Zephyr (1796 ship)
Zephyr was a vessel built at Hull in 1796. She initially traded with the Baltic, though for a year or so she was a London-based transport. From 1810 she made 27 voyages as a whaler in the northern whale fishery. She returned to mercantile trade and was last listed in 1853.
History | |
---|---|
Great Britain | |
Name | Zephyr |
Launched | 1796, Thorne, South Yorkshire[1] |
Fate | Last listed in 1853 |
General characteristics | |
Tons burthen | 342 (bm) |
Complement | 49 (1835)[2] |
Armament |
|
Career
Zephyr first appeared in Lloyd's Register (LR) in the volume for 1796.[3]
Year | Master | Owner | Trade | Source & notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1796 | Jn.Ward | T.Ward | Hull–Petersburg | LR |
1799 | J.Ward | T.Ward | Hull–Petersburg London transport |
LR |
1801 | J.Ward W.Brown |
T.Ward | London transport London–Petersburg |
LR |
Zephyr was absent from the 1809 volume of Lloyd's Register. She reappeared in the 1810 volume with a new owner and new trade, that of a northern whaler.
Year | Master | Owner | Trade | Source & notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1810 | J.Bell | Raines | Hull–Greenland | LR; good repair 1810 |
The data below is from Coltish,[4] augmented with press reports. On occasion, after the whaling season (April to September), Zephyr traded with the Baltic.
Year | Master | Where | Whales | Tuns whale oil |
---|---|---|---|---|
!810 | Bell | Greenland | 12 | 130 |
1811 | Bell | Greenland | 5 | 75 |
1812 | Bell | Greenland | 20 | 155 |
1813 | Bell | Greenland | 6 | 78 |
1814 | Bell | Greenland | 18 | 167 |
1815 | Bell | Greenland | 1 | 19 |
In 1815 Captain Unthank purchased Zephyr.[1]
Year | Master | Owner | Trade | Source & notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1815 | J.Bell J.Unthank |
Raines & Co. | Hull–Greenland | LR; good repair 1810, damages repaired 1814, & large repair 1815 |
Year | Master | Where | Whales | Tuns whale oil |
---|---|---|---|---|
1816 | Bell | Davis Strait | 11 | 163 |
1817 | Unthank | Davis Strait | 6 | 72 |
1818 | Unthank | Davis Strait | 4 | 55 |
1819 | Unthank | Davis Strait | 3 | 34 |
1820 | Unthank | Davis Strait | 11 | 140 |
1821 | Unthank | Greenland | 19 | 214 |
1822 | Unthank | Greenland | 7 | 93 |
1823 | Unthank | Greenland | 26 | 195 |
1824 | Unthank | Davis Strait | 6 | 80 |
1825 | Unthank | Davis Strait | 4 | 55 |
1826 | Unthank | Davis Strait | 5 | 71 |
1827 | Ash | Davis Strait | 12 | 210 |
1828 | Ash | Davis Strait | 19 | 221 |
1829 | Ash | Davis Strait | 14 | 146 |
1830 | Ash | Davis Strait | 5 | 76 |
On 2 July 1830 the whaler William became trapped in ice at Davis Strait, leading her crew to abandon her and join other whaling vessels in the area. The crews of Zephyr and Traveller worked for 48 hours to clear her of ice. They then set fire to the upper part of William, lightening her and causing her to rise. When she rose to the point that the beams above the casks of blubber she had collected were exposed, they set fire to them too. When the casks appeared, the crews put out the fire. When William's master would not sign over her blubber and whale fins to the crews, Zephyr sailed away. Traveller took on 70 butts of blubber and one ton of whale fins. Captain Simpson took them back with him and sold them, keeping the proceeds for himself and his men. William's owners sued for the proceeds, but Simpson argued that it was a long-standing custom of the whaling trade that salvaged cargo belonged to the men who had salvaged it. The jury found for the plaintiffs, who had estimated the value of the lost whale products at £500, and awarded them £392.[5] Although all but one witness, all of whom were masters of whaling ships, testified for the defendant, the jury found for the plaintiff.[6]
Year | Master | Where | Whales | Tuns whale oil |
---|---|---|---|---|
1831 | Ash | Davis Strait | 7 | 70 |
1832 | Ash | Davis Strait | 29 | 231 |
1833 | Ash | Davis Strait | 19 | 148 |
1834 | Ash | Davis Strait | 16 | 168 |
1835 | Ash | Davis Strait | 4 | 120 butts[lower-alpha 1] |
1836 | Ash | Davis Strait | 0 | 0 |
1837 | Ash | Greenland | 0 | 0 |
Zephyr was not listed in 1837, and the relevant page is missing from the volume for 1838. Zephyr reappeared in the volume for 1839. Lloyd's Register gave her owner as Stock & Co. John Unthank, Benjamin Stocks (merchant of Cottingham), and Thomas Shackles (oil merchant of Hull) were partners.[1]
Year | Master | Owner | Trade | Source & notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1839 | T.Magens | Stock & Co. | Hull–America | LR; small repair 1838, damages repaired 1839; "wants repair" |
1844 | T.Magens Brumell |
Stock & Co. Gibson |
Hull–America London collier |
LR; small repair 1838, damages repaired 1839 |
1845 | Brumell W.Sadler |
Gibson | London collier | LR; small repair 1838, damages repaired 1839 & 1845 |
In 1845 her owners sold her to London owners and her homeport changed from Hull to London.[1] A few years later the London owners sold Zephyr to owners that sailed her between Stockton and Canada.
Year | Master | Owner | Trade | Source & notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1850 | A.Watt | Faucus | Stockton–Quebec | LR; small repairs 1849 & large repairs 1850 |
Fate
Zephyr was last listed in the 1853 volume of Lloyd's Register, without a trade.
Notes
- The four whales yielded 40 tons of train oil and two tons of "fins".[2]
Citations
- Laing (2003), p. 27.
- "PORT OF HULL IMPORTS", 13 November 1835, Hull Packet, Issue: 2660.
- LR (1796), "Z" supple. pages.
- Coltish (c. 1842).
- "Whale Fishery", Nautical Magazine (1833), pp.89−92.
- Lubbock (1937), pp. 294–295.
References
- Coltish, William (c. 1842). An account of the success of the ships at the Greenland and Davis Straits fisheries 1772-1842 inclusive.
- Laing, George (2003). Starke, June (ed.). Baffin Fair: Experiences of George Laing, a Scottish Surgeon, in the Arctic Whaling Fleet 1830 and 1831. Hutton Press. ISBN 978-190270920-8.
- Lubbock, Basil (1937). Arctic Whalers. Glasgow: Brown, Son & Ferguson.