The Douglas Archives

A collection of historical and genalogical records

1797 Voyage of the Brig 'Earl of Marchmont' with Captain William Drysdale - from London to Montreal via Quebec - Bill of Lading etc.

Over the next few days I intend to upload a number of pdfs that give a useful indication of the official documentation that would normally accompany an old sailing ship when carrying cargo in the 1790s between Britain and North America.

As an example we have the documents from a 1797 Voyage of the Brig 'Earl of Marchmont', Captain William Drysdale - from London to Montreal via Quebec in Canada.

This vessel was carrying an interesting cargo that was intended to be used for 'Indian presents' and trade with the indigenous Indians as well as land aquisition.

e.g. Long Rifle barrel guns at cost 55 shillings each
Large Tomahawks to pattern at cost 4 shillings each
Buffalo handle penknives 12 for 5 shillings
As well as gunpowder, shot, tobacco, tools, linens, boots etc etc

NB The pdf images are in the public domain but any copyright belongs to Public Archives Canada (ref: c series vol 249 & 250) the images were down;loaded from Familysearch archives - image series 008341927, 008341928 & 008342453.

Bill of Lading, detailed Invoice & Cargo manifest for Earl of M...l

Best regards

Views: 32

Replies to This Discussion

With reference to the previous post with the bill of Lading & Invoice for the Brigantine Earl of Marchmont.

Included within the goods/cargo shipped by this vessel at that time were goods intended for:

- The Indian stores & for Indian presents*
- The 1st & 2nd Battalions of Royal Canadian Volunteers - destined Quebec
- Rectifying shortfalls in the previous years shipment (1796 - also carried by the Earl of Marchmont)
- Purchasing lands from the Indians to form new establishments in consequence of former posts being given up to the Americans
- 3 bales caddies, missing from the initial cargo in London - added at Spithead, Portsmouth 16-5-1797 when the vessel was en route

* Robert Prescott was the governor of the Canadas and commander of forces in British North America from 1796 to 1807. He was involved in the British system of providing "Indian presents" to Indigenous peoples to maintain alliances and foster good relations.

Additional pdfs enclosed of correspondence, invoices etc concerning the above:

Correspondence from Transport office regarding Indian Stores

1st & 2nd Royal Canadian Volunteers - Correspondence, Bill of L...

Covering shortfalls in the 1796 shipment for Indian Stores - also c...

Invoice - goods to purchase land from the Indians - for new establi...

3 bales caddies, missing from the initial cargo in London - added a...

More to come covering the vessel's arrival in Quebec & Montreal

Best regards

Journey's end

By mid-August 1797 the goods had arrived in the deep water port of Quebec onboard the Earl of Marchmont, there they were inspected and trans-shipped onto smaller vessels for the final leg of the journey up the St Lawrence River to Montreal - the Schooner Perseverence, Sloop St. Ann, Schooner Victory, Sloop Beaver & other small craft each took part of the cargo upriver.

pdfs of Cargo check sheets & correspondence - also mentions possible land acquisitions:

August 1797- cargo checked & trans-shipped onto smaller vessels...

September 1797 - Cargo finally arrived in Montreal in good conditio...

A pdf containg a link to the Familysearch website images:

image 502 William Drysdale Master of Earl of Marchmont at london fo...


Best regards

Note

The British Crown purchased St. Joseph Island in 1798 from the Ojibwe people through an agreement known as the St. Joseph Island Treaty (or Treaty 11). The Indigenous people received £1,200 in goods and trade items in exchange for the island, along with the ongoing right to use the island for harvesting and burying their dead.

RSS

Making conections

The more information you can give about the people you mention, the more chance there is of someone else connecting with your family.

Dates and places of births, deaths and marriages all help to place families.

Professions also help.

'My great-grandmother mother was a Douglas from Montrose' does not give many clues to follow up! But a bit of flesh on the bones makes further research possible. But if we are told who she married, what his profession was and where the children were baptised, then we can get to work.

Maybe it is time to update the information in your profile?


© 2025   Created by William Douglas.   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service