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Lady Shore (1793 ship)

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Name
  
Lady Shore

Fate
  
Lost 1815

Launched
  
1793

Propulsion
  
Sail

Owner
  
Thomas Walton, Jr.

Tons burthen
  
315, or 315 ⁄94 (bm)

Weight
  
316 tons

Builder
  
Kingston upon Hull

Namesake
  
Lady Charlotte Shore, wife of Sir John Shore

Length
  
98 ft 4 in (29.97 m) (overall); 77 ft 6 ⁄4 in (23.641 m) (keel)

Place built
  
Kingston upon Hull, United Kingdom

Lady Shore was a 316-ton barque-rigged merchantman, launched in 1793. She made two voyages as an "extra ship" for the British East India Company, though capture by a French privateer cut short the second. She then returned to mercantile service, sailing primarily to the West Indies. She was wrecked near the Saint Lawrence River in 1815.

Contents

Voyages to Bengal

Lady Shore was launched in 1793 at Hull, England. Her first voyage was as an "extra ship" in the services of the East India Company. Under Captain John Christopher she sailed under a letter of marque dated 3 June 1794. She sailed from Plymouth on 22 June 1794, bound for Bengal. She reached the Cape of Good Hope on 25 September, and Calcutta on 17 January 1795. On her return leg she was at Diamond Harbour on 16 March, Saint Helena on 1 June, the River Shannon on 13 September, and The Downs on 13 October.

Her second voyage was more eventful. Captain Christopher sailed for Bengal again in 1796, but on 19 July the French corvette Moineau captured her off the Cape of Good Hope. Moineau was armed with twenty-six 9-pounder guns and had a crew of 190 men under the command of Commander Tayeau. He was sailing from Mauritius to Bordeaux when he encountered Lady Shore. The French took only a few prisoners, looted her stores and cargo, and then allowed her to proceed to the Cape.

The French released Lady Shore in Simon's Bay on 22 July. She left the Cape on 2 September and St Helena on 20 September. She reached The Downs in November.

Subsequent career

Lady Shore, of 316 tons (bm), launched in Hull in 1793, appears in Lloyd's Register in 1799. In March 1803, Lloyd's List reported that Lady Shore had left Gibraltar on 11 February in a convoy under the escort of HMS Halcyon.

Lloyd's List reported that the "Lady Shore Transport" had run aground at Margate on the morning of 29 November 1814, but that she had been gotten off the next day with only the loss of an anchor. Some boats then brought her into Westgate Bay.

Fate

In July 1815, Lloyd's List reported that the transports Lady Shore, Watson, master, Fame, Shaw, master, Adamant, and Robert and Mary had all been lost near the Saint Lawrence River while sailing to Quebec.

References

Lady Shore (1793 ship) Wikipedia


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