairs.[41] In July she was released from government service and set sail for England on the 14th of that month, in convoy with her First Fleet sister ships Alexander, Borrowdale and Friendship, and under the overall command of Lieutenant John Shortland in Alexander.[42]
The plan was that the convoy sail north to rendezvous at Lord Howe Island, then set a course broadly parallel to the Great Barrier Reef with the aim of reaching the Dutch port of Batavia.[43] From there the convoy would sail west through the Sunda Straits to the Cape of Good Hope, then north through the Atlantic to England. This route was comparatively well mapped – the first part largely mirroring that of James Cook in his first voyage in the Pacific from 1768 to 1771, and the remainder from Batavia being the traditional route of Dutch East Indiamen returning to Europe. Shortland estimated the voyage would take the convoy between six and ten months.[42]
This navigation plan was abandoned when both Prince of Wales and Borrowdale lost sight of Alexander and Friendship during a severe storm in late July, and found themselves alone and off course by the time the weather cleared. The two lost ships anchored while their masters, John Mason in Prince of Wales and Hobson Reed in Borrowdale, consulted. Neither considered it likely they could reach the Lord Howe Island rendezvous. They were also reluctant to hazard the voyage to Batavia through the Great Barrier Reef without Alexander in the lead. Instead, they agreed to turn their ships southeast into the open ocean and to return to England by sailing the other way around the world, via Cape Horn and Rio de Janeiro and then northeast across the Atlantic to Europe.[43]
The Pacific weather proved favourable but by August the two ships had lost sight of each other and continued their voyage separately. On 23 August Prince of Wales rounded Cape Horn alone and headed northeast and north on a path to Rio.[44] Throughout the voyage her crew had been heavily reliant on a diet of salted meat and by early September scurvy had incapacitated the majority. Mason died from the condition on 9 October, and another 13 men were too ill to leave their bunks.[43] When Rio was finally sighted on 13 October the crew were too sick to bring the ship to port. She drifted helplessly in the outer harbor until Rio's harbourmaster sighted her the following morning and had additional seamen rowed out to assist.[7][43] Twelve of Prince of Wales' sickest crew members were hospitalised in Rio while the remainder recovered on board.
A resupplied Prince of Wales set sail from Rio on Christmas Day 1788, completing an uneventful final leg to reach Falmouth in England on 25 March 1789. Despite the delays of disease, weather and an unfamiliar route, she was the first of the Fleet to return home, two months ahead of Alexander which did not reach England until 28 May.[43]
Whaler
Between 1790 and into 1793-4 Mather & Co. employed Prince of Wales as a whaler in the South Seas Fisheries, under the command of Captain F. Bolton.[45] In 1790 she left for the Brazil Banks and Africa Grounds, but returned in November.[45][Note 4] By 10 August 1791 she was "All well" at Walwich (Walvis) Bay.[47] In April 1792 Prince of Wales returned to England; she sailed again in July. She sailed around Cape Horn to Peru,[45] but returned to England by late in 1793.
Privateer
Mather & Co. sold Prince of Wales to Clayton Tarleton in 1793. Tarleton armed her with twenty 6-pounder guns and placed her under the command of William Scales. Scales received a letter of marque on 1 March 1793.[1] The letter indicated that Prince of Wales had a crew of 100 men, many more than she needed to sail her, suggesting that Tarleton intended her to sail as a privateer.
Prince of Wales departed on a cruise and on 7 April she captured the French merchant vessel "Le Federatis", which was sailing from Cap-François to Bordeaux with a cargo valued at £40,000,[48] or £32,000.[49] Prince of Wales brought her prize into Hoylake a week later.[Note 5]
Plans changed, and Tarleton appointed Captain James Thomson (or Thompson) to command of Prince of Wales, with the intent of sailing her on the Liverpool-Africa trade, i.e., as a slaver. James Thomson received a letter of marque on 4 September 1793.[1] His letter indicated that he would have a crew of 40 men.
