{{Infobox ship
|Ship image=
|Ship caption=HMS Black Joke firing on El Almirante by Nicholas Matthews Condy
|module=
Career (Brazil)
Name:
HenriquettaBuilder:
BaltimoreLaunched:
1824?Acquired:
1825Fate:
Captured by the Royal Navy in 1827
|module2=
Career (United Kingdom)
Name:
HMS Black JokeNamesake:
Black Joke (bawdy song)Acquired:
Captured 1827Commissioned:
1827Decommissioned:
May 1832Fate:
Burnt on orders from London
|module3=
General characteristics Class & type:
Baltimore clipperTons burthen:
Approx. 260 ton (bm)Length:
90 ft 10 in (27.69 m)[1]Beam:
26 ft 7 in (8.10 m)[1]Sail plan:
BrigComplement:
34 sailors & 5 marinesArmament:
One 18-pounder cannon pivot-mounted
Service record | |
---|---|
Part of: | West Africa Squadron |
Commanders: |
1827–1828 Lt. W. Turner 1828–1829 Lt. Henry Downes 1829–1832 Lt. William Ramsay |
The third HMS Black Joke was probably built in Baltimore in 1824, becoming the Brazilian slave ship Henriquetta.[2] The Royal Navy captured her in September 1827 and purchased her into the service. The West Africa Squadron (or 'Preventative Squadron') employed her to chase down slave ships. Over the course of a five-year career she freed many hundreds of slaves. She was deliberately burnt in May 1832 because her timbers had rotted to the point that she was no longer fit for active service.
Henriquetta – slaver[]
Built as a Baltimore clipper (possibly as the vessel Griffen[1]), Henriquetta (also Henri Quatre) was a brig designed to be fast. Sold to the Empire of Brazil in 1825,[1] she worked for a slave dealer at Bahia, making £80,000 ($400,000) by running 3,040 slaves across to Brazil in only six voyages over a period of three years.[3][4]
HMS Sybille captured her on 6 September 1827.[5] Lieutenant F A Collier, captain of Sybille, wrote to the Admiralty noting that at the time of her capture Henriquetta was 257 tons, mounted 3 guns and had a crew of 38 men. She had 569 enslaved Africans on board "and had landed at Bahia 3,360 slaves in the last two years".[6]
She was sold at auction in Sierra Leone on 5 January 1828, for £330 ($1,650).[4]
Black Joke – slave catcher[]
She was taken into service as a tender to Sybille, under the command of Lieutenant William Turner of Sybille. During her service with the Royal Navy, Black Joke's crew included an assistant surgeon, three midshipmen, thirty seamen and five marines as well as a number of Liberian Kroomen for use on detached boat service. She was armed with one long 18-pounder on a pivot mount.
On 5 January 1828 she sailed with Sybille and the 20-gun post ship Esk. On 12 January she captured the Spanish schooner Gertrudes, which carried 155 slaves. Gertrudes had outrun the other two British warships, but not Black Joke.
On 2 April a Spanish 14-gun brig fired on Black Joke as she approached the brig. After two hours of exchanging shots, and after suffering several casualties, the brig hoisted a flag of truce. She turned out to be the Providentia, of 14 guns and a crew of 80 men. She had fired on the Black Joke as Providentia's captain had been warned that a Colombian privateer answering to the same description as Black Joke was in the area. Turner therefore released her.[7]
On 1 May 1828 Black Joke fought the large and well-armed pirate Presidenté. After two hours of action, and following the death of their captain and two others, as well as the wounding of a number more, the crew of the Presidenté sought a truce. (Black Joke sustained one killed and a number wounded.) The crew of Presidenté underwent an examination before being committed for trial on charges of piracy. Many of her crew appeared to be British or have anglicized names, and they were sent back to England for trial. The next day Black Joke retook the Portuguese vessel Hosse, which Presidenté had taken as a prize. Presidente was lost at sea on her way to Sierra Leone but Black Joke earned salvage money for Hosse.[7]
On 16 May, Black Joke captured Vengador.[8] She had a crew of 45 men and eight guns but offered no resistance. She carried 645 slaves, the most ever captured on a single ship.
On 14 September Black Joke was in company when Primrose captured the Zephirina or Zephorina.[9] Zephorina was carrying 218 slaves.
On 14 November Turner received promotion to commander. He turned over command of Black Joke to Lieutenant Henry Downes of Sybille. In November of the same year Black Joke was forced to leave the coast of Fernando Po due to fever on board.

