Providence (1790 ship)
Providence was launched in 1790 at South Shields. She initially traded with Saint Petersburg but then in 1804 the British Royal Navy hired her. She remained in Royal Navy service until towards the end of 1812. She disappears from the registers between 1812 and 1820, and between 1835 and 1850. She was wrecked in 1869 and broken up in 1870.
History | |
---|---|
Great Britain | |
Name: | Providence |
Builder: | John Wallis, South Shields1790[1] |
Launched: | 1790[1] |
Fate: | Wrecked February 1869 |
General characteristics [1] | |
Tons burthen: | 292, or 293, or 302[2] (bm) |
Armament: |
|
Merchantman
Providence appeared in Lloyd's Register (LR) in 1892 with Hutchinson, master and owner, and trade Petersburg–London.[3]
Year | Master | Owner | Trade | Source |
---|---|---|---|---|
1795 | A.Cairnes | Hutchinson | Petersburgh–Plymouth | LR |
1800 | Hutchinson | Hutchinson | London–Petersburgh | LR |
1805 | Hutchinson | Hutchinson | London–Hamburg | LR |
1806 | Hutchinson | Hutchinson | Newcastle transport | Register of Shipping; thorough repair 1803 & 1804 |
Hired armed ship
The Royal Navy hired Providence on 16 May 1804.[4] Her captain was Commander Peter Rye.[5]
On 14 September Providence captured the Prussian vessel Louisa Ulrica.[6]
On 28 May 1805 Lloyd's List (LL) it reported that the armed ships Providence, Magdalen, Ranger, and Rosina had arrived at Elsinore on 14 May with their convoy.[7]
Then on 11 April 1805, HMS Scorpion, in company with he hired armed vessels Providence and sloop Thames, captured the Dutch 12-gun privateer Eer (also known as De Eer, D'Eer or Honneur).[8][Note 1] She was carrying 1000 stands of arms, two 12-pounder field pieces, two mortars, uniforms for 1000 men, tents, and the like.[8] She was also carrying M. Jean Saint-Faust who was traveling to Curaçao to assume command of the naval forces of the Batavian Republic.[9]
On 1 July 1808 Providence detained and sent into Grimsby Vrow Maria Catharina, Visser, master.[10]
Later, Rye was cited for successfully fighting off five Danish gunboats while becalmed off Jutland. He again served under Saumarez in the Baltic,
Commander Peter Rye attained post rank in 1812. He then commanded Porpoise from April 1813 until October 1814.[11] Providence's contract with the Navy ended on 23 September 1812.
Merchantman
Providence apparently was not listed between the end of her contract with the Royal Navy and reappearance in 1820.
Year | Master | Owner | Trade | Source & notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1820 | Hutchinson | Hutchinson | Hull–Petrsburg | LR; large repairs 1815, repairs 1818 |
1825 | Hutchinson | Hutchinson | Hull–Shields | LR; large repairs 1815, repairs 1818 & 1822, small repairs 1824 |
1830 | Pyle | Hutchinson | Hull–Petersburg | LR; large repairs 1815, small repairs 1824, keel & damages repaired 1828 |
1835 | "Richn'berg" | LR; homeport Newcastle | ||
1840 | LR – not listed | |||
1845 | LR – not listed | |||
1850 | Hutchinson | Hutchinson | LR | |
1855 | B.Robson | Hutchinson | Shields–Mediterranean | LR; large repair 1847, small repairs 1854, |
1860 | H.Gaze | A.Strong | Shields–France | LR; large repair 1847, keel and keelson 1855, |
1865 | J.Hunter H.Fox |
T.Tillock | Shields–Mediterranean | LR; large repair 1847, keel and keelson 1855, small repairs 1861, small repairs 1865 & 1866 |
1869 | H.Fox | T.Tillock | Shields–Mediterranean | LR; large repair 1847, keel and keelson 1855, small repairs 1861, small repairs 1865 & 1866 |
Fate
Providence was wrecked on 13 February 1869 on Corton Sands, near Great Yarmouth. Her entry was closed on the Register on 31 March 1870 with the notation "condemned & broken up at North Shields". This suggests that Providence had been refloated and brought back to Shields for breaking up.[1] Her listing in Lloyd's Register for 1869 carried the annotation "broken up".[2]
Notes, citations, and references
Notes
- Prize money for the capture was paid shortly after 11 November 1805.
Citations
- Tyne Built ships – Providence.
- LR (1869), Seq.№P578.
- LR (1793), Seq.P33.
- Winfield (2008), p. 393.
- Ships Employed on Convoy Duty – May 1805. Accessed 11 January 2020.
- "No. 15999". The London Gazette. 10 February 1807. p. 180.
- LL 28 May 1805, №4202, SAD data.
- "No. 15797". The London Gazette. 13 April 1805. p. 511.
- The Gentleman's magazine, Volume 144, pp. 274–5.
- LL 1 July 1807, №4265.
- The Gentleman's Magazine, Vol. 189–190, p.553.
References
- Winfield, Rif (2008). British Warships in the Age of Sail 1793–1817: Design, Construction, Careers and Fates. Seaforth Publishing. ISBN 978-1-86176-246-7.