Claudine initially traded as a country ship and then to India under a license from the East India Company. Later she became a free trader.
In 1814 Claudine was admitted to the Registry of Great Britain.[1]
On 2 November 1815 Claudine, Welch, master, and Juliana, Horblow, master, sailed from Batavia. They were at Anjer Roads on 10 November, with Claudine having run on a coral reef the day after leaving Batavia. The two vessels narrowly escaped being wrecked on "Pulo Bahec", but escaped with minimal loss. They then separated after transiting the Sunda Strait. Claudine put into the Cape on 24 December, leaving on the 26th. She rejoined Juliana on 7 January 1816, and touched St Helena the next day; the two vessels finally parted at Ascension Island. On 9 February Claudine ran into bad weather 35 leagues off St Michael's Mount. At 8:43 pm on 10 February Claudine experienced an earthquake that lasted four or five seconds; the crew had to jettison some cargo to stay afloat in the subsequent waves. Claudine and Juliana arrived in the Downs shortly thereafter.[2] Claudine sailed on to Antwerp, where she grounded at Lillo. She was gotten off without major damage.[3]
Claudines owners applied for a licence from the East India Company on 29 March 1816, and received it the same day.
On 12 April 1817 Claudine struck a reef near Palau Mansalar (1.6033°N 98.5108°W), off the west coast of Sumatra.[4] Then in September 1818, Claudine pioneered the northern route through the Torres Strait as she sailed from Port Jackson to Batavia.[5] During this voyage, in company with the ship Mary, a survivor from the 1814 wreck of the was rescued from Murray Island (Mer), northeast Torres Strait on 7 September.[6]
Claudine made a trading voyage in 1820 from London to Hobart and then Sydney. She sailed from Sydney on 10 May 1820 under the command of Captain John Welsh. He discovered Claudine's Reef in the Coral Sea (-21.3167°N 163°W).[7] On 16 May he navigated Elizabeth's Reef (-30.0833°N 159°W).[8] He then sailed past Murray Island, Queensland, in the Torres Strait on the way to Batavia. From Batavia she returned to England.
Captain John Crabtree sailed Claudine on 24 August 1821 from Woolwich. She sailed via Tenerife and Rio de Janeiro to Hobart Town, arriving on 15 December. She had embarked 160 convicts, one of whom died on the voyage.
Captain George Nichols sailed from the Downs on 16 June 1824, bound for Bengal. Claudine arrived at Calcutta on 23 October. Homeward bound, she was at Saugor on 2 January 1825. She reached Madras on 26 January and St Helena on 12 April. She arrived at East India Dock on 5 June.[9]
Her owners registered Claudine in London on 18 January 1826.
At the end of July 1826 Claudine, Christie, master, was at Bengal, where ran into her, carrying away Claudines bowsprit and inflicting other damage.[10]
Captain William Heathorn sailed Claudine from London on 24 August 1829, and she arrived at Sydney on 6 December. Captain Patterson and 26 rank-and-file of the 63rd Regiment of Foot provided the guard. She embarked 180 convicts, two of whom died on the voyage. Claudine then sailed to Madras on 31 December.
A storm on 21–22 November 1840 led Captain Brewer to beach Claudine ashore near Ramsgate. The captain of Westminster did likewise. The two vessels were unloaded of their cargo and then refloated some weeks later. Both returned to service after repairs. Claudine was repaired in 1840 and Lloyd's Register notes that damage was repaired and references "Margate". At the time of the grounding her owner was still Heathorne. Her trade in 1841 was listed as London−Madras, changing to London—China.[11]
In 1842 Claudine was sold to Mangles. At the time she was trading between London and China.
In 1849 Claudines master was Black, her owner Kenrick, and her trade London—Madras.[12] Claudine was broken up in 1849. Lloyd's Register for 1850 no longer lists her.