Isabel (1850 ship)
Isabel Lying off Deptford, London
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History | |
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United Kingdom | |
Builder | Hilary McIsaac, at St Peter's Bay, Prince Edward Island |
Launched | 1850 |
General characteristics | |
Class and type | Auxiliary steamship |
Tons burthen | 149 net register |
Length | 86.5 ft (26.4 m) |
Beam | 22.9 ft (7.0 m) |
Depth of hold | 11.9 ft (3.63 m) |
Propulsion | Sails and steam (16 nominal horse power V-twin) |
Sail plan | 2-masted brigantine rigged |
Complement | 18 |
Isabel was a vessel intended to be used in four planned expeditions in search of the fate of Franklin's lost expedition between 1852 and 1856, although she only managed to reach the Arctic once, in 1852. All of these expeditions were sponsored by Lady Jane Franklin who also owned the vessel over most of this period, and expended much money for little result.
The Isabel was a nearly-new sailing vessel when Donald Beatson purchased her in 1851 for a proposed expedition to the Arctic via the
Lady Franklin became the ship's owner and, it being too late to reach the Bering Straits in time for the following summer, arranged for the vessel to make a brief sortie to the coast of Greenland under Edward Inglefield, RN, with Thomas Abernethy as his ice master, later that year.
Public subscriptions, including over £1671 from
However, Grate and most of the crew mutinied at
After preparations were begun late in 1856 to send Isabel back to the Arctic via Baffin Bay, Lady Franklin was finally convinced that the ship was unsuitable. After unsuccessful efforts were made to acquire HMS Resolute, Isabel was sold and replaced by the auxiliary steamship Fox. Isabel later became the tender to the Arctic whaler Emma.
Her engine was later removed, and Isabel was still in service as a sailing vessel, owned by G. Sinclair of Aberdeen, in the 1880s.
References
- John Brown (1860). The North-West Passage and the Plans for the Search for Sir John Franklin: A Review with maps, &c., Second Edition with a Sequel Including the Voyage of the "Fox" London, E. Stanford, 1860.
- Edward Augustus Inglefield, A summer search for Sir John Franklin; with a peep into the polar basin, Thomas-Harrison, London, 1853.
- William Kennedy, A short narrative of the second voyage of the "Prince Albert" in search of Sir John Franklin, Dalton, London, 1853.
- Roderic Owen, The Fate of Franklin: The Life and Mysterious Death of the Most Heroic of Arctic Explorers, Hutchinson Group (Australia) Pty. Ltd., Richmond South, Victoria, 1978.
- Lloyd's Register of Shipping, 1886 edn.
External links
- Media related to Isabel (ship, 1850) at Wikimedia Commons