Several vessels have been named Greyhound for the greyhound:
was a coastal trading vessel launched in Whitby in 1747 or possibly before that was wrecked in a storm off the coast of County Sligo on 12 December 1770.
Greyhound was a smack of 74 tons (bm), launched at Dover in 1784, possibly under another name. In 1791, Dudman & Co. purchased her. Greyhound first appeared in Lloyd's Register (LR) in 1792 with A. Crow, master, Dudman, owner, and voyage London–Southern Fishery. She had been raised in 1791.[1]
Sealing voyage (1791–1793): Captain A.Crow sailed from London on 12 November 1791, bound for Cape Verde.[2] Greyhound arrived back at Falmouth on 28 April 1793. She had worked off Patagonia and she returned with five tuns of whale oil and 20,000 seal skins.[3]
Lloyd's Register for 1794 showed Greyhounds master changing from A.Crow to P. Smith, her owner from Dudman to Skey, and her voyage from London–Southern Fishery to London–Jamaica. Lloyd's Register for 1796 showed her master changing from P. Smith to N. Todd, and her owner from Skey to W.Bryan. In January 1796 Greyhound, Todd, master, arrived at Cork from Honduras, having sustained some damage.[4]
Loss: On 18 May 1796 Greyhound, Todd, master, sailed from Gravesend for Jamaica. Lloyd's List reported on 3 June that Greyhound, Tod, master, was onshore and bilged off Portsmouth.[5] Greyhound was last listed in Lloyd's Register in the volume for 1796.
was launched at Java in 1816. She burnt in 1821.
was an express passenger steamer that operated from the 1890s to about 1915 on Puget Sound in Washington, United States.