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Statements

Subject Item
dbr:Imperial_Eagle_(ship)
rdf:type
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rdfs:label
Imperial Eagle (ship)
rdfs:comment
Imperial Eagle, originally named Loudoun (also spelled Louden, Loudin, and Lowden), was a 400-ton burthen (bm) British merchant ship, launched in 1774 at Liverpool. By 1780 her master was S. Rains, her owner Robertson, and her trade a transport out of London. In 1786 she underwent refitting at Shadwell Dock, Thames, London. She then sailed on maritime fur trading ventures in the late 1780s. She was under the command of Captain Charles William Barkley until confiscated in India.
foaf:name
Loudoun (1774-1786)
dcterms:subject
dbc:Fur_trade dbc:Exploration_ships_of_the_United_Kingdom dbc:History_of_Washington_(state) dbc:Age_of_Sail_merchant_ships_of_England dbc:Pre-statehood_history_of_Alaska dbc:History_of_Vancouver_Island dbc:1774_ships dbc:Merchant_ships_of_the_United_Kingdom dbc:Pre-Confederation_British_Columbia
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26218064
dbo:wikiPageRevisionID
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n19:books%3Fid=NgTkNwAACAAJ
owl:sameAs
freebase:m.0b73z54 dbpedia-fa:ایمپریال_ایگل_(کشتی) n18:4n7vr wikidata:Q6006561
dbp:shipRenamed
Imperial Eagle
dbp:wikiPageUsesTemplate
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dbp:shipSailPlan
dbr:Full-rigged_ship
dbp:shipArmament
Loudon:18 x 9-pounder + 3 x 6-pounder guns 20 guns
dbp:shipBuilder
Liverpool
dbp:shipCountry
Great Britain
dbp:shipFate
Confiscated, 1788.
dbp:shipLaunched
1774
dbp:shipName
Loudoun
dbp:shipOwner
Austrian East India Company
dbp:shipPropulsion
Sail
dbp:shipTonsBurthen
400
dbo:abstract
Imperial Eagle, originally named Loudoun (also spelled Louden, Loudin, and Lowden), was a 400-ton burthen (bm) British merchant ship, launched in 1774 at Liverpool. By 1780 her master was S. Rains, her owner Robertson, and her trade a transport out of London. In 1786 she underwent refitting at Shadwell Dock, Thames, London. She then sailed on maritime fur trading ventures in the late 1780s. She was under the command of Captain Charles William Barkley until confiscated in India. Although some sources, such as Miller, state that Loudon was a former East Indiaman, this appears to be incorrect. Hardy and Hardy do not list her, under any of the alternative spellings of her name, among the vessels that performed voyages for the British East India Company (EIC). The National Archives's guide to East India Company records in the "British Library: Asian and African Studies (previously Oriental and India Office Library)" also has no record of any vessel bearing her name, in any of its alternative spellings. As Imperial Eagle, she was among the first ships used in the trading system that developed in the 1780s, in which traders collected sea otter pelts on the Pacific Northwest coast of North America, through trade with the indigenous peoples, and then sold them in Guangzhou (Canton) or Macau, China. The Hawaiian Islands, only recently discovered, were a key way station, with many trading vessels spending the winter there. This maritime fur trading system had originated from the voyages of James Cook, which unexpectedly had revealed the value of sea otter pelts in China.
gold:hypernym
dbr:Ton
prov:wasDerivedFrom
wikipedia-en:Imperial_Eagle_(ship)?oldid=1123772173&ns=0
dbo:wikiPageLength
24194
dbo:status
Confiscated, 1788.
foaf:isPrimaryTopicOf
wikipedia-en:Imperial_Eagle_(ship)