In late 1793, Thompson sailed from Viana (probably Viana do Castello, Portugal), for Dartmouth, in company with Somme. On 8 October he captured Maryland, which was sailing from Baltimore to Bordeaux with a cargo of coffee, sugar, and barrel staves. He sent her into "Montserrat".[49] In December he recaptured Best, which had been sailing from Lancaster to the West Indies when a French man-of-war had captured her. Thompson brought Best into the Mersey.[49]
On 1 January 1794, Thomson spoke with a ship that was sailing for Botany Bay. The ship had encountered a French privateer, of 14 guns, which the British ship managed to drive off after an engagement that lasted almost two hours. Reportedly, Prince of Wales went on to recapture a British brig that a French 74-gun ship of the line had captured. Prince of Wales sent the brig into Oporto.[50] However, this may have been Best. Lastly, in early 1974, Prince of Wales captured and brought in Flugen, of Malmö, which had been carrying wine, brandy, and bale goods from Bordeaux to Saint-Domingue.[49]
Slaver and capture
Later in 1794 a new captain replaced Thomson. Radcliffe Shimmin received a letter of marque on 11 June 1794.[1][Note 6][Note 7] A database of slave voyages by Liverpool-registered ships also names Shimmin as master of Prince of Wales.
Shimmin's voyage was ill-fated. Lloyd's List reported that as Prince of Wales was approaching Barbados, having sailed from West Africa for the West Indies, she encountered a French privateer. The privateer, possibly built in Baltimore, was armed with 28 guns and carried a crew of 300 men. She captured Prince of Wales and took her into Saint Thomas, then a Danish colony, and hence neutral.[52] the capture took place in late 1794 or early 1795.
Unsurprisingly, there is no listing for Prince of Wales in Lloyd's Register in 1796.
British merchantman
What is perhaps more surprising is that Prince of Wales returned to British ownership. There is an entry for her in the supplemental (i.e., late addition) pages for the 1797 volume. One suspects that the Royal Navy recaptured her in the West Indies, but so far evidence for the conjecture is lacking.
Barclay and Co. sailed Prince of Wales between the West Indies and London, and particularly Martinique and London, from 1797 to 1800. They then sold her to Fairbridge & Co. Under the command of Captain "Farbidge", she sailed between London and the Mediterranean between 1801 and 1805. In 1806 Prince of Wales received a large repair and new deck and sides. Fairbridge also rearmed her with six 6-pounder guns. From 1805 or so, she was under the command of Captain Stoker, who then sailed in the London-St Vincent trade. She was still listed as sailing in 1810.
Lloyd's Register
Lloyd's Register is only as accurate as the information owners gave it, and there are discrepancies between the entries for vessels and information from other sources. That said, there is generally a strong correspondence between the information in Lloyd's Register, and other sources, at least with respect to Prince of Wales.
