Engineering:Bengalee (ship)

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Short description: 1837 merchant barque
History
United Kingdom
Name: Bengalee
Port of registry:
  • Greenock:3 June 1837[1]
  • Whitehaven:1840[1]
Builder: Archibald P McFarlane Jnr & Co., Dumbarton[1]
Launched: 1837
Fate: Wrecked 23 October 1851
General characteristics
Tons burthen:
  • Old Act: 304[2] (bm)
  • New Act (post 1836): 354[2] (bm)
Length: 101 ft 2 in (30.8 m)[1]
Beam: 23 ft 0 in (7.0 m)[1]
Depth: 17 ft 7 in (5.4 m)[1]

Bengalee was a three-masted merchant barque built in 1837 at Dumbarton. She first appeared in Lloyd's Register (LR) in 1838 with Hamlin, master, Hamlin and Company, of Greenock, owners, and trade Clyde–Calcutta.[2] Captain Thomas Hamlin did not allow the consumption of alcohol on his ship, thus it was known as a temperance ship.

Voyages

  • Hamburg to Port Adelaide, South Australia. Bengalee left Hamburg on 16 July 1838 and stopped at the Downs. She arrived at Kingscote, South Australia on 9 November and at Port Adelaide on 16 November. Although primarily carrying supplies, she also carried 27 passengers, among whom were a group of the first Prussian settlers to Australia . From Port Adelaide she sailed on 29 February 1839 to Batavia.
  • Calcutta to Liverpool - arrived 16 December 1839
  • ??? to Sydney - arrived 26 June 1840
  • Hobart Town to Canton - arrived 3 November 1843

Fate

Bengalee was driven ashore on 23 October 1851 and broke her back at Saugor. Her crew abandoned her. She was on a voyage from Calcutta to Genoa, Kingdom of Sardinia.[3]

Citations

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 Scottish Built Ships.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 LR (1838), Seq.№134.
  3. [1] "Ship News." Times [London, England] 4 Dec. 1851: 2. The Times Digital Archive. Web. 10 Dec. 2019.

References