Engineering:Amphitrite (1789 ship)

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History
Great Britain
Name: Amphitrite
Namesake: Amphitrite
Builder: Unknown
Launched: Unknown
Fate: Lost 1799
General characteristics
Tons burthen: 200,[1] or 236[2][3] (bm)
Complement: 25[2]
Armament:
  • Merchantman: 8 × 6-pounder guns[1]
  • Slaver: 16 × 6-pounder guns + 4 × 12-pounder carronades[2]

Amphitrite's origins are obscure. She first appeared in Lloyd's Register in 1789. Her entry notes that she had been almost rebuilt in 1783 and had undergone a good repair in 1788, presumably under a different name. From 1789 to 1799 she was a whaler in the British northern whale fishery. She then started on a voyage as a Liverpool-based slave ship in the triangular trade in enslaved people. She capsized off the coast of Africa on her first voyage.

Career

In 1788 the King's Dock opened in Liverpool. On 3 October, the Greenland whaler Amphitrite, Pagan, master, was the first vessel to enter the dock.[4]

Year Master Owner Trade Source & notes
1789 T.Pagan Gryson & Co. Liverpool–Greenland LR; almost rebuilt 1783, & good repair 1788[1]
1790 J.Pagan
J.Miller
Mason & Co. Liverpool–Greenland LR; almost rebuilt 1783, & good repair 1788
1795 J.Miller Liverpool–Greenland LR; almost rebuilt 1783, & good repair 1788
1799 Gardner
C__hn
Ross & Co. Liverpool–Greenland
Liverpool–Africa
LR; almost rebuilt 1783, good repair 1788, & damages repaired 1796
1800 Carnehan R.Johnson Liverpool–Africa LR; almost rebuilt 1783, good repair 1788, & damages repaired 1796

Enslaving voyage and loss

Captain James Cosnahan acquired a letter of marque on 20 March 1799.[2] Cosnachan (or Cosmacher) sailed Amphitrite (or Amphitut) from Liverpool on 16 June, bound for Bonny; she was legally allowed to transport up to 470 captives.[5] In 1799, 156 vessels sailed from British ports bound on enslaving voyages; 134 of the vessels came from Liverpool.[6]

Lloyd's List (LL) reported on 10 January 1800 that Amphitrite, Cochrane, master, had capsized at New Calabar, Africa.[7]

The Trans Atlantic Slave Trade database has Amphitrite being captured.[8] However, there were two Amphitrites of Liverpool that were engaged in gathering captives off the coast of Africa in late 1799, and both were lost. The other was Amphitrite, Adams, master, which by elimination appears to be the one that the French captured.

In 1799, 18 British enslaving ships were lost, five of them on the coast of Africa.[9] During the period 1793 to 1807, war, rather than maritime hazards or resistance by the captives, was the greatest cause of vessel losses among British enslaving vessels.[10]

Citations

References

  • Genuine Dicky Sam (1884). Liverpool and slavery, by a genuine Dicky Sam. 
  • Horton, Steven (2012). The Liverpool Book of Days. History Press. 
  • Inikori, Joseph (1996). "Measuring the unmeasured hazards of the Atlantic slave trade: Documents relating to the British trade". Revue française d'histoire d'outre-mer 83 (312): 53–92. doi:10.3406/outre.1996.3457. 
  • Williams, Gomer (1897). History of the Liverpool Privateers and Letters of Marque: With an Account of the Liverpool Slave Trade. W. Heinemann.