Bootle (1805 ship)
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- 1805:Robert Kitchen[1]
- 1808:Foderingham
- 1809:Barton & Co.
| Name | Bootle |
|---|---|
| Owner |
|
| Builder | Liverpool |
| Launched | 1805 |
| Fate | Wrecked 1813 |
| General characteristics | |
| Tons burthen | 401[2][3] (bm) |
| Complement | |
| Armament | |
Bootle was launched in 1805 at Liverpool as a slave ship. She made two voyages delivering slaves to the West Indies before her owner sold her. She then became a West Indiaman. In 1811 the Liverpool partnership of Barton, Irlam and Higginson purchased her and sailed her between Liverpool and Barbados. A hurricane at Bridgetown, Barbados wrecked her in 1813.
Bootle entered Lloyd's Register in 1805 with J. Sillars, master, Kitchen, owner, and trade Liverpool–Africa.[2] Captain John Sillars (or Sillers) acquired a letter of marque on 19 October 1805.[3]
First slave voyage: Sillars sailed from Liverpool on 16 November, bound for Africa. Bootle arrived at Kingston, Jamaica on 13 June 1806. She had embarked 367 slaves and she landed 330, for a loss rate of 10.0%. She left Kingston on 22 June 1808, and arrived back at Liverpool on 16 August. She had commenced the voyage with 46 crew members and suffered six crew deaths on the voyage.[1]
Second slave voyage: Sillars sailed from Liverpool on 11 March 1807 and Bootle arrived at Kingston on 1 September. She had embarked 377 slaves and she landed 339. She left Kingston on 7 September, and arrived back at Liverpool on 4 November. She had commenced the voyage with 51 crew members and suffered six crew deaths on the voyage.[1]