Several sailing ships have been named William and Ann:
William and Ann, a 20-gun hired vessel of the
Royal Navy mentioned in 1757.
William and Ann (1759) was a former vessel of the British
Royal Navy that first appeared under that name in 1786. She was a 370-ton merchantman, convict transport, and
whaler. She was last listed in 1857.
William and Ann, an armed ship mentioned in 1759.
William and Ann, a brig that
HMS Amazon recaptured in 1777.[1]
William and Ann (1781 ship) was launched in 1781 at Whitby. From her launch until 1805 she alternated between being a transport and trading with the Baltic. In 1805 she became a
whaler in the British
northern whale fishery. She wrecked in ice in 1830 in the Greenland Fisheries on her 24th
whaling voyage.
William and Ann, a gun boat mentioned in 1795.
William and Ann, a 77-ton sloop mentioned in 1814.
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 sailing ships have been named William and Ann:
William and Ann, a 20-gun hired vessel of the
Royal Navy mentioned in 1757.
William and Ann (1759) was a former vessel of the British
Royal Navy that first appeared under that name in 1786. She was a 370-ton merchantman, convict transport, and
whaler. She was last listed in 1857.
William and Ann, an armed ship mentioned in 1759.
William and Ann, a brig that
HMS Amazon recaptured in 1777.[1]
William and Ann (1781 ship) was launched in 1781 at Whitby. From her launch until 1805 she alternated between being a transport and trading with the Baltic. In 1805 she became a
whaler in the British
northern whale fishery. She wrecked in ice in 1830 in the Greenland Fisheries on her 24th
whaling voyage.
William and Ann, a gun boat mentioned in 1795.
William and Ann, a 77-ton sloop mentioned in 1814.
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.