Jump to content

Charles Eaton (1833 ship): Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
Vonding (talk | contribs)
mNo edit summary
m Reverting possible vandalism by Vonding to version by Rodw. Report False Positive? Thanks, ClueBot NG. (3609888) (Bot)
Line 54: Line 54:
'''''Charles Eaton''''', was a merchantman launched in 1833. She was wrecked in 1834 and her passengers and crew attacked by Torres Strait Islanders, off the coast of Northern Queensland, near the entrance to the Torres Strait.
'''''Charles Eaton''''', was a merchantman launched in 1833. She was wrecked in 1834 and her passengers and crew attacked by Torres Strait Islanders, off the coast of Northern Queensland, near the entrance to the Torres Strait.


==Career==
[ht


Reputedly a fine-looking wood barque, she was built in a shipbuilding yard at Coringa, near Madras in India, where she was launched in January 1833. Registered in London at 313 tons to carry 350 tons burden, She was built of the best [[Teak]], and had two flush decks, forecastle, bust head, and quarter galleries. She was [[coppered]] to the wales in [[chunam]] and [[felt]].
Reputedly a fine-looking wood barque, she was built in a shipbuilding yard at Coringa, near Madras in India, where she was launched in January 1833. Registered in London at 313 tons to carry 350 tons burden, She was built of the best [[Teak]], and had two flush decks, forecastle, bust head, and quarter galleries. She was [[coppered]] to the wales in [[chunam]] and [[felt]].


Named after a Captain Charles Eaton, a former ship’s captain, trader and owner of several ships, who gave up the sea to settle ashore as the Port Master of Coringa, a town to the north of [[Chennai|Madras]]. He died there in 1827. One of his daughters, Sophia, married William Gibson, at one time the manager of a shipbuilding yard in the region. Eaton’s son, Captain Charles W. Eaton, took over his father’s role as Coringa’s Port Master from 1828–1838 and was the part-owner of at least three merchant ships.<ref>http// veronicapeek.com\</ref>
Named after a Captain Charles Eaton, a former ship’s captain, trader and owner of several ships, who gave up the sea to settle ashore as the Port Master of Coringa, a town to the north of [[Chennai|Madras]]. He died there in 1827. One of his daughters, Sophia, married William Gibson, at one time the manager of a shipbuilding yard in the region. Eaton’s son, Captain Charles W. Eaton, took over his father’s role as Coringa’s Port Master from 1828–1838 and was the part-owner of at least three merchant ships.


The Charles Eaton under the command of Captain Fowle arrived in London with 1000 chests of indigo worth about £45,000. On 14 June 1833 ‘Lloyd’s Shipping List’, had noted that: ''The cargo saved from the ''James Sibbald'', built in Bombay, and wrecked on reefs off Coringa in 1832, has been reshipped per Charles Eaton''.<ref>http// veronicapeek.com\</ref>
The Charles Eaton under the command of Captain Fowle arrived in London with 1000 chests of indigo worth about £45,000. On 14 June 1833 ‘Lloyd’s Shipping List’, had noted that: ''The cargo saved from the ''James Sibbald'', built in Bombay, and wrecked on reefs off Coringa in 1832, has been reshipped per Charles Eaton''.


Advertised for sale in the [[Guardian and Public Ledger]] of London as late as 6 September 1833, she was bought by Gledstanes & Co for use as a fast sailing passenger ship capable of use for general purposes.
Advertised for sale in the [[Guardian and Public Ledger]] of London as late as 6 September 1833, she was bought by Gledstanes & Co for use as a fast sailing passenger ship capable of use for general purposes.


