Monarch was launched at Whitby in 1810. In 1803 her owners sold her to the Montrose Whale Fishing Company. Between 1813 and 1839 she made 27 annual voyages to the northern whale fishery. Her most successful years were 1823 when she killed 28 whales and brought in 193 tuns of whale oil, and 1832 when she killed 24 whales and brought in 205 tuns of whale oil. She was last listed in 1838. However, she was sold in 1839 and still sailing to the Baltic for some time.

History
United Kingdom
NameMonarch
Owner
  • 1810: Jn. Holt and William Skinner[1]
  • 1813: Montrose Whale Fishing Co.
BuilderHolt and Richardson, Whitby[1]
Launched1810
FateLast listed 1838, but sold in 1839 and still sailing for some time
General characteristics
Tons burthen308, or 309,[1] or 311 (bm
Armament6 × 9-pounder carronades

Career

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Monarch first appeared in the Register of Shipping in the volume for 1810.[2]

Year Master Owner Trade Source
1810 Dickson Holt & Co. Whitby–Shields RS

Initially Monarch sailed as a coaster between Whitby and Shields. Then in 1813 her owners sold her to Montrose, and she assumed Montrose Registry.[1]

The French Revolutionary (1793–1802) and Napoleonic (1803–1814) Wars resulted in a reduction in whaling as sailors were diverted to the navy, causing a rise in wages for those still in whaling and mercantile trade. Owners of whalers had to compete with the Navy for stores, and the whalers came to carry guns to protect themselves from privateers.[3]

Towards the end of the Napoleonic Wars, oil prices started to rise more sharply than costs. The whale fishery was also more productive as the reduced activity earlier had helped stocks of whales improve. Consequently, the number of whalers and whaling from Scotland started to increase.[4]

As a whaler, Monarch carried six to seven whaleboats, which did the actual whaling. The ship was a means for getting the boats and their crews to the whaling grounds, and their catch home. By law, each whaler had to carry one boat and six-man crew for every 50 tons burthen.[5] In all, Monarch carried 46–50 men.[6]

The whaling data below is primarily from the Scottish Arctic Whaling Voyages database,[7] augmented with reports from Lloyd's List and other contemporary newspaper sources. When there are two numbers for whales or tuns in a cell, the second is from Jackson.[8]

Year Master Where Whales Tuns
whale oil
Seals
1813 A.Young Greenland 6 3
1814 A.Young Greenland 20 171 0
1815 A.Young Greenland 7 96 0
1816 A.Young Greenland 6 85 0
1817 A.Young Greenland 3 54/44 108
1818 A.Young Greenland 8 115 0
1819 A.Young Greenland 5 88
1820 A.Young Greenland 3 41 0
1821 A.Young Greenland 19 152 0
1822 Young Greenland 3 47 0
1823 Young Greenland 28/26 193 0
1824 Inglis Davis Strait 11 129/130 0
1825 Inglis Davis Strait 3 40 0
1826 Inglis Davis Strait 4/3 50/48 0
1827 Inglis Greenland 7 70 0
1828 Davidson Davis Strait 11 143 0
1829 Davidson Davis Strait 6 70/65 0
1830 Davidson Davis Strait 3/5 30/35 0
1831 Davidson Davis Strait 1 11/10 0
1832 Davidson Davis Strait 24 205 0
1833 Fulton (or Tuston) Davis Strait 23 160 0

The Montrose Whaling Company went into voluntary liquidation in November 1833. Her owners were unable to find buyers for their two ships or their boiling houses. Cheap oil was coming from the British southern whale fishery. Also, the arrival of Free Trade ended penal tariffs on foreign oil.[9]

The company's manager, James Guthrie, continued to dispatch Eliza Swan and Monarch to Davis Strait, but catches were poor. In 1836 Monarch came home a "clean ship", having failed to catch anything.[9]

The whaling data below is primarily from the Scottish Arctic Whaling Voyages database,[10] augmented with reports from Lloyd's List and other contemporary newspaper sources. When there are two numbers for whales or tuns in a cell, the second is from Jackson.[8]

Year Master Where Whales Tuns
whale oil
Seals
1834 Fulton Davis Strait 9 52 0
1835 Fulton Davis Strait 3 45/54 0
1836 Burn Davis Strait 0 0 0
1837 Burn Davis Strait 1 13 0
1838 Cramond (or Crammon) Greenland 3 50 300
1839 Marshall Greenland 4 42/44 1500

Fate

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Monarch was last listed in 1838. Whaling was in decline in Scotland. (In Whitby, the last whaling voyage took place in 1837.)

In 1839, the shipbuilder Charles Birnie finally purchased the Montrose Whaling Company's assets. He advertised the yard for sale and put the two vessels into the Baltic trade.[8] Monarch went back to being a merchantman, carrying flax and other cargoes.

Citations

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References

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  • Jackson, Gordon (1993). The Port of Montrose: A History of Its Harbour, Trade and Shipping. Hutton.
  • Weatherill, Richard (1908). The ancient port of Whitby and its shipping. Whitby: Horne and Son.