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词条 Charming Kitty (1799 ship)
释义

  1. Whaling voyages

  2. Subsequent career

  3. Fate

  4. Notes, citations and references

{{Use dmy dates|date=May 2017}}{{Use British English|date=May 2017}}{{Infobox ship image
Ship image=Ship caption=
}}{{Infobox ship career
Ship country=United KingdomUnited Kingdom|civil}}Ship yard number=Ship owner=*Robert Wigram (1799-1801)
  • John Shuttleworth (1802-1813)
Ship name=Charming KittyShip namesake=Ship builder=Ship acquired=c.1799 as prizeShip launched=Ship fate=Wrecked 1813Ship status=Ship notes=
}}{{Infobox ship characteristics
Header caption=[1]Ship type=Ship tons burthen=303 (bm)Ship length=Ship beam=Ship draught=Ship propulsion=SailShip speed=Ship complement=Ship armament=Ship notes=
}}

Charming Kitty was a ship captured from the Spanish. She first appears in the Protection Lists for whalers in 1799. She conducted four whaling voyages between 1799 and 1808 before becoming a West Indiaman, trading with the Caribbean. She was wrecked in October 1813.

Whaling voyages

Charming Kitty left Britain on her first whaling voyage 21 March 1799 under the command of James Mather, master, with destination Walvis Bay.[2] Charming Kitty was reported at Walvis Bay in August 1801 with Burn, master. By 19 September 1801 she was at St Helena, and she arrived back at Britain on 6 December.[2]

Captain Thaddeus Luce (or Lewis) sailed Charming Kitty on 16 March 1802 from Britain and bound for Delagoa Bay. She was reported there with other whalers, including Britannia and DuBuc, on 8 August.[3][4]

She left Cape of Good Hope on 12 February 1804 for Britain, and arrived there on 3 April 1804.[2]

In August 1802, the Honourable the Court of Directors of the East India Company announced that they had licensed 19 vessels, Albion, Charming Kitty, and {{HMS|Flirt|1782|2}} among them, to sail east of the Cape of Good Hope to engage in whaling in the "Southern Whale Fishery".[5] At the time Charming Kitty was valued at £9,000.[6]

Charming Kitty{{'}}s third whaling voyage began on 1 July 1804 when she left Britain under the command of George Hedge (or Hodges), master. She was reported to have called at Rio de Janeiro in January 1805 with 40 tons of oil, but with her master and seven crew members dead. Her new master appears to have been "Mitchell". She returned to Rio in December, to refill her water casks.[2] She left St Helena on 7 September in a convoy under the escort of the 50-gun {{HMS|Antelope|1802|6}},{{refn|The whalers and other vessels had been waiting at St Helena for about a month for the arrival of the East Indiaman Warren Hastings when news arrived that the French had captured her,[7]|group=Note}} and returned to Britain on 29 October 1806.[2]

Captain Henry King sailed Charming Kitty on her fourth and last whaling voyage. She left Britain on

9 February 1807 bound for Delagoa Bay. She was reported to have been at Delagoa Bay on 1 August and on 1 September 1807. She sailed out of the Cape of Good Hope on 19 January 1808.[2] She was then reported "feared lost".[6] She arrived in Britain on 12 December 1808,[2] but put into Ramsgate on 15 December 1808 having lost her anchor, cables, and bowsprit.[6]

Subsequent career

Charming Kitty{{'}}s entry in Lloyd's Register for 1809 shows an amendment, changing master from H. King to Manning, and her trade from South Seas to Yucatán.[8]

Lloyd's Register for 1810 gives her trade as London-Antigua, her master as Manning, and her owner as Shuttleworth.

Charming Kitty was reported to have been at Havana on 11 June 1812, loading for London.[9]

Fate

Charming Kitty, Nevin, master, was lost near Bermuda on 20 October 1813. Her crew and part of the cargo were saved. She had been sailing from British Honduras to London.[10]

Notes, citations and references

Notes
1. ^Lloyd's Register (1810): Seq. №C407.
2. ^  Jones, A.G. E.; Dale Chatwin; and Rhys Richards. BSWF Database – voyages: Charming Kitty.
3. ^Lloyd's List №4102.
4. ^Between 1795 and 1797 Luce had sailed another whaler, {{ship||Robust|1782 ship|2}}, on two whaling voyages.
5. ^Naval Chronicle (Jul-Dec 1802), Vol. 8, p.254.
6. ^Clayton (2014), pp.86-7.
7. ^Naval Chronicle, Vol. 16, p.313.
8. ^Lloyd's Register (1809), №C393.
9. ^Lloyd's List №4683.
10. ^Lloyd's List №4832, 24 December 1813.
Citations{{reflist|30em}}References
  • 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}}
{{italic title}}

6 : 1799 ships|Whaling ships|Captured ships|Age of Sail merchant ships|Merchant ships of the United Kingdom|Maritime incidents in 1813

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