History | |
---|---|
United Kingdom | |
Name | Harriot |
Builder | America |
Launched | 1803 |
Acquired | Circa 1806 |
Captured | 1808 |
General characteristics | |
Tons burthen | 205 [1] ( bm) |
Armament | 4 × 4-pounder guns + 12 × 12-pounder carronades [1] |
Harriot (or Harriet) was launched in America in 1803, possibly under another name. In 1806 she made a voyage as a slave ship. In 1807 she started a second such voyage, one of the last legal such voyages, but a French privateer captured her before she could deliver to the British West Indies the slaves she had acquired.
Harriot first appeared in Lloyd's Register (LR) in 1806. [1]
Year | Master | Owner | Trade | Source |
---|---|---|---|---|
1806 | J.Woodrick | Shaw & Co. | Liverpool–Africa | LR |
1st slave voyage (1806–1807): Captain John Woolrich sailed from Liverpool on 20 February 1806, bound for Lagos Onim. After having acquired her slaves, Harriot stopped in at Prince's Island. She arrived at Demerara on 3 October 1806 with 240 slaves. [2] The 240 slaves were offered for sale on 11 October. Captain P. Stuart replaced Woolrich at some point, and she arrived at Demerara under Stuart's command. [3] Harriot cleared outbound on 12 December and sailed from Demerara on 20 December under the command of Captain Peter Stewart. [4] She arrived back at Liverpool on 16 February 1807. She had left Liverpool with 34 crew members and she suffered nine crew deaths on her voyage. [2]
The Act for the abolition of the slave trade had passed Parliament in March 1807 and took effect on 1 May 1807. However, apparently Harriot had received clearance to sail before the deadline. Thus, when she sailed on 9 July, she did so legally. (The last vessel to sail legally was Kitty's Amelia, which sailed on 27 July, having received clearance to sail on 28 April.)
2nd slave voyage (1807–capture): Captain James Irwin sailed from Liverpool on 9 July 1807, bound for Loango. [5] In February 1808 or so, the privateer Général Ernouf captured Harriot, as Harriet was sailing from Africa to the West Indies, and possibly sent her into Cayenne. [6]
The LR volume for 1809 carried the annotation "captured" beneath her name. [7]