Union (ship)
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Many vessels have borne the name ''Union'': * was a Royal Navy
sixth-rate In the rating system of the Royal Navy used to categorise sailing warships, a sixth-rate was the designation for small warships mounting between 20 and 28 carriage-mounted guns on a single deck, sometimes with smaller guns on the upper works and ...
post ship, built in 1755. She served during the French and Indian War, most notably at
Louisbourg Louisbourg is an unincorporated community and former town in Cape Breton Regional Municipality, Nova Scotia. History The French military founded the Fortress of Louisbourg in 1713 and its fortified seaport on the southwest part of the harbour, ...
and Quebec, and the American Revolution, during which she captured two French privateers. The Royal Navy sold her in 1783. J. Montgomery purchased her and she became the Greenland whaler ''Union''. Then in 1790–91 she became a slaver, making five slave-trading voyages. Between 1796 and 1802 she made two voyages for the British East India Company (EIC). She then traded between London and Liverpool. She was last listed in 1804. * was an 8-gun bomb ketch launched in 1759 for the British Royal Navy that it sold in 1774. New owners renamed her ''Union''. She made two voyages as a Greenland whaler before becoming a London-based transport. She remained a transport until she was lost on 20 May 1782 off the Malabar coast of India. * was launched in Philadelphia. She sailed between England, North America, and the West Indies. She made one voyage as a slave ship and then returned to her previous trade. A privateer captured her in 1781. * was launched in Liverpool. She became a slave ship that the French captured in 1793 on her first slave voyage. * was a slave ship acquired in 1796 by owners in Liverpool. The French captured her around late 1796 or early 1797 on the
Windward Coast The Windward Coast was used to describe an area of West Africa located on the coast between Cape Mount and Assini, i.e. the coastlines of the modern states of Liberia and Ivory Coast, to the west of what was called the Gold Coast. A related re ...
before she had acquired an any slaves. * first appeared in online records in 1799. She made one voyage as a slave ship before she foundered in 1801 on her way home. * was launched at Calcutta. She sailed to England and then made five voyages for the British East India Company (EIC), between 1805 and 1814. She was wrecked in late 1815 or early 1816. * , sunk in Fiji in 1804 * was an
East Indiaman East Indiaman was a general name for any sailing ship operating under charter or licence to any of the East India trading companies of the major European trading powers of the 17th through the 19th centuries. The term is used to refer to vesse ...
that made eight voyages for the EIC before her sale for breaking up in 1819. * was launched at Liverpool in 1805. She made three voyages as a slave ship in the triangular trade in enslaved people. She then became a West Indiaman. ''Union'' was last listed in the mid-1820s. * was a vessel that the Hudson's Bay Company owned from 1824–1831. * was a screw schooner collier launched at Southampton and fitted with a auxiliary engine. She served the Union Steam Collier Line formed in 1853 to carry coal from Wales to Southampton (England). She was last listed in ''Lloyd's Register'' in 1862. In 1900 Union Steam Collier merged with Castle Line to form Union-Castle Line. * ''Union'', a steamboat originally named , in Oregon, United States, in the 1860s.


See also

* , a
Peruvian Navy The Peruvian Navy ( es, link=no, Marina de Guerra del Perú, abbreviated MGP) is the branch of the Peruvian Armed Forces tasked with surveillance, patrol and defense on lakes, rivers and the Pacific Ocean up to from the Peruvian littoral. Addit ...
ship * , one of eight ships of the British Royal Navy * , one of four ships of the United States Navy {{DEFAULTSORT:Union Ship names