HMS Black Joke and prizes (clockwise from top left) Providentia, Vengador, Presidenta, Marianna, El Almirante, and El Hassey
In January 1829 Black Joke saw a Spanish brig as she loaded slaves and sailed for Havana. Black Joke chased her for a total of 31 hours and on 1 February, when the wind dropped, resorted to sweeps to bring herself within gunshot of her prey. El Almirante mounted a total of 14 guns (ten Gover's 18-pounder cannon and four long 9-pounders) and had a crew of 80 men.[Note 1] Black Joke was almost half the size of El Almirante and mounted two guns. Good ship-handling, the discipline of the Royal Navy gun crew, and light winds gave Lieutenant Downes the advantage. In 80 minutes he defeated and captured the slaver, which suffered 15 dead, including the captain and the first and second mates, and a further 13 wounded, while Black Joke suffered six wounded, two of whom died later.[10] El Almirante held 466 slaves, who were later landed.[11]
On 6 March Black Joke captured the 2-gun brigantine Carolina, which carried 420 slaves.[8] After this capture Downes was invalided home because of illness, and received a promotion to Commander on his return in recognition of the capture of El Almirante. He had freed a total of 887 slaves. His replacement was Lieutenant William Ramsay.
On 24 March 1830, Black Joke captured the Maria de la Conception,[9] and by April Black Joke was in refit in Sierra Leone. In July she captured the Dos Amigos, a Baltimore schooner with a crew of 34 and armed with a single carronade. When Black Joke captured her she had 567 African captives aboard. The Admiralty put Dos Amigos up for auction where the commodore of the British Anti-Slavery Squadron, Jonathan Hayes, bought her and named her Fair Rosamond. In December Black Joke was cruising in the Bight of Benin with Medina.
On 21 or 22 February 1831 she captured a slaver with 300 slaves on board. This was probably the Spanish schooner Primeira. At the time Black Joke was acting as a tender to Dryad.[12][Note 2]
In a famous action on 25 or 26 April 1831, Black Joke captured the Marinerito.[14] Black Joke captured the much larger and more heavily armed Spanish slaver off the island of Bioko. At one point, 14-year-old Midshipman Hinde from Black Joke took command and rescued the boarding party, including Ramsey, which had become stranded on the Spanish slaver's deck. Marinerito had 15 of her crew killed; Black Joke lost one man killed. Of the 496 slaves on Marinerito, 26 were found to have died and 107 were in so weakened a state that they were landed on Bioko, where more than half subsequently died. The remainder were taken to freedom in Sierra Leone.[Note 3]
In September, in company with Fair Rosamond, Black Joke chased two Spanish slavers into the Bonny River. Lieutenant Ramsey, reported that "during the chase they were seen to throw their slaves overboard, by twos shackled together by the ankles, and left in this manner to sink or swim." The British captured the Spanish vessels, Regulo and Rapido, on 10 September and took them to Sierra Leone, where the Admiralty Court condemned them. Black Joke freed 39 slaves, for which a half bounty was paid to the captain and crew. A further bounty was paid for the 29 slaves who died between the capture and the condemnation of the Regulo.[16][Note 4]
On 15 February 1832, Black Joke captured Spanish schooner Frasquita, alias Centilla. This vessel too yielded bounty money for the slaves on board her.[Note 5]
In all, between November 1830 and March 1832, Black Joke and Fair Rosamond accounted for 11 out of the squadron's take of 13 slavers.
Fate[]
A survey held on the Black Joke in 1832 stated that her timbers were rotten, and that "she is not, in our opinion, a vessel calculated fit for H.M. Service." There were discussions about further use of Black Joke, including use as a Government vessel for Sierra Leone. She was due to be transferred to the governor when the rear admiral changed his mind and ordered that Black Joke be destroyed. She was burnt on 3 May 1832[20] and her stores sold. The surveyors attached examples of her timber; all that now remains of the famous slave-chaser is an envelope filled with brown dust in The National Archives. In 1958 "a small quantity of the 'testings' of the timber of Black Joke were sent to Lagos for exhibition in the museum there".[21]
When the Royal Navy ordered that Black Joke be burned, Peter Leonard, surgeon of HMS Dryad, wrote that she was the ship "which has done more towards putting an end to the vile traffic in slaves than all the ships of the station put together."[22][23]
Notes[]
- ↑ John Gover designed a new type of gun-carriage in the late 1790s or early 1800s that enabled the guns to be handled by smaller gun crews and the guns to be stored alongside the rails rather than perpendicular to them (de Toussard 1809: pp.357-362).
