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词条 Northumberland (1805 EIC ship)
释义

  1. Voyages

     EIC voyage #1 (1805–1807)  EIC voyage #2 (1808–1809)  EIC voyage #3 (1810–1812)  EIC voyage #4 (1813–1814)  EIC voyage #5 (1815–1816)  EIC voyage #6 (1817–1818) 

  2. Fate

  3. Citations and references

{{other ships|Northumberland (ship)}}{{Use dmy dates|date=January 2017}}{{Use British English|date=January 2017}}{{Infobox ship image
Ship image= Ship caption=
}}{{Infobox ship career
Hide header= Ship country=Great Britain Ship flag= Ship name=Northumberland Ship owner=*Voyage #1: Henry Joseph Hounsom
  • Voyages #2-3: William Masson
  • Voyages #4-6: William Sims.
Ship operator= Ship ordered= Ship builder= Francis Thomas Hurry, Newcastle-upon-Tyne,[1] or Brent[2] Ship original cost= Ship laid down= Ship launched=2 February 1805[1] Ship acquired= Ship commissioned= Ship decommissioned= Ship in service= Ship out of service= Ship renamed= Ship struck= Ship reinstated= Ship honours= Ship honors= Ship captured= Ship fate=1819 sold for breaking up Ship status= Ship notes=
}}{{Infobox ship characteristics
Hide header= Header caption=[2] Ship type=East Indiaman Ship class=[2] or 673,[6] or 673{{small>{{frac|24|94}}}}[1] (bm)135|ft|6+1/2|in|m|1|abbr=on}} (overall)
  • {{convert|109|ft|10|in|m|1|abbr=on}} (keel)
33|ft|0+1/2|in|m|1|abbr=on}} Ship draught= Ship draft=14|ft|9|in|m|1|abbr=on}} Ship propulsion= Ship sail plan=Full rigged ship Ship complement=*1805:50[6]
  • 1808:70[6]
Ship armament=*1805:14 × 9&18-pounder guns[6]
  • 1808:18 × 12-pounder guns[6]
Ship notes=Three decks
}}

Northumberland was launched in 1805. She made six voyages as an extra ship of the British East India Company (EIC), between 1805 and 1818. In 1810 and 1811 she served as a transport in the British invasions of Mauritius and Java. She was sold for breaking up in 1819.

Voyages

On 9 April 1805 Thomas Hardy received a contract for six voyages from the EIC. The freight rate was £15 9s per registered ton peacetime rate, plus £12 10s per ton for wartime contingencies as of the first voyage.[3]

EIC voyage #1 (1805–1807)

Captain George Raincock acquired a letter of marque on 20 June 1805.[4] He sailed from Cork on 31 August, bound for St Helena and Bengal. Northumberland reached Madeira on 29 September and St Helena on 13 December. There a passenger, the future explorer and naturalist William John Burchell left her. She was at the Cape of Good Hope on 27 February 1806, and Penang on 29 May. She parted from {{ship||Euphrates|1803 EIC ship|2}} off the Andaman Islands on 15 July.[5] Although Euphrates arrived at Caclutta on 18 July, Northumberland did not arrive at Calcutta on until 4 August.[2]

Northumberland was at Saugor on 13 September. She was again at Calcutta on 25 September. Homeward bound, albeit indirectly, she was at Saugor on 21 November, and Madras on 11 January 1807. By 20 February she was at Bombay. She reached Point de Galle on 5 April, the Cape on 5 June, and St Helena on 9 July. She arrived back at the Downs on 26 September.[2]

EIC voyage #2 (1808–1809)

Captain John Robinson Francklin (or Franklin) acquired a letter of marque on 11 March 1808. He sailed from Portsmouth on 15 April 1808, bound for Madras and Bengal. Northumberland was at Madeira on 1 May, and arrived at Madras on 19 September. On 5 November she was at Calcutta. Homeward bound, she was at Saugor on 29 December and Point de Galle on 7 February 1809.[2]

On 15 February she sailed from Point de Galle as part of a fleet of 15 East Indiamen under escort by {{HMS|Culloden|1783|6}} and {{HMS|Terpsichore|1785|6}}.[6]