Her first trading voyage from Saint Katherine's Dock in London was to the [[Australia|Australian penal colonies]]. Her passengers included an Irish lawyer called George Armstrong and 40 pauper children from the Children's Friend Society. Also on board was a young ship's boy called John Ireland, the only member of the crew who lived to tell the story of what happened to the Charles Eaton. She cleared the Thames on 20 December 1833, and set sail the next day with favourable winds.<ref>http// veronicapeek.com\</ref> After a stopover at the Downs to collect more passengers from the village of Deal, she collided with another vessel. <ref name="Caledonian Mercury">{{cite news |title=Charles Eaton (ship) at Cowes for repairs |url=https://www.newspapers.com/clip/28758486/charles_eaton_ship_at_cowes_for/ |accessdate=23 February 2019 |agency=newspapers.com |publisher=The Caledonian Mercury |date=11 Jan 1834 |page=4 |quote=Shipping Intelligence. Cowes, Jan. 5. The Charles Eaton, Moore, from London to. New, South. Wales, and the Active, Holman, from Portsmouth to Bristol, have put back, the. former with bowsprit sprung and cutwater damaged, and the latter with the hull cut down to the water's edge, having been in contact. Jan. 6. The Charles Eaton, in being towed into the harbour, grounded, and remains.}}</ref> she left Falmouth , England for good on 5 February 1834 with sundry cargo, including [[Calico|calicoes]] and [[lead]].<ref name="Pyke">{{cite web |last1=Pyke |first1=Roger |last2=McInnes |first2=Allan |title=Thomas Prockter Ching |url=http://launcestonthen.co.uk/index.php/the-people/thomas-prockter-ching/ |website=launcestonthen |accessdate=23 February 2019}}</ref>
Her first trading voyage from Saint Katherine's Dock in London was to the [[Australia|Australian penal colonies]]. Her passengers included an Irish lawyer called George Armstrong and 40 pauper children from the Children's Friend Society. Also on board was a young ship's boy called John Ireland, the only member of the crew who lived to tell the story of what happened to the Charles Eaton. She cleared the Thames on 20 December 1833, and set sail the next day with favourable winds.<ref name="Peek"/> After a stopover at the Downs to collect more passengers from the village of Deal, she collided with another vessel. <ref name="Caledonian Mercury">{{cite news |title=Charles Eaton (ship) at Cowes for repairs |url=https://www.newspapers.com/clip/28758486/charles_eaton_ship_at_cowes_for/ |accessdate=23 February 2019 |agency=newspapers.com |publisher=The Caledonian Mercury |date=11 Jan 1834 |page=4 |quote=Shipping Intelligence. Cowes, Jan. 5. The Charles Eaton, Moore, from London to. New, South. Wales, and the Active, Holman, from Portsmouth to Bristol, have put back, the. former with bowsprit sprung and cutwater damaged, and the latter with the hull cut down to the water's edge, having been in contact. Jan. 6. The Charles Eaton, in being towed into the harbour, grounded, and remains.}}</ref> she left Falmouth , England for good on 5 February 1834 with sundry cargo, including [[Calico|calicoes]] and [[lead]].<ref name="Pyke">{{cite web |last1=Pyke |first1=Roger |last2=McInnes |first2=Allan |title=Thomas Prockter Ching |url=http://launcestonthen.co.uk/index.php/the-people/thomas-prockter-ching/ |website=launcestonthen |accessdate=23 February 2019}}</ref><ref name="Peek"/>


==The Wreck==
==The Wreck==

Revision as of 00:37, 14 March 2019

History
Vereinigtes Königreich
NameCharles Eaton
NamesakeCharles Eaton, former Port Master of Coringa
BuilderWilliam Smoult Temple, Coringa, near Madras, India [citation needed]
Launched1833
FateWrecked 1834
General characteristics
Tons burthen350, or 400(bm)
Sail planFull sail

Charles Eaton, was a merchantman launched in 1833. She was wrecked in 1834 and her passengers and crew attacked by Torres Strait Islanders, off the coast of Northern Queensland, near the entrance to the Torres Strait.

Career

Reputedly a fine-looking wood barque, she was built in a shipbuilding yard at Coringa, near Madras in India, where she was launched in January 1833. Registered in London at 313 tons to carry 350 tons burden, She was built of the best Teak, and had two flush decks, forecastle, bust head, and quarter galleries. She was coppered to the wales in chunam and felt.

Named after a Captain Charles Eaton, a former ship’s captain, trader and owner of several ships, who gave up the sea to settle ashore as the Port Master of Coringa, a town to the north of Madras. He died there in 1827. One of his daughters, Sophia, married William Gibson, at one time the manager of a shipbuilding yard in the region. Eaton’s son, Captain Charles W. Eaton, took over his father’s role as Coringa’s Port Master from 1828–1838 and was the part-owner of at least three merchant ships.

The Charles Eaton under the command of Captain Fowle arrived in London with 1000 chests of indigo worth about £45,000. On 14 June 1833 ‘Lloyd’s Shipping List’, had noted that: The cargo saved from the James Sibbald, built in Bombay, and wrecked on reefs off Coringa in 1832, has been reshipped per Charles Eaton.

