Scarborough (1782 ship)

For other ships with the same name, see Scarborough (East Indiaman).
Scarborough
History
Great Britain
Name: Scarborough
Owner: John, George, & Thomas Hopper
Builder: Fowler & Heward, Scarborough, North Yorkshire
Launched: 1782, Scarborough
Fate: Foundered, 1805
General characteristics [1]
Tons burthen: 411, or 410 9194[2] (bm)[Note 1]

Scarborough was a square-sterned barque that participated in the First Fleet, assigned to carry convicts for the European colonisation of Australia in 1788.[4] Also, the British East India company (EIC) chartered Scarborough to take a cargo of tea back to Britain after her two voyages transporting convicts.[5] She spent much of her career as a West Indiaman, trading between London and the West Indies, but did perform a third voyage in 1801-02 to Bengal for the EIC. She foundered in 1805.

Early career

Scarborough spent her first four years transporting timber from the Baltic and North America.[2]

In 1787 south London shipbroker William Richards chartered Scarborough for the First Fleet voyage. He selected her after first consulting with Royal Marine officers Watkin Tench and David Collins.[6] Both marine officers would sail with the Fleet to Australia, Tench as a captain of marines and Collins as judge-advocate for the new colony. She was the second-largest transport selected for the Fleet after Alexander[3]

After selection, Scarborough sailed to Deptford dockyard to be refitted for convict transportation under the supervision of Naval Agent George Teer.[7] The height between decks was increased to 6 feet 2 inches (1.9 m) amidships and between 6 feet 1 inch (1.9 m) and 5 feet 11 inches (1.8 m) fore and aft, and two windsails were brought aboard to improve the flow of air in the convict quarters.[8][9] Bulkheads were also fitted to separate convict quarters from those of the marines and crew, and space set aside for stores and a sick bay. An Osbridge machine was also installed to filter Scarborough's drinking water during the voyage to New South Wales.[9][Note 2] Teer was entirely satisfied with Scarborough's fitout; in December 1786 he advised the Navy Board that she and her fellow First Fleet transports were "completed fitted [with] provisions and accommodations .. better than any other set of transports I have ever had any directions in."[Note 3]

Scarborough's crew as a convict transport was approximately 35 men including her master, three mates, a boatswain and a ship's surgeon.[8]

Voyage with the First Fleet

On her first convict voyage, as part of the First Fleet, her master was John Marshall and her surgeon was Dennis Considen.[12] She left Portsmouth on 13 May 1787, carrying 208 male convicts, together with officers and 41 other ranks of the New South Wales Marine Corps. On the way Marshall suspected that the convicts had a plan to mutiny. An informer named two ringleaders, whom Marshall then transferred to HMS Sirius. There they received 24 lashes each and then were again transferred, this time to Prince of Wales.[13] She arrived at Port Jackson, Sydney, on 26 January 1788.

On leaving Port Jackson on 6 May 1788, in company with Charlotte, she travelled to China.[14] On 17 May 1788 the two ships landed at Lord Howe Island for birds and vegetables, then sailed for Whampoa.[15] En route, the ships became the first European vessels to pass among the Marshall and Gilbert islands.[15] Further north, they made landfall on Tinian in the Northern Marianas, where both ships were forced to anchor. The long sea voyage had depleted Scarborough's stores, and scurvy had become rampant among her crew. Fifteen of the sickest men were brought ashore on Tinian and housed in tents on the dunes, while the remainder of the crew foraged for food. While anchored off Tinian, both vessels were nearly blown onto shore by strong winds, but disaster was averted when their captains decided to cut the anchor ropes and raise sail to move off shore.[15]

After several weeks recovery on Tinian, Scarboroughs crew had returned to sufficient health for the voyage to resume. In easy sailing weather, Scarborough and Charlotte reached Macau on 9 September and Whampoa shortly afterwards. There the EIC chartered them as an "extra ship". They received cargoes of tea and made ready to sail to England. Departing Whampoa on 17 December, the ships reached St. Helena by 20 March 1789 and arrived in England on 15 June.[16][15]

Voyage with the Second Fleet

Scarborough returned to New South Wales with the notorious Second Fleet. In company with Surprize and Neptune, she sailed from England with 253 male convicts on 19 January 1790. Her master was again John Marshall and the surgeon was Augustus Jacob Beyer.