On 14 March 1809, off Mauritius, a gale developed. Four of the ships, {{ship||Bengal|1799 EIC ship|2}}, {{ship||Calcutta|1798 EIC ship|2}}, {{ship||Jane, Duchess of Gordon|1805 EIC ship|2}}, and {{ship||Lady Jane Dundas|1800 EIC ship|2}}, parted company with the main convoy. They were never heard of again. {{ship||Huddart|1803 EIC ship|2}} was the last to vessel to see Bengal and Calcutta; {{ship||Hugh Inglis|1799 EIC ship|2}} was the last vessel to see Jane, Duchess of Gordon and Lady Jane Dundas.[7] The hull of one of the four missing vessels was sighted overturned off Mauritius the following October, but sank before it could be identified.[8]

Northumberland reached St Helena on 29 April. She arrived at the Downs on 13 July.[2]

EIC voyage #3 (1810–1812)

Captain Franklin left Portsmouth on 14 March 1810, bound for Madras and Bengal. She reached Madras on 8 July and arrived at Diamond Harbour 29 July. Outward bound, she was at Saugor at 30 August, and Mauritius on 29 November.[2] She may have been transporting troops or material to support the British invasion of Mauritius. She then returned to Diamond Harbor on 23 February 1811.[2]

Next, she sailed in support of the British invasion of Java. She was at Saugor on 17 March and Malacca on 4 May.[2] Northumberland was in the fourth division, which left Malacca on 17 June.[9]

{{main|Transport vessels for the British invasion of Java (1811)}}

On 4 August she was at Batavia. She returned to Calcutta on 23 October. Finally homeward bound, she was at Saugor on 26 January 1812, Madras on 4 February, and St Helena on 11 May. She arrived at the Downs on 21 July.[2]

EIC voyage #4 (1813–1814)

Captain Franklin sailed from Portsmouth on 2 June 1813, bound for Bengal. Northumberland was at Madeira on 22 June Madeira and arrived at Diamond Harbour on 8 November. She was at Calcutta on 25 December. Homeward bound, she was at Saugor on 29 January 1814, the Cape on 25 April, and St Helena on 19 May. She arrived at Woolwich on 12 June.[2]

EIC voyage #5 (1815–1816)

Captain Franklin sailed from the Downs on 3 April 1815, bound for Madras and Bengal. Northumberland reached Madeira on 18 April and Madras on6 August. She arrived at Calcutta on 5 September. Homeward bound, she was at Saugor on 25 November, Madras on 29 December, Bencoolen on 1 February 1816, and St Helena on 10 May. She arrived at the Downs on 13 July.[2]

EIC voyage #6 (1817–1818)

Captain William Mitchell sailed from the Downs on 6 May 1817, bound for Bengal and Bencoolen. Northumberland reached Madeira on 21 May, and arrived at Diamond Harbour on 28 September. On 17 December she was at New Anchorage (Calcutta, near Diamond Harbour and Kedgeree.) On 27 February 1818 she was at Bencoolen. She reached St Helena on 3 July, and arrived at the Downs on 29 August.[2]

Fate

Northumberland was sold in 1819 for breaking up.

Citations and references

Citations
1. ^Hackman (2001), p.164.
2. ^10 11 12 13 British Library: Northumberland (5).
3. ^Hardy (1811), p.30.
4. ^Letter of Marque, p.80 - accessed 25 July 2017.
5. ^[https://hdl.handle.net/2027/uc1.c2735023?urlappend=%3Bseq=23 Lloyd's List №4121.]
6. ^Naval Chronicle, Vol. 26, p.216.
7. ^Naval Chronicle, Vol. 26, p.218.
8. ^Hackman (2001), p.66.
9. ^Naval Chronicle, Vol. 27, p.109.
References
  • {{cite book |last=Hackman |first=Rowan |year=2001 |title=Ships of the East India Company |location=Gravesend, Kent |publisher=World Ship Society |ISBN=0-905617-96-7 |ref=harv}}
  • Hardy, Horatio Charles (1811) A register of ships, employed in the service of the Honorable the United East India Company, from the year 1760 to 1810: with an appendix, containing a variety of particulars, and useful information interesting to those concerned with East India commerce. (Black, Parry, and Kingsbury).

4 : 1805 ships|Ships of the British East India Company|Age of Sail merchant ships|Merchant ships of the United Kingdom

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