William (1770 ship)

History
Great Britain
Name: William
Builder: France
Launched: 1770[1]
Fate: Last listed in the Register of Shipping in 1809
General characteristics
Tons burthen: 302,[2] or 305 (bm)
Complement: 28[2]
Armament:
  • 1801:12 × 6-pounder guns + 2 × swivel guns[2]
  • 1802: 2 × 9-pounder + 8 × 4-pounder guns[3]

William was a merchant vessel built in France in 1770 or 1771. From 1791 she made numerous voyages as a whaler. She also made one voyage in 1793 transporting supplies from England to Australia. She then resumed whaling, continuing until 1809.

Career

William first enters Lloyd's Register in 1786. The table below recapitulates information from Lloyd's Register for William, built in France in 1770.

Year Master Owner Burthen Trade
1786 Rt Hill Matthews 350 London-Dominica
1787 R. Hill Matthews 350 London-Dominica
1789 S. Hill
S. Pearce
Matthews 350 South Carolina—London
London—"Piscat" (Piscataqua?)
1790 S. Pearce Clapcoat 305 London—Piscat
1791 T.Sweetland
Moss?
Clapcoat
S. Enderby
305 London—Piscat
London—South Seas Fishery

On 3 April 1791 Captain Moss (or Mott), sailed William, of 302 tons (bm), for Peru. A month earlier (1 March), she had been on shore at Sheerness. She returned on 21 April 1793 with 141 tuns of sperm oil, five tuns of whale oil, and 2347 seal skins.[4][Note 1]

Under the command of William Folger (or Folgar), she sailed from England via Cork, Ireland, on 21 September 1793, with 2080 barrels of beef and pork, the Colony's new Assistant Chaplain, Rev. Samuel Marsden, and one female convict. William arrived at Port Jackson, New South Wales, on 10 March 1794.[6] After unloading her goods, she purportedly left for China.[7]

There is some confusion about her ownership and later role on this voyage. Lloyd's Register gives her owner as Samuel Enderby & Sons. A database of whaling voyages gives her owner as Mather & Co.,[4] but also lists Enderbys as her owners from 1791 on. Both sources agree that she was a whaler.

Apparently, William went whaling off Peru instead of going to China. She was reported off the coast of Peru, and then on the coast of Chile in November 1794. She returned to Britain on 29 November 1795 with 64 tuns of sperm oil, 57 tuns of whale oil, and 32 cwt of whale bone.[4]

On 12 April 1796, Captain George Fitch sailed William for the South Seas whaling grounds. She was reported to have been off Massafuero (Más Afuera) Island in August. Then at Chatham Island (Galapagos) on 6 November. She was in company with Greenwich between February and May 1797 at the Galapagos. On 8 July Williams was at Cape Corrientes (Mexico). She was off Chile on 21 November. Then she was off Bahai (possibly Bahía de Banderas), California, in January 1798 bound for the Galapagos and then Easter Island. She was reported at St Helena shortly before she returned to England on 10 July 1798.[4]

Fitch made another whaling voyage in William, returning to Britain on 12 September 1800.[4]

On 4 March 1801 Captain Robert Poole received a letter of marque for William.[2]

Poole left Britain on 20 March,. She was reported off the coast of Brazil in November. Later, she was reported at St Helena. She returned to Britain on 25 May 1802.[4]

The Register of Shipping for 1802 shows William's master changing from Poole to J. Cottle. Her owner is still S. Enderby, and her trade is still the South Seas Fishery.[3]

Obediah Cottle (or Catterell) sailed from Britain on 22 August, bound for the Pacific. William was reported to have been in the Pacific in November 1803 and March 1804, and at St Helena on 23 December. She returned to Britain on 21 March 1805.[4]

Fate

William is last listed in the Register of Shipping in 1809.

Notes, citations and references

Notes

  1. While under Sweetland's command William may have hunted whales in Delagoa Bay. The records are garbled.[5][4]

Citations

References

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