Year | Master | Owner | Trade | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1787 | J. Mason | J. Mather | London - Botany Bay | 300 tons (bm); almost rebuilt 1786; named Hannibal in 1786[53] |
1789 | J. Mason | J. Mather | London-Botany Bay | 300 tons (bm); almost rebuilt 1786[54] |
1790 | J. Mason Illegible |
J. Mather | London-Botany Bay London - South Seas Fisheries |
300 tons (bm); almost rebuilt 1786[55] |
1791 | F. Bolton | J. Mather | London-Botany Bay London - South Seas Fisheries |
300 tons (bm); almost rebuilt 1786[56] |
1792 | F. Bolton | J. Mather | London-South Seas Fisheries | 300 tons (bm); almost rebuilt 1786[57] |
1793 | F. Bolton Thompson |
C. Tarleton | London-South Seas Fisheries Liverpool-Africa |
300 tons (bm); almost rebuilt 1786; 18 × 6-pounder guns[58] |
1794 | Thompson | C. Tarlton | Liverpool-Africa | 300 tons (bm); almost rebuilt 1786; 18 × 6-pounder guns[59] |
1795 | R. Simons | C. Tarlton | Liverpool-Africa | 300 tons (bm); almost rebuilt 1786; 10 × 6-pounder guns[60] |
1796 | Not listed | |||
1797 | Andrews | Bartly & Co. | London-Martinique | 300 tons (bm); almost rebuilt 1786[61] |
1798 | J. Andrews | Barclay | London-Martinque | 318 tons (bm); almost rebuilt 1786 - part old materials; 6 × 4-pounder guns[62] |
1799 | J. Andrews | Barclay | London-Martinque | 318 tons (bm);almost rebuilt 1786 - part old materials; 6 × 4-pounder guns[63] |
1800 | J. Andrews | Barclay | London transport London-Grenada |
318 tons (bm);almost rebuilt 1786 - part old materials; 6 × 4-pounder guns[64] |
1801 | Farbridge | Fairbridge | London - Mediterranean | 318 tons (bm);almost rebuilt 1786 - part old materials; 6 × 3-pounder guns[65] |
1802 | Farbridge | Fairbridge | London - Mediterranean | 318 tons (bm);almost rebuilt 1786 - part old materials[66] |
1803 | Farbridge | Fairbridge | London - Mediterranean | 318 tons (bm);almost rebuilt 1786 - part old materials[67] |
1804 | Farbridge | Fairbridge | London - Mediterranean | 318 tons (bm);almost rebuilt 1786 - part old materials[68] |
1805 | Stoker | Fairbridge | London - St Vincent | 318 tons (bm); 6 × 6-pounder guns;new deck and sides; large repair[69] |
1806 | Stoker | Fairbridge | London - St Vincent | 318 tons (bm); 6 × 6-pounder guns;new deck and sides; large repair[70] |
1807 | Stoker | Fairbridge | London - St Vincent | 318 tons (bm); 6 × 6-pounder guns;new deck and sides; large repair[71] |
1808 | Stoker | Fairbridge | London - St Vincent | 318 tons (bm); 6 × 6-pounder guns;new deck and sides; large repair[72] |
1809 | Stoker | Fairbridge | London - St Vincent | 318 tons (bm); 6 × 6-pounder guns;new deck and sides; large repair[73] |
1810 | Stoker | Fairbridge | London - St Vincent | 318 tons (bm); 6 × 6-pounder guns;new deck and sides; large repair[74] |
See also
Notes, citations, and references
Notes
- ↑ The reason for the discrepancies between different reports is that the calculation of burthen was complex, and owners and others may simply have provided reasonable approximations, or repairs may have resulted in material changes, or simply occasioned more careful calculation. All these numbers are noticeably smaller than the burthen of 389 tons that the length and breadth measurements yield.
- ↑ From Phillip's report: 3 convicts were suffering from venereal disease, 3 convicts and 2 marines from "intermittent fever" and 1 convict from "fever."[29]
- ↑ The seventh child was born on 29 August, while Prince of Wales was at sea; the eighth while the ship was anchored off Cape Town on 17 October.[39]
- ↑ The Brazil Banks are the edge of the continental shelf to the east and south of latitude 16°S of the coast of South America.[46]
- ↑ Williams states that the captain of Prince of Wales was Thompson, not Scales,[49] which is inconsistent with the letter of marque and other evidence. The item in Scots Magazine does not give the master's name.
- ↑ Shimmin was from the Isle of Man. A survey of Manx mariners lists him as her captain in 1794.[51]
- ↑ Lloyd's Register for 1795 gives the captain's name as R. Simons, but this is clearly an error.
Citations
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Letter of Marque, p.82, - accessed 14 May 2011.
- ↑ Lloyd's Register (1787).
- ↑ Hackman (2001), p.175.
- 1 2 Lloyd's Register (1787), seq. no. H446.
- ↑ Lloyd's Register (1799)
- ↑ Keneally 2005, p. 58
- 1 2 3 Gillen 1989, p.429.
