Duckenfield (1814 ship)

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NameDuckenfield
BuilderPreston, Great Yarmouth
Launched13 September 1814
History
United Kingdom
NameDuckenfield
NamesakeDuckenfield, Jamaica
BuilderPreston, Great Yarmouth
Launched13 September 1814
FateAbandoned 1 December 1835
General characteristics
Class & type3672594,[1] or 370[2] (bm)

Duckenfield was launched in 1814 at Great Yarmouth. She spent most of her career as a West Indiaman. Between 1831 and 1833 she sailed to Australia and Bengal. She then started sailing across the North Atlantic. She became waterlogged; her surviving crew were rescued on 1 December 1835. They left her in a sinking state.

Duckenfield first appeared in Lloyd's Register in 1814 with H. Wood, master, C. Nockels, owner, and trade London–Jamaica.[2]

Year Master Owner Trade Source & notes
1815 H. Wood C. Nockels London–Jamaica Lloyd's Register (LR)
1820 Wood Nockels London–Jamaica Register of Shipping (RS)

On 22 December 1824 Duckenfield ran foul of HMS Niemen in Cowes Roads.[3]

Year Master Owner Trade Source & notes
1825 D[avid] T[homson] Lyon Cox & Co. London–Honduras LR; "wants repair"
1830 Riddle (Adam Riddell) Cox & Co. London–Honduras RS; large repair 1828

In 1829 Duckenfield sailed to Saint Helena with coal. From 1830 or so on, Duckenfield started to sail east of the Cape of Good Hope under a license from the British East India Company (EIC). She sailed to Van Diemen's Land and New South Wales on 12 February 1831.[4]

On 5 March 1831 West India was wrecked on the Bonavista Reef (Cape Verde Islands). Duckenfield rescued the crew. West India was on a voyage from Liverpool, Lancashire to the Cape of Good Hope and Mauritius.[5]

Duckenfield left Sydney on 7 August 1831 and arrived at Hobart on 17 August. From Van Diemen's Land Duckenfield sailed back to Britain via Bengal and arrived in London on 22 September 1833. She brought with her a Tasmanian devil, a gift to the Surrey Zoological Society.[6]

Fate

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