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Æolus (1783 ship)

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Name
  
Æolus

Laid down
  
1781

Fate
  
Captured 1807

Builder
  
Aabenraa Municipality

Namesake
  
Aeolus

Launched
  
1783

Name
  
Æolus

Æolus, also spelt Aeolus (or frequently Eolus), was a snow sailing ship built in 1783 at Åbenrå in Denmark as a West Indiaman. The British Royal Navy captured her in 1807. Buckle & Co. purchased her as a prize. In 1808-9 she transported convicts to Port Jackson, New South Wales. She was last listed in Lloyd's Register in 1815.

Career

Æolus was built for a Mr. Butz for use as a West Indiaman.

HMS Royalist, Phosphorus, and Bloodhound shared in the prize money for the Danish ship Æolus, which they took on 19 August 1807, early in the Gunboat War between Britain and Denmark. She enters Lloyd's Register in 1808, where she is shown with Cooper, master.

Under the command of Robert Addie, she sailed from England in 1808 and arrived at Port Jackson on 26 January 1809. She had embarked 79 female convicts, none of whom died on the voyage. Most of the convicts were then sent to the Parramatta Female Factory.

Æolus left Port Jackson on 1 April bound for England. She was carrying a full load of whale oil from the whaler DuBuc, which had been condemned by survey at Hobart.

Æolus, E. Sindry, master, was still sailing in 1813. She had to put into Corunna in distress on her way from London to Bermuda. She discharged her cargo at Corunna. She is last listed in 1815.

References

Æolus (1783 ship) Wikipedia