- ↑ A first-class share, which would have accrued to the captain of Dryad, was worth £369 2s 6d. A second first-class share, which would probably have accrued to Ramsey, was worth £184 11s 3d; a sixth-class share was worth £1 3s 6¾d.[13]
- ↑ A first-class share was worth £533 8s 9d; a sixth-class share was worth ₤1 18s 6¾d.[15]
- ↑ A first-class share was worth £383 8s 1d; a sixth-class share was worth £1 8s 6d.[17] Later it was discovered that nine men had been left off the prize list for the capture of the Potosi (by Fair Rosamond), and Rapido and Regulo, and the holders of sixth-class shares were obliged to return 1s 0¾d for distribution to these men.[18] However, a prize court reinstated a half-bounty for 29 slaves who had died prior to the Regulo's condemnation. A captain's share was £13 10s, a commander's share was £6 5s, and a sixth-class share was 11½d.[19]
- ↑ A first-class share was worth £303 3s 6d; a sixth-class share was worth £1 1s 9¾d.[18]
References[]
- Citations
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Footner, Geoffrey (1998). Tidewater Triumph: The Development and Worldwide Success of the Chesapeake Bay Pilot Schooner. Mystic, CT: Mystic Seaport Museum. p. 155. ISBN 0-913372-80-3. http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=M7a5mqVBo1YC&printsec=frontcover&source=gbs_navlinks_s#v=onepage&q&f=false. Retrieved 2010-06-11.
- ↑ "Slave ships and Squadron Vessels". Royal Naval Museum. http://www.royalnavalmuseum.org/visi_cfimage_blackjoke.htm. Retrieved 2011-01-09.
- ↑ Villiers, Allan (October 1955) "The Drive for Speed at Sea", American Heritage vol. 6 no. 6.
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 Tinnie (2008).
- ↑ Log of HMS Sybille held by The National Archives, archival reference ADM 51/3466
- ↑ Correspondence from Collier to the Admiralty, 12 December 1827, held at The National Archives, archival reference ADM 1/1682
- ↑ 7.0 7.1 "Life and Adventures of the Black Joke, recently deceased at Sierra Leone" (1832) United service magazine vol.10.
- ↑ 8.0 8.1 "HMS Black Joke at the Naval Database website". http://www.pbenyon.plus.com/18-1900/B/00572a.html. Retrieved 2011-01-09.
- ↑ 9.0 9.1 "No. 18788". 29 March 1831. https://www.thegazette.co.uk/London/issue/18788/page/
- ↑ "No. 18568". 17 April 1829. https://www.thegazette.co.uk/London/issue/18568/page/
- ↑ "Navy News, June 2007". http://publishing.yudu.com/An8w/navynewsjune2007/resources/36.htm. Retrieved 2008-02-09.
- ↑ "No. 18922". 30 March 18321. https://www.thegazette.co.uk/London/issue/18922/page/
- ↑ "No. 18932". 1 May 1832. https://www.thegazette.co.uk/London/issue/18932/page/
- ↑ "No. 18933". 4 May 1832. https://www.thegazette.co.uk/London/issue/18933/page/
- ↑ "No. 18935". 11 May 1832. https://www.thegazette.co.uk/London/issue/18935/page/
- ↑ "No. 19119". 14 January 1834. https://www.thegazette.co.uk/London/issue/19119/page/
- ↑ "No. 18975". 11 September 1832. https://www.thegazette.co.uk/London/issue/18975/page/
- ↑ 18.0 18.1 "No. 18993". 9 November 1832. https://www.thegazette.co.uk/London/issue/18993/page/
- ↑ "No. 19119". 14 January 1834. https://www.thegazette.co.uk/London/issue/19119/page/
- ↑ Correspondence between the governor, the Colonial Secretary and the Board of Admiralty held by The National Archives, reference ADM 1/4249
- ↑ The National Archives reference ADM 1/74
- ↑ Lloyd, Christopher (1968) The Navy and the Slave Trade: The Suppression of the African Slave Trade in the Nineteenth Century.(Routledge). ISBN 0-7146-1894-2
- ↑ Leonard, Peter, surgeon of the British Navy (1833). "The Western coast of Africa: Journal of an officer under Captain Owen: Records of a voyage in the ship Dryad, in 1830, 1831, and 1832". Edward C. Mielke. pp. 171–172. OCLC 191250092. http://books.google.com/books?id=5dURAAAAYAAJ&dq=%22Journal%20of%20an%20officer%20under%20Captain%20Owen%20%22&pg=PA171#v=snippet&q=fvile%20traffic%20in%20slaves&f=false.
- Bibliography
- de Tousard, Louis (1809) American artillerist's companion; or, Elements of artillery, treating of all kinds of firearms in detail, and of the formation, object and service of the flying or horse artillery, preceded by an introductory dissertation on cannon. (Philadelphia: C. and A. Conrad).
- Tinnie, Dinizulu Gene (2008) "The Slaving Brig Henriqueta and her Evil Sisters: A Case Study in the 19th-Century Slave Trade to Brazil". Journal of African American History, vol. 93, no. 4, pp. 509–531.
The original article can be found at HMS Black Joke (1827) and the edit history here.