1849 – 56 Joseph Young b.1823 (Cork) 1856 John Spillane b.1819 (Crosshaven)
Mate:
1835 William Bransfield b.1800 (Cove)#11326 1844 David Manning b.1814 (London) 1848 – 9 Joseph Young b.1823 (Cork) 1849 – 50 Stephen Bertridge b.1825 (Cork) 1849 – 50 Joshua Hargrave b.1829 (Ballynoe, Cork) 1852 Michael Lehan b.1825 (Cork) 1831 – 2 John Mills b.1814 (Cork) 1835 Simon Hall b.1800 (Passage)#104 1835 Thomas Brien b.1814 (Passage)#11327 1835 Hugh White b.1797 (Cork)#10004 1836 – 9 David Manning b.1813 (Cork)#868 1847 Lawrence Barry b.1829 (Passage West) 1851 John Hegarty b.1828 (Queenstown) 1824 – 7 William Best b.1809 (Crosshaven) 1838 Joseph Young b.1823 (Cork)
Seaman:
Apprentice:
Fate of ship:
An emigrant ship during the Famine. Arrival at St John, New Brunswick, 22 May 1847. This barque under Captain Hall was 50 days out from Cork with passengers. On 26 June 1847: ‘Captain Hall of the ship Pallas, who had been landed (at the quarantine station) on Partridge Island from that vessel, we are sorry to say, died there, last evening, of typhus fever’. An additional fifteen deaths for this ship were listed. (Appendix: Emigrant ships). Captain John Spillane reported that the ship was wrecked off the Island of St Paul ’ s on a voyage from Cork to Quebec on 30 May 1856. St Paul ’ s lies off the Nova Scotia coast. This vessel was consistently described in Lloyd’s and in John Spillane’s post-wreck repo rt as a barque, yet another report stated: ‘The steamship was driven ashore and wrecked between Cape North and St Paul’s, Nova Scotia with the loss of 82 of the 149 on board. She was on a voyage from Cork to Quebec City (List of Shipwrecks - Wiki). This ship was engaged in North American and Cork to Quebec trade. Captain William Henry Deave Hargrave documents, by his name alone, the known familial and professional ties between the Deaves and Hargraves of Cork. Mate (future Captain) Joshua Hargrave would next move to McMullen’s 549t barque Hebe as a mate with Captain William Henry Deave Hargrave (b.1827). Mate David Manning in UK M&M records and Seaman David Manning (b.1813, Cork)
Additional information:
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