Edwin Fox

A wooden full-rigged ship built of teak and part saul in 1853 at Sulkeah, Bengali. Dimensions: 144'8"×29'8"×23'6" and tonnage: 836 GRT, 836 NRT and 747 tons under deck.

Later re-rigged as a barque,

1853
Launched at the shipyard of ..., for the Honourable East India Co. Assigned the official British Registration No. 4673 and signal JDMN.
1853 December - 1853 May
In command of Captain William Taylor Salmon, Rochford, Essex.
1853 December 14
Sailed from Calcutta to London via Cape Town.
1853 May - 1853 July
Captain John Duncan was appointed commander but never made any voyages.
1853 July - 1862 September
In command of Captain Joseph Ferguson, Arbroath, Scotland.
c1854
Sold for £ 30.000 and immediately chartered to the British Government to carry troops to Crimea.
1860
LR 1860-61: Owner: Duncan Dunbar, London; Master: Captain J. Ferguson.
1862
Sold to Edward Gellatly, London, for �7600.
1862 September - 1865 August
In command of Captain Francis Freemantle McLean, Fraserburgh.
1865
LR 1865-66: Owner: Gellatly & Co., London; Master: Captain McClean was replaced by Captain A. Morrison.
1865 August - 1867 February
In command of Captain Alexander. J. Molison, Brechin, Scotland. Died ashore in Bombay from Typhoid Fever, on 23 Feb 1867.
1860[?]
LR 1860-61: Owner: Gellatly & Co., London; Master: Captain R. Johnson.
1867 February - 1867 October
In command of Captain Alexander Strachan Molison, Brechin, Stepney.
1867 October - 1871 November
In command of Captain William Black, Yorkshire.
1870
LR 1870-71: Owner: Gellatly & Co., London.
1871 November - 1874 October
In command of Captain John Ellis Johnson, Bebington, Cheshire.
1873
Chartered to Shaw, Savill & Co., London. Employed in the New Zealand emmigrant trade.
1873 January 28
Sailed from London for Lyttleton with 190 emmigrants.
1873 February 2
The rudder was damaged in a gale and the Edwin Fox had to be towed to Brest by the ship Copernicus.
1873 March 5 - June 27
Sailed from Brest to Lyttleton in 114 days with 167 of the original passengers. The balance had left the ship at Brest.
1874 November - 1874 December
In command of Captain Walter Walpole, Great Yarmouth.
1874 November 24
Left London for Wellington but had to return after having lost an anchor in a gale off Deal. On her second try she collided with and sank a collier schooner and drifted onto the rocks at Deal. Had to be towed off the rocks and back to London where she was docked.
1874 December - 1876 November
In command of Captain John S. Davies.
1874 December 23 - April 18
Sailed from London to Wellington with 259 emmigrants.
1876 November - 1882 April
In command of Captain John Phease, Montrose, Scotland.
1878
Reduced to barque rig.
1882 April - 1883 November
In command of Captain William Colville, Montrose, Scotland.
1883 October - 1885 June
Lay in London to be fitted out with a refrigeration machinery.
1885 June - 1885 October
In command of Captain W. Patterson, late Mate of the ship.
1885 June 25 - October 19
Sailed from London to Dunedin where she served as a freeze storage until January 1889.
1889
LR 1889-90: Owner: Shaw, Savill & Albion, London; Master: Captain Wood.
1897
Used as a floating freezing facility at Picton until the shore-based facility was finished.
1905
Used as a coal hulk.
1965
Sold to the Marlborough Committee of the New Zealand Historic Places Trust by the Picton Freezing Works for one shilling. [Annual Dog Watch No. 23 (1966)]
1967
Towed to Shakespeare Bay.
1986
Towed back to Picton.
1999 May 18
Was put into a custom built graving dock at Picton.

References:


Updated 2000-02-15 by Lars Bruzelius


Sj�historiska Samfundet | The Maritime History Virtual Archives | Ships.

Copyright © 1997 Lars Bruzelius.