- ↑ Hackman (2001), p.241.
- ↑ Bateson (1959), p. 81.
- ↑ Cavanagh (1999), p. 9.
- 1 2 3 Hill (2009), p. 54.
- ↑ Bateson 1959, p. 275.
- ↑ Hackman (2001), pp. 175 & 241.
- ↑ Henderson and Stanbury 1998, p. 40.
- ↑ Bateson 1959, p.80.
- ↑ Allan 2002, p. 1929.
- ↑ The Voyage of Governor Phillip to Botany Bay (1789)
- ↑ Keneally 2005, p. 49
- ↑ Britton (ed.) 1978, p.56
- ↑ Keneally 2005, p. 50
- 1 2 Moore 1987, pp. 46–48
- ↑ Hill 2009, p.333
- ↑ Hill 2009, p. 334.
- ↑ Hill 2009, p. 131
- ↑ Hill 2009, p. 134
- ↑ Bateson 1959, p. 98
- ↑ Britton (ed.) 1978, pp. 121–122
- ↑ Hill 2009, p.149
- 1 2 Letter from Governor Phillip to Lord Sydney, 5 June 1787, cited in Britton (ed.) 1978, pp. 106–107
- 1 2 Keneally 2005, p. 73
- ↑ Journal of Lt Ralph Clark, July 1787, cited in Hill 2009, p. 102
- ↑ Hill 2009, p. 103 & 136.
- 1 2 Gillen 1989, p. 450
- ↑ Hill 2009, pp. 103–104
- ↑ Hill 2009, p. 105
- ↑ Moore 1989, p.66
- ↑ Moore 1989, pp. 55, 60-61
- 1 2 Moore 1989, pp. 69–70
- ↑ Moore 1989, p.64, 69
- ↑ "James Scott". catalogue entry. State Library of NSW. Retrieved 11 December 2013.
- ↑ Governor Philip to Admiralty, 10 July 1788, cited in Britton (ed.) 1978, p. 166
- 1 2 Cavanagh 1999, p. 2
- 1 2 3 4 5 Cavanagh 1999, p. 5
- ↑ Cavanagh 1999, p. 6
- 1 2 3 Clayton (2014), pp.193-4.
- ↑ Clayton (2014).
- ↑ Lloyd's List, n° 2346, 28-10-1791.
- ↑ Scots magazine, Vol.55, p.204.
- 1 2 3 4 5 Williams (1897), p.307.
- ↑ Lloyd's List, n°2578, 17 January 1794.]]
- ↑ Wilkins (200), p.109.
- ↑ Lloyd's List, n° 2709, 21 April 1795 - accessed 31 October 2015.
- ↑ http://hdl.handle.net/2027/mdp.39015065522610?urlappend=%3Bseq=267
- ↑ http://hdl.handle.net/2027/mdp.39015065522511?urlappend=%3Bseq=248
- ↑ http://hdl.handle.net/2027/mdp.39015050578064?urlappend=%3Bseq=287
- ↑ http://hdl.handle.net/2027/mdp.39015050578056?urlappend=%3Bseq=263
- ↑ http://hdl.handle.net/2027/mdp.39015004281252?urlappend=%3Bseq=265
- ↑ http://hdl.handle.net/2027/mdp.39015004281245?urlappend=%3Bseq=272
- ↑ http://hdl.handle.net/2027/mdp.39015004281237?urlappend=%3Bseq=287
- ↑ http://hdl.handle.net/2027/mdp.39015004281294?urlappend=%3Bseq=275
- ↑ http://hdl.handle.net/2027/mdp.39015004281278?urlappend=%3Bseq=285
- ↑ http://hdl.handle.net/2027/mdp.39015004281211?urlappend=%3Bseq=266
- ↑ http://hdl.handle.net/2027/mdp.39015004281260?urlappend=%3Bseq=269
- ↑ http://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.39015065522479;view=1up;seq=313
- ↑ http://hdl.handle.net/2027/mdp.39015065522503?urlappend=%3Bseq=380
- ↑ http://hdl.handle.net/2027/mdp.39015005680551?urlappend=%3Bseq=358
- ↑ http://hdl.handle.net/2027/mdp.39015005667087?urlappend=%3Bseq=391
- ↑ http://hdl.handle.net/2027/mdp.39015005667095?urlappend=%3Bseq=425
- ↑ http://hdl.handle.net/2027/mdp.39015005667111?urlappend=%3Bseq=433
