Earl St Vincent (1803 ship)
| History | |
|---|---|
| Name | Unknown | 
| Launched | 1794[1] | 
| Captured | 1803 | 
| Name | Earl St. Vincent | 
| Namesake | John Jervis, 1st Earl of St Vincent | 
| Owner | Dunsterville | 
| Acquired | 1803 by purchase of a prize | 
| Fate | Last listed 1814 | 
| General characteristics | |
| Tons burthen | 106[2][1] (bm) | 
| Propulsion | Sail | 
| Complement | 20[2] | 
| Armament | 6 × 9-pounder guns[2] | 
Earl St Vincent was a French ship that was captured and became a British merchantman in 1803. Captain William Emery acquired a letter of marque on 10 June 1803.[2] In 1804 her master was W. Emery, her owner Dunsterville, and her trade Cork to the West Indies.[3]
A French privateer captured her in late 1803 as she was sailing from Cork to Barbados but the British Royal Navy recaptured her and took her into Dominica.[4][5]
She then traded out of Cork. She was last listed in Lloyd's Register in 1814.[1]
Citations
- ^ a b c Lloyd's Register (1814), Seq. №37.
 - ^ a b c d Letter of Marque, p.60 - accessed 25 July 2017.
 - ^ Register of Shipping (1804), Seq.№E53.
 - ^ Naval chronicle, Vol. 11, p.176.
 - ^ Lloyd's List №4416.