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Duc de Dantzig (1808 ship)

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Name
  
Duc de Dantzig

Crew
  
103

Displacement
  
264,000 kg

Type
  
Brig

Launched
  
1808

Builder
  
Nantes

Namesake
  
François Joseph Lefebvre

Commissioned
  
October 1810 (as privateer)

Fate
  
Disappeared in June 1812, or later

Duc de Dantzig (or Duc-de-Dantzick) was a brig launched in 1808 at Nantes that became a privateer. She captured a number of vessels, generally plundering them and then letting them go, or burning them. She disappeared mysteriously in the Caribbean in early 1812, and became the subject of a ghost ship legend.

Contents

Privateer

On 12 February 1808, under Pierre-François Baclin, Duc de Dantzig took part in the capture of William & Henry. Lloyd's List reported that William & Henry was sailing from London to the Cape of Good Hope with a cargo worth 700,000 francs when she was driven into Le Havre with the loss of her mizzen mast and bowsprit. Duc de Dantzig took possession of William & Henry the next day.

At some point, she was under command of Jean Pierre Antoine Duchenne.

That there seem to be no reports of captures after the first until 1811 suggests that prior to October 1810 she may have simply sailed as a letter of marque rather than as a private man-of-war.

In October 1810, François Aregnaudeau assumed command of Duc de Dantzig. On 20 November he captured Ceres, on 4 December the British Bonetta, and a few days later the American Cantone and the British Jane in the Gulf of Mexico.

She brought Jane, Hutchinson, master, into Charleston on 6 February 1811. Jane had been sailing from Savannah to Liverpool when she was captured. Jane, Cochrane, master, returned to Saint Kitts on 6 February. Duc de Dantzig had captured Jane on 18 November 1810 off Anegada, plundered her, and let her proceed as Jane was sailing from St Kitts to Newburn.

On 22 July 1811 Duc de Dantzig captured the merchantman Lady Penrhyn while Lady Penrhyn was sailing from London to Grenada. Duc de Dantzig set Lady Penrhyn on fire, scuttling her. Lloyd's List reported that the privateer Duc de Dantzig, of 14 guns (18-pounder carronades) and 128 men, of Nantes, had captured the Thames, J. Clark, master, on 17 July, and the Lady Penrhyn, Burgess, master on 22 July. Thames had been sailing from London to St Vincent's, and Lady Penrhyn from London to Grenada. Both vessels were in ballast, and Duc de Danzig burnt them after taking off the people on board them. She then captured the schooner Ann, which had set out from Barbados to Demerara. Duc de Dantzig put her prisoners aboard Ann and let her proceed; Ann arrived at Barbados on 26 July.

Damaged by a heavy sea, Duc de Dantzig had to throw her guns overboard to remain afloat and returned to harbour. She set sail again on 18 June 1811.

Barossa, Barry, master, arrived at Jamaica on 23 July. On 29 June, as she was sailing from Cork she had encountered the privateer Duc de Danzig off Ushant. Duc de Dantzig, of 10 guns and 176 men, had plundered Barossa and thrown her guns overboard, and had then let her proceed. Duc de Dantzig had captured a Spanish ship and an English packet three days earlier. On 28 August, Duc de Dantzig arrived in New York with a British prize that the US government seized. By October 1811, Aregnaudeau had captured Planter, from London, Tottenham, and a Spanish schooner.

On 1 September Duc de Dantzig captured Tobago, Paterson, master, off St Bartholomew's. Tobago was sailing from Guadeloupe and St Bartholemew's to New Brunswick when Duc de Dantzig captured and burnt her.

Rover, Everett, master, arrived at St John, New Brunswick, on 23 June 1812. On 2 June Duc de Dantzig had captured Rover, plundered her, and then let her proceed.

Aregnaudeau and Duc de Dantzig were last heard of on 13 December 1811, when the privateer Gazelle reached Morlaix and reported on her activities.

Fate

After the last mention of her, Duc de Dantzig disappeared without a trace. She might have been cruising in the Atlantic or in the Caribbean at the time, and either been destroyed in a night encounter against a British frigate, or in a tropical cyclone.

Napoléon Gallois later relayed the legend that an unspecified French frigate had encountered the wreck of Duc de Dantzig drifting at sea, covered with dried blood and the putrefying corpses of her crew, many crucified to the masts or the deck. There were no signs that she had been in a recent battle: no new shot holes, and her sails and rigging were intact. Some blood-stained papers found in the captain's cabin identified her captain as François Aregnaudeau. The crew of the frigate set the brig ablaze.

References

Duc de Dantzig (1808 ship) Wikipedia