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West Indiaman

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Merchant ship sailing between Great Britain or Europe and the Caribbean
The West IndiamanBritannia

West Indiaman was a general name for anymerchantmansailing ship making runs from theOld World to theWest Indies and the east coast of theAmericas.[1] These ships were generally strong ocean-going ships capable of handling storms in theAtlantic Ocean.[2] The term was used to refer to vessels belonging to theDanish (e.g.Æolus),Dutch,English, andFrench (e.g.Indispensable) West India companies.

Similarly, at the time (18th and 19th centuries) people also referred toEast Indiamen (ships trading with the East Indies),Guineamen (slave ships), orGreenlandmen (whalers in the North Seas whale fishery).

British West Indiamen tended to be London-built and to sail directly from England (generally London) to the West Indies. Guineamen tended to be built (or owned) in Bristol and Liverpool and to sail from Bristol or Liverpool via West Africa in what is now often referred to as thetriangular trade in enslaved people.[3] There were London-based Guineamen, (for exampleExperiment), and Liverpool-based West Indiamen, (for exampleIrlam andIrlam).

There were design differences between vessels built for the different trades, but the vessels were not highly specialized. A vessel built as a West Indiaman typically had less height between decks than comparably sized East Indiaman. For instance,William Miles had a height of 5 ft 11 in (1.8 m) in her upper deck and a mere 4 ft 10 in (1.5 m) under her lower deck.Lord William Bentinck, a comparably sized East Indiaman, had a height of 6 ft 9 in (2.1 m) below her deck. The cargoes the two types of vessels were designed to carry dictated the difference. West Indiamen brought semi-liquid sugar back to England in casks laid on their sides that were only laid in one course. East Indiamen carried mostly light goods in bales or cases that could be and were necessarily laid to a greater height.[4]

Often the same vessel would move between roles and routes over the course of her career as entrepreneurial owners chased profitability. ThusFame started and finished as a West Indiaman, but in between made a voyage for the BritishEast India Company (EIC) as anEast Indiaman, and two voyages as a Guineaman.Holderness made one voyage as an East Indiaman for the EIC, then several as a Greenlandman, and ended up a West Indiaman.

See also

[edit]

Bibliography

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  • Farr, Grahame E., ed. (1971).Bristol Shipbuilding in the Nineteenth Century. Bristol Branch of the Historical Association The University Bristol.
  • Tibbles, Anthony (2005).Transatlantic Slavery: Against Human Dignity. Liverpool University Press.ISBN 978-0-853-23198-1.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)

References

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  1. ^"West Indiaman".Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary.Merriam-Webster. Retrieved28 March 2025.
  2. ^"West Indiaman ship".Portcities London. Archived fromthe original on 2 March 2018. Retrieved27 June 2014.
  3. ^Tibbles (2005), p. 33.
  4. ^Farr (1971), p. 7.
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