Year |
Name |
Owner |
|
---|---|---|---|
1838 | Victory | Hartlepool Original Shipping Co. | |
1843 | Victory | Phoenix Shipping Co. Ltd. |
On a voyage from Archangel to London with a cargo of deals & about 100 cases of brandy Victory parted from her anchors & was wrecked at the back of the South Quay at Fraserburgh on 25 November 1849. The crew were brought ashore by the lifeboat. The hull was sold in January 1850 for £110. Loss recorded by letter from Robert E Hutton, manager, to Customs House Hartlepool.
Formed in 1835 under the management of Robinson Watson and with a capital of £50,054. The shareholders were paid extremely high dividends which probably brought about the downfall of the Company. The shareholders were; Thomas Thompson of Stockton; Thomas Allison Tenant (railway clerk) Stockton; Joshua Byers (timber and lead merchant) Stockton; Ralph Walker of Stockton and Thomas Fox (spirit merchant) of Norton. William Lisle (miller) and William Geoge Jackson (grocer and druggist) both of Hartlepool. Although some of the shareholders were from Stockton-on-Tees all their vessels were known as Hartlepool ships and traded from that port.
The company went into liquidation in 1843 with some of their ships purchased by the Phoenix Shipping Co. Those ships are listed under that company. They were: Allison, Evenwood, George William and Schiedam.
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Robert E. Hutton owned and had shares in Hartlepool registered ships and in one Hartlepool built ship, the Acacia.
Other shareholders were: John Elstob Hutton; George Denton; George Wilkinson; John Wilkinson; John Punshon Denton; William and John Watson; William Wilson; William Lisle; John and Robert Lawn; William, Thomas Bell, Errington Bell and Robert Ord (Sunderland); Thomas Wilson Elstob (Camberwell); William Hodgson Elstob Cmberwell); Eli Kay (South Shields); Bostock Toller Whinney (South Shields); John Wilkinson (Craythorne, York); Elizabeth Hutton Wilkinson (Craythorne, York); William Marsingale Wikinson (Manchester); James Saville (Sunderland); John Halliday (butcher, Shields); Mary Ward (Wolviston.
Family History:
Robert Elstob Hutton was born on 29th November 1804 at Bishopwearmouth to parents Ann Donkin (nee Elstob) and Robert Hutton. He married Catherine Elstob on 27th December 1828 at Bishopwearmouth. The couple had eleven children. By 1851 the couple were living at Cliff Terrace, Hartlepool with their two daughters and five sons.
Robert went to sea as an apprentice in January 1820 and from 1827 sailed on four Sunderland ships as master (C.N. 42414). He retired from the sea in December 1840 and in 1841 joined the General Shipping Company as a shareholder. When the company folded in 1844 Robert continued to own shares in ships.
Robert died at Hartlepool aged 53 on 30th April 1858 leaving effects of under £3,000. He was interred at Spion Kop Cemetery.
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John Elstob Hutton was born in November 1834 at Bishopwearmouth to parents Catherine (nee Elstob) and Robert Elstob Hutton. He became an insurance agent and was in partnership with Robinson Thomas as shipbrokers and commission agents in West Hartlepool. The partnership became bankrupt and was dissolved on 6th March 1857.
Shields Daily Gazette – Friday 30 November 1866:
ALLEGED DEFALCATIONS BY A HARTLEPOOL MARINE INSURANCE SECRETARY. Some excitement has been created at Hartlepool during the past few days in consequence of the disappearance of Mr. John Elstob Hutton, secretary to the North Star and Mutual Marine Insurance Clubs, whose offices are on the Town Wall, Hartlepool. Mr. Hutton is a young man, about thirty years of age, and has been secretary to these clubs for about seven years, having succeeded his deceased father, Mr. Robert E. Hutton. The family are highly respectable, and with good connections, and were formerly resident at Sunderland. Besides being secretary to the clubs, Mr. Hutton held the office of pilot-master to the port, at a salary of £30 per annum, and was also Vice-Consul for Portugal. For some time past some irregularities in the cash account have been suspected; and on Saturday last the chairman of the committee received a note from Mr. Hutton, stating that for certain reasons explained, he had been obliged to abscond. Whither he has betaken himself is not known, but it is presumed he has gone abroad. The accounts of the companies are undergoing investigation, and various sums of money ore alleged to have been misappropriated; but the loose and irregular manner in which Mr. Hutton is stated to have kept the books and accounts, precludes the possibility of the committee ascertaining the extent of the deficiency. From what has already transpired there is no doubt that the deficiency is serious. Previous to his absconding he had got some cheques cashed to the amount of between £100 and £200. One cheque given by Mr. Denton was for £120, which was cashed at Messrs. Backhouse's bank, and another cheque received from Shields was cashed by Mr. S. Armstrong the day on which Hutton absconded, all of which money he had, it is alleged, appropriated to himself, and not accounted for. Independent of the clubs, Mr. Hutton has also borrowed sums of money from different parties in the town.
John married Jane Susannah Evans on 27th January 1869 at Clifton, Gloucestershire. The couple had two daughters, Caroline Vaughan born 1869 and Catherine Elizabeth born 1874.
John died aged 55 at Barton Regis in 1889.
More detail »Hartlepool custom registration documents for the sailing vessel Victory 1845-1849
More detail »Built in 1838 at Sunderland.
Wood brig 281nt 296gt; one deck; two masts; square rigged; square stern; carvel built; sheathed in yellow metal.
Dimensions 88.4 x 24.2 x 17.0
Owners: 1838 Hartlepool Original Shipping Co, Stockton-on-Tees; 1843 purchased for £1,600 Hartlepool & Durham Commercial Shipping Co (Thomas Rowell, Abraham Scotson & William Lisle) Hartlepool.
Masters: 1838-44 J Frost; 1845 C Wake; 1845 William Compton; January 1846 William Brough; January 1847 William Compton; June 1848 Edward Cummin; February 1849 John Minto.
Voyages: 1840-44 London for Constantinople; 1845 Hull for Constantinople; 3 July 1846 after leaving Odessa bound for Falmouth with a cargo of linseed the ship was making water so they had part of the cargo removed at Constantinople, the leak plugged and surveyed. Leaks & pumping continued through the sea of Marmora, the Dardanelles, Valletta, Malta, Gibraltar to Falmouth where they had orders to go to Liverpool. When docked in Victoria Dock they found the main mast was sprung.
Bound from Archangel for London with a cargo of deals & about 100 cases of brandy Victory parted from her anchors & was wrecked at the back of the South Quay at Fraserburgh on 25 November 1849. The crew were brought ashore by the lifeboat. The hull was sold in January 1850 for £110. Loss recorded by letter from Robert E Hutton, manager, to Customs House Hartlepool.
More detail »Cover document dated 1847 relating to a Protest of William Brough, master of the Victory.
More detail »First page of a Protest document brought by William Brough, master of the Victory, in 1847.
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