Henry Porcher (1817 ship)

History
United Kingdom
Name: Henry Porcher
Namesake: Henry Porcher
Builder: Hilhouse & Sons and Company
Launched: 1817
Fate: Wrecked in 1858
General characteristics
Type: barque
Displacement: 485 tons
Propulsion: Sail

The Henry Porcher was a 485-ton barque sailing ship built in 1817 by Hilhouse & Sons and Company at Bristol, England. The ship was named after Henry Porcher, the son of then East India agent, Josias Du Pré Porcher.

Henry Porcher was a regular ship of the East India Company between 1818 and 1831.

Under the command of John Thomson, she departed Dublin, Ireland on the 5 August 1825, carrying 176 male convicts. She arrived in Sydney on 3 December 1825 and had one death en route. In 1835, Henry Porcher sailed, under the command of John Hart, on her second voyage as a convict transport, departing The Downs on 4 September 1834, with 260 male convicts. She arrived in Sydney on 1 January 1835 and had eight deaths en route. On her third voyage as a convict transport, again under the command of John Hart, she departed Portsmouth on 4 August 1836, with 260 male convicts. She arrived at Hobart on 15 November 1836 and had two deaths en route.

While she was travelling from Quebec to Grangemouth, Captain Simpson committed suicide in September 1858 with result that the ship went aground near Thurso and was wrecked.[1]

Citations

  1. "Suicide of a Captain at Sea, and Loss of his Ship.". The Maitland Mercury & Hunter River General Advertiser, Thursday 6 January 1859, p.2. Retrieved 27 March 2014.

References


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