Clarendon (ship) explained
Several ships have been named Clarendon:
- was built at Bristol as a West Indiaman.
- was built at Lancaster as a West Indiaman. She spent most of her career sailing between England and Jamaica. She then became a transport based out of Hull. She wrecked on 7 April 1815 while bringing prisoners as a cartel from Bermuda to the United States.
- was launched in France in 1788, under another name. She was taken in prize in 1804. In 1805 Clarendon began a voyage as a slave ship in the triangular trade in enslaved people but fell prey to Spanish privateers after she had embarked slaves.
- was built at Whitehaven. Between 1808 or so and 1813 she sailed as a West Indiaman between London and Jamaica. In 1814 she sailed for Batavia under a license from the British East India Company (EIC). The privateer Young Wasp captured her off the Cape of Good Hope (the Cape), on 6 January 1815, and she arrived at Baltimore on 15 April.
- , of 450 tons (bm), was launched at London in 1827. In 183 she brought Chinese labourers to Trinidad, and was the second such vessel to arrive there during the 1853-1866 importation of Chinese labourers.
- Clarendon (APA-72) was launched 12 September 1944. On 22 May 1945, Clarendon made three voyages from San Diego and San Francisco to Pearl Harbor, carrying passengers and cargo back and forth. A county in South Carolina is named after this ship.[1]
Notes and References
- Web site: Clarendon (APA-72). 2020-10-20. NHHC. en-US.