Sylph (1831 ship)

This article is about the ship. For other uses, see Sylph (disambiguation).
The opium clipper Sylph salvaged by the sloop Clive, William John Huggins, in the National Maritime Museum
History
Name: Sylph
Namesake: Mythological creature in Western tradition, the Sylph
Owner: Rustomjee Cowasjee
Builder: Currie & Co., Sulkea, Calcutta[1]
Launched: 1831[1]
Acquired: Jardine Matheson, 1833
In service: 1832
Out of service: 1849
Homeport: Hong Kong
Fate: Disappeared en route to Singapore, 1849
General characteristics
Class and type: Opium clipper
Tons burthen: 304 (bm)
Length: Hull, 100 ft (30.48 m)
Propulsion: Sails
Complement: Crew of 70

Sylph was a clipper ship built in Calcutta in 1831 for the Parsi merchant Rustomjee Cowasjee.[2] After her purchase by the Hong Kong based merchant house Jardine Matheson, in 1833 Sylph went on to set an unbroken speed record by sailing from Calcutta to Macao in 17 days, 17 hours.[2][3] Her primary role was to transport opium between various ports in the Far East.[4] Two contemporary paintings of Sylph show her to have been a heavily rigged ship with trysails on each mast and a tall, high-peaked spanker.[2]

History

Sylph was designed in London by Sir Robert Seppings, surveyor of the Royal Navy, to the order of a consortium of Calcutta merchants headed by Rustomjee Cowasjee. Sleek, elegant, functional and devoid of ornament, Sylph did not have the rakish lines of the later clippers, yet proved to be particularly swift.[5] She is supposed to have run from the Sandheads to Macao in sixteen days.[6]

In 1833 Jardines sent Sylph to explore the profitability of trading along the Chinese coast. Arriving at Macao in September, Sylph unloaded some of the opium she had transported from Calcutta and immediately departed northwards with the German Protestant missionary Karl Gützlaff on board as translator.[7] During the First Opium War (18391842) Jardines were offered a premium price for the ship, an offer that was declined on the basis of the huge profits she made from transporting opium.

Sylph and another well-known clipper, Cowasjee Family, were fitted out with extra guns and full European crews during the war, and were joined by the Lady Hayes, belonging to Jardine, Matheson & Co., the three ships sailing in company. While they were sailing among the islands Chinese war junks surrounded them and a fierce battle ensued. But Captains Wallace and Vice, of Sylph and Cowasjee Family, were two of the most experienced captains in the trade, celebrated for their daring and success in dealing with pirates, and the war junks suffered a severe defeat, many of them being sunk; after which the opium clippers had no more trouble.[6]

While sailing from Calcutta to China in 1835 and carrying 995 chests of opium, Sylph ran aground on a shoal on the Malay Peninsula.[2] According to the Canton Register dated April 14, 1835, Captain Wallace told the vessel's insurers that she had been swamped, then beached by the north east monsoon.[8] The East Indiaman Clive came to the rescue and the ship and all but two chests of opium were recovered.[2]

After undergoing re-rigging in Hong Kong in 1848 at a cost of 11,166.22 Mexican dollars, Sylph disappeared en route to Singapore the following year, possibly captured and burned by pirates based on Hainan Island.[2] Other sources believe that she was shipwrecked on the rocks of Pedra Branca off the coast of Singapore whilst carrying a cargo of opium to the value of 557,200 Spanish dollars.[9]

Notes

  1. 1 2 Phipps (1840), p.113.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Hunt 1999, p. 88.
  3. Denis Leigh (January 1974). "Medicine, the City and China". Med Hist. 18 (1): 51–67. doi:10.1017/s0025727300019219. PMC 1081522Freely accessible. PMID 4618583.
  4. "Opium Hall of Fame". Retrieved October 13, 2010.
  5. J J Spigelman AC. "Shanghai And The West: First Contact".
  6. 1 2 Lubbock, Basil (1914). The China clippers (2nd ed.). Glasgow: James Brown & Son. Retrieved 2013-03-21.
  7. Jason A. Karsh (2008). "The Root of the Opium War:Mismanagement in the Aftermath of the British East India Company's Loss of its Monopoly in 1834". Retrieved October 13, 2010.
  8. Canton Register (Vol. 8 No. 15), Tuesday, April 14, 1835 p. 62
  9. "Case Concerning Sovereignty Over Pedra Branca I Pulau, Batu Puteh, Middle Rocks and South Ledge" (PDF). March 25, 2004. Retrieved October 14, 2010.

References

Further reading

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