HMS Wolf (1814)


HMS Wolf was a 14-gun brig of the Royal Navy that was launched in 1814 from Woolwich Dockyard, too late for the war. The Navy sold her 1825 and she then became a merchant and whale fishing vessel. She was wrecked in the South Seas in 1837.

Naval career

Wolf sailed to Sheerness on 22 September 1814.
Commander Bernard Yeoman commissioned her on 5 December 1819 for the Cork station. He then sailed her on 27 February 1819. She served on the Irish Station in 1819.
When His Majesty King George visited Dublin in 1821, Wolf was part of the naval escort. Yeoman frequently dined with His Majesty on HMY Royal George, and while the king was in Dublin, Yeoman lived with the household, attended the king in public, and was generally considered as forming part of the royal suite.

Commercial service

Wolf paid off in 1825. The Admiralty listed her for sale at Plymouth on 27 January 1825, and she sold that same day to Thomas S. Benson for £3,1000.
She underwent several changes of ownership. She was working as a whaler in the Pacific Ocean when she hit an uncharted rock on 6 August 1837 off Lord Howe Island, and sank.
YearMasterOwnerTradeNotes
1826W. ChristiePearl & Co,London
1827W. ChristiePearl & Co,London
1828W. ChristiePearl & Co,London
1829WilsonCaptain & Co.London & Barbados
1830Wilson/ J. LewisCaptain & Co.London & Barbados
1831J. LewisWalkerLondon & South Seas
1832J. LewisWalkerLondon & South Seas
1833J. LewisWalkerLondon & South Seas
1834J LewisLondon
1835J. LewisLondon
1836J. LewisLondon
1837J. LewisLondon
1838J. LewisLondon

Citations and references

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