Advertised for sale in the Guardian and Public Ledger of London as late as 6 September 1833, she was bought by Gledstanes & Co for use as a fast sailing passenger ship capable of use for general purposes.

Her first trading voyage from Saint Katherine's Dock in London was to the Australian penal colonies. Her passengers included an Irish lawyer called George Armstrong and 40 pauper children from the Children's Friend Society. Also on board was a young ship's boy called John Ireland, the only member of the crew who lived to tell the story of what happened to the Charles Eaton. She cleared the Thames on 20 December 1833, and set sail the next day with favourable winds.[1] After a stopover at the Downs to collect more passengers from the village of Deal, she collided with another vessel. [2] she left Falmouth , England for good on 5 February 1834 with sundry cargo, including calicoes and lead.[3][1]

The Wreck

She was en-route from Sydney to Singapore by way of the Torres Strait leaving Sydney on 29 July 1834, when she was wrecked on the Great Barrier Reef near the Sir Charles Hardy Islands on 15 August 1834.

Six of the crew took one of the quarter boats and set out for Timor but were subsequently taken captive at an island then called Timor Laut, but now called Yamdena, part of the Tanimbar group of islands.

Of the 27 persons and the ship's dog Portland remaining with the wreck, only four boys initially survived. The rest were killed by Torres Strait islanders. They were the two young ship's boys, John Ireland and John Sexton, and the two sons of Captain Thomas D'Oyly of the Bengal Artillery and his wife, Charlotte D'Oyly. They were George D'Oyly, aged seven, and William D'Oyly, aged three. Sexton and George D'Oyly died soon after, the latter possibly from natural causes.

Those remaining at the wreck made two rafts, the first of which set sail with all the passengers, Captain Moore, surgeon Grant, steward Montgomery and two strong sailors to man the oars. They reached a small sandy cay now called Boydang, inhabited at the time by visiting Torres Strait Islanders, who killed all the adults and kept their skulls for their daily ceremonial rituals. Only William and George D'Oyly were spared.

The second raft left the Charles Eaton wreck with the rest of the crew and they, too, were murdered and beheaded by the visiting party of islanders.

John Ireland and William D'Oyly lived with their captors for some months, and were eventually exchanged to a couple from Murray Island local name Mer Torres Strait, for a bunch of bananas.

The two boys were treated kindly by the Murray Islanders and lived with them from about September/October 1834 until June 1836.

Rescue

On 3 June 1836 schooner, the Isabella[disambiguation needed] commanded by Captain Charles Morgan Lewis, was dispatched from Sydney to make a search for reported survivors of the Charles Eaton being held captive at Murray Island. The Isabella[disambiguation needed] arrived at Murray Island on 19 June and the two survivors were handed over to Captain Lewis, who returned with them to Sydney. The ship also carried back skulls believed to be those of the murdered passengers and crew.

The rescue of William D'Oyly, 1841l

The Isabella may have been one of the first European vessels to make contact with natives at Prince of Wales Island near the tip of Cape York.

Captain Lewis took leave of absence to take the young D’Oyly back to England to be placed in care of relatives.

References

  1. ^ a b Cite error: The named reference Peek was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  2. ^ "Charles Eaton (ship) at Cowes for repairs". The Caledonian Mercury. newspapers.com. 11 January 1834. p. 4. Retrieved 23 February 2019. Shipping Intelligence. Cowes, Jan. 5. The Charles Eaton, Moore, from London to. New, South. Wales, and the Active, Holman, from Portsmouth to Bristol, have put back, the. former with bowsprit sprung and cutwater damaged, and the latter with the hull cut down to the water's edge, having been in contact. Jan. 6. The Charles Eaton, in being towed into the harbour, grounded, and remains.
  3. ^ Pyke, Roger; McInnes, Allan. "Thomas Prockter Ching". launcestonthen. Retrieved 23 February 2019.

[1][2]

[2]


  1. ^ Pyke, Roger; McInnes, Allan. "Thomas Prockter Ching". launcestonthen. Retrieved 23 February 2019.
  2. ^ a b Peek, Veronica. "Charles Eaton: wake for the melancholy shipwreck". veronicapeek.com/. Retrieved 23 February 2019.