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Lady Penrhyn (1786 ship)

Lady Penrhyn
Lady Penrhyn (sailing ship).jpg
Lady Penrhyn, convict transport ship
History
Great Britain
Namesake: Lady Penrhyn (née Anne Susannah Warburton), the wife of Richard Pennant, 1st Baron Penrhyn, of the Penrhyn Estate in Llandygai, North Wales. The word Penrhyn itself is Welsh for headland or peninsula.
Owner:
  • Sir William Curtis (Curtis & Co.)
  • William C. Sever
Port of registry: London
Builder: Edward Greaves, River Thames
Launched: 1786
General characteristics
Tons burthen: 332, or 332294, or 360 (bm)
Length:
  • 103 ft 5 in (31.5 m) (overall)
  • 82 ft 3 12 in (25.1 m) (keel)
Beam: 27 ft 6 12 in (8.4 m)
Depth of hold: 12 ft 0 in (3.7 m)
Propulsion: Sails
Sail plan: Ship rig

Lady Penrhyn was built on the River Thames in 1786 as a slave ship. For her first voyage she transported convicts to New South Wales as part of the First Fleet. On her voyage back to Britain she was the first European vessel to pass by the Kermadec Islands, and the Penrhyn Atoll in the Cook Islands. She also carried a cargo for the British East India Company (EIC). The French captured her in the West Indies in 1811 and scuttled her.

Lady Penrhyn was designed as a two-deck ship for use in the Atlantic slave trade, with a capacity of 275 slaves. She was part-owned by William Compton Sever, who served as ship's master on her voyage to Australia, and by London alderman and sea-biscuit manufacturer William Curtis.

Lady Penrhyn left Portsmouth on 13 May 1787, at Port Jackson, Sydney, Australia, on 26 January 1788. She carried 101 female convicts, and three officers and 41 other ranks of the New South Wales Marine Corps, as well as her crew. She was part of a convoy of eleven ships, the so-called "First Fleet", which brought over 1000 convicts, marines, and seamen to establish European settlement in Australia.

John Turnpenny Altree was surgeon to the convicts, and Arthur Bowes Smyth was surgeon to the crew. Bowes Smyth then took charge of the prisoners on the ship when Altree fell ill at Tenerife and in Governor Arthur Phillip’s opinion had proved unequal to the task.

The list of stores unloaded from Lady Penrhyn on 25 March at Port Jackson has been widely quoted in books on the First Fleet. In Sydney Cove 1788 by John Cobley the amount of rice unloaded is given as 8 bram. This amount has been repeated in various books on the First Fleet. Bram, however, is not a unit of measurement and the original log entry lists the amount of rice as 8 barrels.


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