On 18 February several convicts plotted a mutiny. They chose as their leader one Samuel Burt, who revealed the plot to the ship's officers. The plotters were interrogated, and several were severely flogged. Others were chained to the deck.[17]

Scarborough arrived at the Cape of Good Hope on 13 April 1790, and spent 16 days there, taking on provisions, and eight male convicts from HMS Guardian, which had been wrecked after striking an iceberg. She and Neptune parted from Surprize in heavy weather and arrived at Port Jackson on 28 June 160 days out from England. During the voyage 68 or 73 (28%) convicts died and 96 (37%) were sick when landed. After landing, a total of 124 convicts who had arrived in Port Jackson succumbed to disease. She also brought with her two officers and 38 soldiers.[18]

Scarborough returned to England in 1792, via China.[2]

Later service

Scarborough's Pacific voyages had left her increasingly decrepit and in need of repairs to her hull. In 1792 she was re-sheeted to remove damage caused by shipworm, and was then set to work plying a trade route between London and St. Petersburg.[19] Further repairs were undertaken in 1795 and 1798.[19] In 1800 to 1801, under Captain J. Scott, she shuttled back and forth between London and the Caribbean, carrying trade goods and provisions for British colonies including St. Vincents, with extensive repairs between voyages.[19] In 1801 Lloyd's Register gives her trade as London to St. Vincents, and then London to the East Indies.

Captain John Scott left Falmouth on 25 January 1801 for Bengal. Scarborough arrived at Calcutta on 19 June. Homeward bound, she left Diamond Harbour on 21 August, reached the Cape on 22 December and St Helena on 28 January 1802, and arrived at the Downs on 8 April.[20]

In 1802 her owners sold Scarborough to Charles Kensington. However, on 10 November she was sold to foreign buyers and her registration was canceled.[2]

In 1803 her former owners repurchased her to use her as a West Indiaman.[2] For the next two years she plied a route between London and Tobago.[19]

Fate

In April 1805, Scarborough began leaking heavily while at sea, and foundered off Port Royal, Jamaica.[21][22][2]

Postscript

An Urban Transit Authority First Fleet ferry was named after Scarborough in 1986.[23]

See also

Notes, citations, and references

Notes

  1. The 411 tons comes from the Register of Transports 1774-1794", Admiralty 49/127. Cited in Bateson.[3] Contemporary Admiralty surveys also record a figure of 418 3694 tons (bm), based on design. Another informal source, First Fleet Lieutenant Phillip Gidley King estimated Scarborough at 430 tons (bm).[3]</ref>Length:
    • 109 feet 3 inches (33.3 m) (overall)
    • 87 feet 0 14 inch (26.5 m) (keel)
    Beam: 29 feet 10 inches (9.1 m)Depth of hold: 12 feet 5 12 inches (3.8 m)Propulsion: SailSail plan: Ship rigArmament: 4 × 4-pounder + 10 × 6-pounder guns<ref>Lloyd's Register (1801)
  2. Osbridge machines: a rudimentary means of circulating water to remove sediment and reduce the incidence of bacteria. Naval surgeon William Turnbull described their operation as follows, "This machine consists of a hand pump which is inserted in a scuttle made at the top of the cask, and by means of it the water, being raised a few feet, falls through several sheets of tin pierced like colanders, and placed in a half-cylinder of the same metal. The purpose of it is to reduce the water into numberless drops, which being exposed in this form to the open air is deprived of its offensive quality."[10]
  3. Captain George Teer to Navy Board, 7 December 1786.[11]

Citations

  1. National Archives - Scarborough (3)
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Hackman (2001), p. 191.
  3. 1 2 3 Bateson (1969), p.96
  4. Spennemann, Dirk H.R. "Historic Ships Associated with the Marshall Islands No. 2". Retrieved 2 April 2014.
  5. Farrington, Anthony. Catalogue Of East India Company Ships' Journals & Logs (1600-1834). Ms. British Library.
  6. Keneally 2005, p. 49.
  7. Frost 1984, p.112
  8. 1 2 Gillen 1989, p.430
  9. 1 2 Bateson 1969, p13
  10. Turnbull (1806), p.40.
  11. Frost (1984), p. 113.
  12. "Entries from the log book - Convict Ship Scarborough 1788". The settler or felon?. Retrieved 2 April 2014.
  13. Bateson (1969), p.86.
  14. Letter from Newton Fowell, midshipman HMS Sirius, to John Fowell, 12 July 1788. Cited in Irvine (ed.) 1988, p.81
  15. 1 2 3 4 Cavanagh 1989, p.4
  16. National Archives: Scarborough (3), - accessed 25 July 2015.
  17. "The Mutiny on the Scarborough, Transport". Dublin Chronicle, 23 October 1790. - accessed 25 July 2915.
  18. "A letter from Sydney" - The Bee, 15 May 1792. - accessed 25 July 2015.
  19. 1 2 3 4 Lloyd's Register, 1796-1805.
  20. National Archives: Scarborough (4) - accessed 27 July 2015.
  21. "LLOYD'S MARINE LIST. - 1 June". Caledonian Mercury (13072). 22 June 1805.
  22. "Ship News". The Aberdeen Journal (2999). 3 July 1805.
  23. Sydney Ferries Fleet Facts Transport for NSW

References

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