Whitby (barque)

History
Red EnsignUnited Kingdom
NameWhitby
OwnerJohn Chapman & Co, 2 Leadenhall Street, London (Original owner)
BuilderHenry and George Barrick, Whitby, Yorkshire
Launched1837
FateWrecked April 1853
General characteristics
Tons burthen437 (bm)
Length99 ft 6 in (30 m)
Beam24 ft 7 in (7 m)
Depth of hold19 ft 7 in (6 m)
PropulsionSail

Whitby was a three-masted, square-rigger launched in 1837 and later re-rigged as a barque. She was registered in London, and made voyages to India, British Guiana, Australia, and New Zealand. In 1841 Whitby, Arrow, and Will Watch carried surveyors and labourers for the New Zealand Company to prepare plots for the first settlers (scheduled to follow five months later). Whitby was wrecked at Kaipara Harbour in April 1853.

Career

[edit]

Whitby was originally built for the London-Calcutta route, and sailed there in May 1837.[1] She arrived at Kedgeree, Bengal, on 12 November.[2] In May 1838, she brought the first 270 apprenticed East Indian hill coolie migrants from Calcutta to Berbice and Demerara in British Guiana for Gillanders, Abuthnot and Co.[3]

In 1839 Whitby transported 133 female convicts to Sydney. Under the command of Captain Thomas Wellbank, she left Dublin on 18 February and arrived at Sydney on 23 June.[4]

On 20 June 1840 she left Sydney for New Zealand.[5] On 19 December she was reported landing three rescued crew members from the Esperance and Hesperia at Grimsby.[6] However, this may have been another ship, as she was reported sailing from Table Bay to Mauritius on 15 December.[7] She was reported as being at Cork on 16 February 1841 having passed the Olympus, which was sailing to New Zealand.[8] She arrived at Gravesend on 3 or 4 March, being noted as having sailed from Lombock.

Her first voyage to New Zealand was to Wellington under Captain Lacey. She arrived on 18 September 1841 at Port Nicholson.[9] Her cargo included 20,000 bricks.[10]

On 3 November, while under the command of Captain James Swinton, Whitby arrived at Nelson, New Zealand, with the Will Watch and Arrow. In October she had participated in the New Zealand Company's exploration of Golden Bay.

In 1842 seamen on board her were paid £3 5s per month.[11]

Ownership changed in 1843 when she sold to Thomas Hawson in Moulmein, Burma, then part of British India. In 1844 she was sold to Phillip Richardson of London and 1848 to Thomas Radcliff of London.

On 3 February 1849 she left London with 165 immigrants to Melbourne, Australia.[12] She arrived at Port Phillip on 28 June.[13] On 31 July 1851 she had arrived from Port Phillip in Sydney.[14]

In 1851 or 1852 Whitby underwent major repairs, including a new deck.

She sailed from Sydney on 30 September 1852 under the command of Captain Bruce, and arrived at Kaipara on 16 October to load a cargo of timber for Melbourne or Sydney. She had been earlier purchased by Mr Wright of Sydney for use by Wright and Grahame's line on the trans-Tasman trade.[15] She sailed from Kaipara on the 19 December and arrived back in Sydney on 2 December.[16] In March 1853 she again sailed from Sydney to Kaipara under Captain Bruce, arriving at Kaipara on 16 March. On this voyage one of the crew, Benjamin Leeland, fell into the Kaipara river and drowned.[17]

Loss

[edit]

She was sailing under Captain Bruce with a full cargo of timber when she was lost on Tory Shoal at Kaipara on 24 April 1853. Fortunately all the crew survived.[18]

Monument

[edit]

On 5 May 1988, a bronze sculpture of the Whitby was presented to the people of Guyana by the Indian government. It is located in the Guyana National Park in Georgetown.[19]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Ship News", The Times, London, England, 5 May 1837.
  2. ^ The Times, London, England, 1 February 1838.
  3. ^ Correspondence relative to the condition of hill coolies etc in British Guiana, The sessional papers printed by order of the House of Lords, or presented by Royal command in the session 1839 VOL. VII, pp. 4-6.
  4. ^ "Third Quarter of Convict Register 1839-1849".
  5. ^ "Ship News", The Times, London, England, 20 October 1840.
  6. ^ Ship News, Times, London, England, 23 December 1840.
  7. ^ Ship News, Times, London, England, 23 February 1841
  8. ^ Ship News, Times, London, England, 27 February 1841
  9. ^ "Arrived", New Zealand Gazette and Wellington Spectator, 25 September 1841, Page 2
  10. ^ "Custom House", New Zealand Gazette and Wellington Spectator, Vol. 25, Issue 76, 25 September 1841, P. 2.
  11. ^ "Colonial extracts", New Zealand Gazette and Wellington Spectator, Vol. 3, Issue 147, 4 June 1842, p.3.
  12. ^ Shipping Intelligence, New Zealander, Volume 5, Issue 316, 9 June 1849, Page 3
  13. ^ "Shipping Intelligence", New Zealander, Vol.5, Issue 332, 24 July 1849, p.2.
  14. ^ "Shipping intelligence", New Zealander, Vol. 7, Issue 557, 16 August 1851, p. 2.
  15. ^ Shipping intelligence, New Zealander, Volume 8, Issue 682, 27 October 1852, Page 2
  16. ^ Shipping intelligence, Bell’s Life in Sydney and Sporting Reviewer, 8 January 1853
  17. ^ Shipping List, Daily Southern Cross, 29 March 1853, Page 2
  18. ^ Shipping Intelligence, Sydney Morning Herald, 25 May 1853.
  19. ^ Mahendra Sukhdeo. "Project proposal: installation of a monument for the unknown Fiji Girmitiyas". Academia: 4. Retrieved 9 December 2021.

36°25′18″S 174°4′12″E / 36.42167°S 174.07000°E / -36.42167; 174.07000 (Tory Shoal)