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The 1782 Jamaica convoy
This is Thomas Morgan's voyage home, as purser on the captured Ville de Paris. Although he will have missed the thick of any fighting, he was aboard Russell when bad weather forced her home on that venture into the Atlantic under Byron, and again when sickness obliged her to leave Charleston. On the Alfred there was action at the Chesapeake, St Kitts and The Saints. He deserves a restful trip home. And he still owes £3,500 to Henry Cort. Will he get home safely? Judging from my research, no account of the voyage is completely accurate; but at least they guide towards the ships' books that have survived. Not many of those: if the ship perishes, what chance for the books on board? Logs, musters, pay books all go to the bottom. If a log is preserved at the National Archives (PRO), that is a good indication that the ship has survived. Pay books we can find for all the Royal Navy's vessels on the voyage, but they may have been compiled afterwards: not an easy task, and likely to omit many men who have perished. By my reckoning, nine ships of the line start on the voyage (though many accounts say ten). Four survive, but only one makes it home this trip. A story that 3,500 lives are lost looks wildly exaggerated, unless it includes losses from merchantmen. An account by Breen gives a vivid and plausible description of Graves's experience on his flagship Ramillies, but its references to other ships are less reliable. At the end of June 1782, the waters around Jamaica are thronged with shipping, including British merchantmen heading home. The escorting squadron under Graves's command comprises five prizes - Hector, Caton, Ardent, Glorieux and Ville de Paris; and four British warships - Ramillies, Pallas, Canada and Centaur. Graves's convoy leaves Bluefields Bay on 26 July 1782. The first setback occurs the same day, causing Ardent to head back prematurely to Port Royal.
The convoy proceeds to Bermuda, where Hector loses contact. Continuing on her own across the Atlantic, her fate is evident from the later court martial of her captain John Bourchier. A French attack on 5th September causes severe damage, and she is "quitted in a sinking state" a month later. Over a hundred of her crew are picked up. Beyond Bermuda, Caton springs a leak and is escorted away to Halifax.
Five warships are left: we deduce their fate from Breen's account, Canada's log (the only one that survives), ships' paybooks and newspaper accounts. The storm strikes after dark on the 17th. Breen tells how Graves tries to ride it out by ordering all ships to lie to the wind with only the mainsail hoisted. This stratagem is thwarted by a sudden reversal in wind direction, causing many masts to snap off. (A suggestion that "corroded bolts caused the tragedy" appears well wide of the mark.)
The convoy is scattered, and for a while Canada loses all contact. Eventually she picks up with a few of the stragglers, and anchors off the Isle of Wight on 2nd October. Ramillies, badly damaged in the storm, limps on for three days before Graves and the crew abandon her. They are picked up by the Belle merchantman. The Oxford DNB's commendation of Graves's "superb feat of seamanship" is backed by Breen's account, while Ramillies's paybook records only one death. The Belle reaches Cork on 10 October. Centaur is less fortunate. She goes down on 24 September. Ten men, including her captain, get away in a boat. Over 400 perish. The column in her paybook recording the pay's recipients is replete with widows, relatives and executors. The fates of Glorieux and Ville de Paris are less certain.
The article is evidently mistaken in identifying Ville de Paris's commander as Captain Curgenwen. The ship's paybook reveals he was superseded before the voyage began, while information on the Web reveals that his successor was George Wilkinson. We should also note that "the Hector, Cox" is not the ship commanded by John Bourchier that parted from the convoy in August. Probably a merchantman from the same convoy, "dismasted" in the same storm. Ville de Paris's paybook shows 406 of the crew collecting their pay, 168 presumed dead (pay collected by a relative or executor). Since the ship's compliment is 800, it seems that over 200 (including most of the officers) have been swallowed into oblivion. However, accounts elsewhere on the Web that there are few if any survivors are wrong. The likeliest narrative is that Captain Wilkinson looks at the damage caused by the hurricane, packs half of his crew on a neighbouring merchantman and tries unsuccessfully to make port with the rest. Glorieux's fate may be similar. Her paybook shows over 220 survivors collecting their pay. Thomas Morgan is one of Ville de Paris's survivors. On 28 October 1782, he attends a meeting of Gosport trustees for the first time. Nevertheless it is nearly a year before he collects his pay for service on the ship.
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The pages on this site are copied from the original site of Eric Alexander (henrycort.net) with his allowance. |