Several ships have been named British Tar an alternative nickname for British sailors to
Jack Tar:
British Tar (1792 ship) was launched at Shields and made five voyages as a
whaler and several as a
West Indiaman. She then became a general trader. She was lost on 29 January 1818.
British Tar (1797 ship) was built in Plymouth (probably Plymouth, Massachusetts). She sailed from Bristol in 1805 on a
slave trading voyage during which the French captured her. She became the privateer Revanche, out of Guadeloupe. Revanche fought an inconclusive
single-ship action in 1806 with
HMS Curieux. The British captured Revanche in 1808.
British Tar (1803 ship) was built by Lockwood Brodrick (Late), at South Shields. She was last listed in 1811.
British Tar (1804 ship) was launched in 1793 in Spain under another name and taken in prize. In 1806 she was on a voyage from Labrador to the Mediterranean when a French squadron captured and burnt her.
British Tar (1814 ship) was launched at Whitby in 1814. She became a Liverpool-based merchantman, trading across the Atlantic with North America until she was wrecked in August 1840.
British Tar (1824 ship), of 383–395 tons (bm), was a brig launched at Sunderland. In 1834 she made a voyage carrying immigrants to Canada under the
Petworth Emigration Scheme. She was last listed in 1863.
List of ships with the same or similar names
This article includes a
list of ships with the same or similar names. If an
internal link for a specific ship led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended ship article, if one exists.
Several ships have been named British Tar an alternative nickname for British sailors to
Jack Tar:
British Tar (1792 ship) was launched at Shields and made five voyages as a
whaler and several as a
West Indiaman. She then became a general trader. She was lost on 29 January 1818.
British Tar (1797 ship) was built in Plymouth (probably Plymouth, Massachusetts). She sailed from Bristol in 1805 on a
slave trading voyage during which the French captured her. She became the privateer Revanche, out of Guadeloupe. Revanche fought an inconclusive
single-ship action in 1806 with
HMS Curieux. The British captured Revanche in 1808.
British Tar (1803 ship) was built by Lockwood Brodrick (Late), at South Shields. She was last listed in 1811.
British Tar (1804 ship) was launched in 1793 in Spain under another name and taken in prize. In 1806 she was on a voyage from Labrador to the Mediterranean when a French squadron captured and burnt her.
British Tar (1814 ship) was launched at Whitby in 1814. She became a Liverpool-based merchantman, trading across the Atlantic with North America until she was wrecked in August 1840.
British Tar (1824 ship), of 383–395 tons (bm), was a brig launched at Sunderland. In 1834 she made a voyage carrying immigrants to Canada under the
Petworth Emigration Scheme. She was last listed in 1863.
List of ships with the same or similar names
This article includes a
list of ships with the same or similar names. If an
internal link for a specific ship led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended ship article, if one exists.