Marquis of Rockingham (East Indiaman)

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The Marquis of Rockingham was an Indiaman, a ship of the East India Company, in service during the eighteenth century.

In late 1775, she was hired to transport three companies of the 32nd Regiment of Foot, along with a number of their families,[1] to Ireland en route to British North America as part of a force under General Cornwallis. On 21 November it was reported that all baggage was loaded, and she was ordered to Gravesend; she sailed in a convoy of six transports on 10 December, but was driven back by heavy wind.[2]

On the night of 23 December 1775,[3] making for the Cove of Cork in a heavy gale, she mistook Robert's Cove for the entrance to the harbour, and was driven onto a lee shore at Reannie's Bay, a few miles distant.[1]

The master and crew of the ship were drowned, as were about ninety of the passengers. A number of officers and soldiers managed to escape in a flat-bottomed boat; the numbers are unclear, but were variously reported as five officers and twenty men[4], four officers and thirty men,[1] or three officers, thirty men, and two of the ship's crew.[5] The regimental pay chest and records were also lost in the wreck.[1]

Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Shipwrecks of Cork Harbour
  2. Robson, p.546
  3. Tucky gives it as the 22nd, "about 7 o'clock"; the Annual Register gives it as the 23rd, and Robson (p. 547) concurs.
  4. Annual Register
  5. Tucky

References