Fame (ship)

Numerous vessels have borne the name Fame:

  • Fame (1779 ship) was built at Bristol as a West Indiaman. Between 1797 and 1799 she made two voyages to India for the British East India Company (EIC). She then made two voyages to Africa as a slave ship. On her return from Africa she resumed her trading with Jamaica. She is last listed in Lloyd's Register in 1807.
  • Fame (1801 ship) was launched at Bristol and made two voyages for the EIC. On her third voyage a French frigate captured her. She apparently returned to British hands and was last listed in 1811.
  • Fame (1803 ship) was built at Calcutta; on 27 July 1807 she was lost on the Eastern Sea Reef.
  • Fame (1812 ship) was built at Quebec and was lost in 1817 after having transported convicts to New South Wales.
  • Fame (1815 ship) of 204, or 205 tons (bm), was built at Quebec by John Goodie.[1] She traded widely and was last listed in 1833.
  • Fame (1816 ship) was built in 1816 at Calcutta. She traded between Britain and India and was wrecked in 1822.
  • Fame, of 377 tons, was built in India and came to Britain in 1817. With Scoresby (Jnr) as master and Scoresby (Sr) as owner, between 1818 and 1822 she made some six whaling voyages from Whitby, killing more than 35 whales, before a fire at Stromness destroyed her in 1823.
  • Fame (1818 ship) was built at Northfleet in 1818. She made one voyage under charter to the EIC; a fire destroyed her in 1824 during her second voyage for the EIC.

Citations and references

Citations

  1. Marcil (1995), p. 368.

References

  • Marcil, Eileen Reed (1995). The Charley-Man: a history of wooden shipbuilding at Quebec 1763-1893. Kingston, Ontario: Quarry. ISBN 1-55082-093-1.

See also

  • HMS Fame – one of nine ships of the Royal Navy to bear the name
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