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BLACK
PRINCE
Black Prince
was a
120-ton
schooner
commissioned by
Benjamin Franklin
when he was
Ambassador to France to raid British merchant shipping. Black Prince's
captain was praised by an American officer as
the most skilled and fearless captain he
ever sailed with, surpassing even John Paul Jones.
That
captain's name was
Luke Ryan (1750–89). Ryan started his
smuggling/privateer carrier
in
1779, when he captained
the
cutter
Friendship.
In April 1779, the authorities, learned
that the Friendship had
landed contraband, seized the ship and arresting those
onboard. Escaping capture, Ryan arranged for six men to
break his twelve crewmen out of the Black Dog Gaol,
Dublin, on the night of the 11–12 April. They boarded
the Friendship,
overpowered the guards and sailed to Rush where Ryan
joined added another eighteen hands. His crime was
punishable by death so he decided to go privateering
against British shipping.
To become a privateer,
Friendship needed
to convert the into a sloop. To finance that, Ryan
entered a fifty-fifty contract with another person whose
name was Torris. The new ship was named
Black Prince.
Aware
that the Continental Congress, unlike the French crown,
did not take one-third of the privateering profits, Ryan
sought an American commission. The American Minister to
France, Benjamin Franklin, wanted to use privateering
for the purposes of arranging prisoner exchanges, but
was wary of associating with Irish smugglers. Thus, Ryan
duped a Boston shipmaster, Stephen Marchant, into acting
as their captain to obtained commission from Franklin.
Black Prince
had seventy-four-strong crew (about half
were Irish, from the close-knit smuggling community
around Rush). In her first cruise (12–22 June) she took
eight merchant ships, ransoming one and keeping seven.
He achieved surprise by approaching targets with his gun
ports closed flying a British or neutral flag. Realizing
that keeping the ships was not sound (six of the prizes,
along with twenty-one of Ryan's men, were eventually
recaptured by the British), Ryan later relied mainly on
ransoms.
On the second day of the fourth cruise (4–24 September),
Ryan assumed the captaincy.
Black
Prince then preyed on ships in the middle of the
Irish Sea and ranged off western Scotland where it
bombarded the residents of a village in Argyll until
they offered provisions. During this voyage, he robbed
neutral
vessels.
Although Ryan delivered few prisoners –
because taking more would diminish supplies, forcing an
early return to port – Franklin endorsed his captaincy.
Franklin also commissioned a second privateer, the Black
Princess.
The Black
Prince and
the Black
Princess enjoyed
great success in the Irish Sea during 1779–1780.
Falling ill, Ryan sold his half interest
of the
Black Prince
to his half partner Torris.
In March 1780, Ryan
resumed privateering with the 150-ton Fearnot,
which was also commissioned by Franklin. He sailed
north, swinging around the top of Scotland and
descending on the Hebrides and the shipping routes north
of Ireland. He caused panic by landing plundering
parties in defenseless locations in the Hebrides and
western Scotland.
The three ships crippled trade and
drove marine insurance
premiums to exorbitant heights. However, the Irish
privateers' habit of straying into outright piracy
embarrassed Franklin. Also, their recruitment of local
sailors short handed the French navy. So, Franklin
withdrew their commissions in fall 1780. By then, they
had captured and sunk 114 ships. The
Black Prince
herself, under American colors, took
fifty ships of which thirty-one were ransomed,
three brought in and the rest either burned, lost or
retaken. An American officer praised Ryan for being the
most skilled and fearless captain he ever sailed with,
surpassing even John Paul Jones. For all that and
despite becoming renowned in Ireland, Britain and
France, Luke Ryan was unknown in America.
This primarily wood Black Prince
is 21" long x 18" tall
x 7" wide $1,900
shipping
and insurance in the USA included. Other countries: $200
flat rate. This model is in stock and can be shipped
within three business days.
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