- ↑ http://hdl.handle.net/2027/mdp.39015005667103?urlappend=%3Bseq=474
- ↑ http://hdl.handle.net/2027/mdp.39015005690469?urlappend=%3Bseq=439
- ↑ http://hdl.handle.net/2027/mdp.39015005676377?urlappend=%3Bseq=400
- ↑ http://hdl.handle.net/2027/mdp.39015005676385?urlappend=%3Bseq=374
- ↑ http://hdl.handle.net/2027/mdp.39015005676393?urlappend=%3Bseq=405
References
- Allan, John (2002). "The Fate of Cook's Ships: Cook's Ships – A Summary Update". Cook's Log. United Kingdom: Captain Cook Society. 25 (3): 1929. Retrieved 2 November 2013.
- Bateson, Charles (1959). The Convict Ships. Brown, Son & Ferguson. OCLC 3778075.
- Britton, Alex R., ed. (1978). Historical records of New South Wales. Vol. 1, part 2. Phillip, 1783–1792. Lansdown Slattery & Co. p. 56. OCLC 219911274.
- Campbell, Susan (2007) "AFRICANS TO DOMINICA: 100,000 MIDDLE PASSAGES FROM 'GUINEA' to the Eastern Caribbean, 1764-1808".
- Cavanagh, A.K. (1989). "The Return of the First Fleet Ships". The Great Circle. The Australian Association for Maritime History. 11 (2). JSTOR 41562684. (Subscription required (help)).
- Clayton, Jane M. (2014) Ships employed in the South Sea Whale Fishery from Britain: 1775-1815: An alphabetical list of ships. (Berforts Group). ISBN 978-1908616524
- Gillen, Mollie (1989). The Founders of Australia: A Biographical Dictionary of the First Fleet. Library of Australian History. ISBN 0-908120-69-9.
- Hackman, Rowan (2001) Ships of the East India Company. (Gravesend, Kent: World Ship Society). ISBN 0-905617-96-7
- Henderson, G; Stanbury, M (1988). The Sirius:Past and Present. Sydney: Collins. ISBN 0-7322-2447-0.
- Hill, David (2009). 1788. Random House Australia. ISBN 978-1-74166-800-1.
- Keneally, Tom (2005). The Commonwealth of Thieves. Random House Australia. ISBN 978-1-74166-613-7.
- Knight, R.J.B.; Frost, Alan, eds. (1983). Journal of Daniel Paine, 1794–1797, together with documents illustrating the beginning of government boat-building and timber-gathering in New South Wales, 1795–1805. Library of Australian History. ISBN 0-908120-49-4.
- Moore, John (1989). The First Fleet Marines. University of Queensland Press. ISBN 0702220655.
- Watson, Frederick, ed. (1914). Historical records of Australia : Series 1, Governors' despatches to and from England (1788–1848). The Library Committee of the Commonwealth Parliament. OCLC 321045909.
- Wilkins, Frances (2000) 2,000 Manx Mariners: An Eighteenth Century Survey. (Wyre Forest Press). ISBN 978-1897725146
- Williams, Gomer (1897; since republished) History of the Liverpool Privateers and Letters of Marque: With an Account of the Liverpool Slave Trade. (W. Heinemann).
External links
- Cama, Nicole (2015). "Prince of Wales". Dictionary of Sydney. Retrieved 2 October 2015. [CC-By-SA]