African Queen (1792 ship)
African Queen was built at Folkstone in 1780, though almost surely under a different name. She became a slave ship in 1792 and made two complete slave voyages. On her first slave voyage she suffered a high mortality, both among her slaves and her captains and crew. A privateer captured her in 1795 as she was on her way to Jamaica with slaves while on her third slave trading voyage.
History | |
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Great Britain | |
Name: | African Queen |
Owner: |
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Builder: | Folkstone |
Launched: | 1780 |
Captured: | December 1795 |
General characteristics | |
Tons burthen: | 277[1][2][3] (bm) |
Complement: | 16 × 4&3-pounder guns[1] |
Career
African Queen first appeared in Lloyd's Register (LR) in 1793 with Williams, master, J.Anderson, owner, and trade Bristol–Africa. It gave her origin as Folkstone and her build year as 1783. She had been rebuilt in 1785, and had undergone lengthening and a "good repair" in 1791.[2] However, the 1796 volume amended the build year to 1780.
1st slave voyage (1792–1793): Actually, African Queen left Bristol on her first slave trading voyage on 16 January 1792.[3] She left with 37 crew members and enlisted three more 3 March on the African coast. She had arrived at Old Calabar on 17–18 March, and she gathered her slaves there. While she was gathering her cargo of slaves, at least 21 crew members died, including two captains in succession. Captain Samuel Stibling died on 14 May, and Captain Hamet Forsyth, who had replaced Stribling, died on 1 October. While African Queen was on the coast she employed two smaller vessels, Dragon, and Fame, as ship's tenders.[4]
African Queen sailed from the coast of Africa either on 10 October or 11 November. Captain James Lloyd, who had replaced Forsyth, died at sea on 1 December; Captain Long, originally her third mate, took command.[4] She arrived at Montego Bay, Jamaica, on 18 January 1793. She had embarked 330 slaves and she landed 214, for a mortality rate of 35%.[3] At Montego Bay she discharged three crew men and enlisted two. She left Jamaica with 19 crew members.[4] She left on 11 March and arrived back at Bristol on 6 May.[5]
2nd slave voyage (1794–1795): Captain Thomas Williams acquired a letter of marque on 13 June 1794.[1] He sailed from Bristol on 28 June 1794, bound for West Africa. She gathered 411 slaves at Calabar. She arrived at Grenada on 19 October and landed 401 slaves, for a mortality rate of about 1%. She had left Bristol with 31 crew members and suffered two crew deaths by the time she reached Grenada. African Queen sailed from Grenada on 18 November and arrived back at Bristol on 12 January 1795.[6]
3rd slave voyage (1795): African Queen underwent a second good repair in 1795.[7] Captain Williams then sailed from Bristol on 18 May 1795 bound for West Africa. African Queen gathered her slaves in the Sierra Leone estuary.[8]
A privateer captured three British slave ships off the west coast of Hispaniola on about 15 December 1795 as they were on their way to Jamaica. African Queen, Williams, master, was one of the three. She was carrying 411 slaves. Cyclops, Grice, master, was carrying 470 slaves, and Dispatch, Jackson, master, was carrying 250.[9]
Citations and references
Citations
- "Letter of Marque, p.48 - accessed 25 July 2017" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 20 October 2016. Retrieved 27 October 2018.
- LR (1794), Seq.№A588.
- Trans Atlantic Slave Trade Database – African Queen voyage #18129.
- Richardson (1996), p. 203.
- Trans Atlantic Slave Trade Database – African Queen voyage #80129.
- Trans Atlantic Slave Trade Database – African Queen voyage #18189.
- LR (1796), Seq.№A141.
- Trans Atlantic Slave Trade Database – African Queen voyage #18204.
- Lloyd's List №2796.
References
- Richardson, David, ed. (1996). Bristol, Africa, and the Eighteenth-Century Slave Trade to America, Vo. 4 The Final Years, 1770-1807. Bristol Record Society, c/o Department of Historical Studies, Univ. of Bristol. ISBN 0 901538 17 5.