This list presents the names and dates of most known privateer
vessels based in what is now Canada. Profiles are presented for many
selected privateer vessels giving an outline of their career. Most are
illustrated by a drawing or silhouette illustrating the type of rig
that they most resembled. Please note that unless indicated otherwise, the
home port of Liverpool refers to Liverpool, Nova Scotia (Lat. 44 2 N,
Long 64 42 W) a hotspot for Canadian privateering and not Liverpool,
England.
You can also use this Guide to Rigs to get a
sense of the types of rigs used by privateers.
Back to Privateering Home Page
In the various wars inflicted upon the colonies that later became
Canada, coastal communities sought to sustain and defend themselves with
privateer vessels. Quebec and Ontario were too far inland to engage in much privateering so it was an activity carried
out mainly by English and French settlers in Atlantic Canada.
This list of privateer vessels is under construction; not all wars are
listed, but more are coming down the ways.
Privateers were an important part of the offensive side to the great
French fortress of Louisbourg in Cape Breton. They enjoyed
considerable assistance and even direct investment from the military and
civil authorities. This list is only a selection,
showing the privateer vessels who mounted a successful campaign
against New England shipping in the spring of 1744.
Source: The Summer of 1744: A Portrait of Life in 18th Century
Louisbourg by A.J.B. Johnston
Louisbourg also outfitted privateers in the next conflict, the Seven Years
War
Kindly provided by Sandy Balcolm at Parks Canada, Fortress
Louisbourg; Archival Source: France, Archives Nationales,
Section Ancienne, Sirie G5, Carton 260, Amirauti. Conseil des Prises,
Minutes de Jugements 1756-57
Halifax had just been settled when the war broke out and was little more of
big army and navy camp. Still the fledgling city fielded a number of privateers, although several were
owned in England.
At first sympathetic to the American rebels and reluctant to take up
privateering, Nova Scotians turned to privateering with vigour in repsonse
to aggressive American privateer attacks. Halifax led the privateering
fleet, with Liverpool N.S. entering the field along with some small
communities such as Chester. Many merchants, including a few in Quebec,
also outfitted armed merchant ships.
Wars with the new revolutionary France wrecked Nova Scotia's prosperous
West Indies trade, leading merchants and mariners to switch their efforts
to raiding French and Spanish commerce in the West Indies.
Source:"A Private War in the Caribbean:
Nova Scotia Privateering 1793-1805" by Dan Conlin
Sources: "The Fortunes of War" by Faye Kert, MA Thesis Carleton University
(1986) and Under the Red Jack by C.H.J. Snider (1928).
Back to Privateering Home Page
Acadian Privateers
Privateers based at Port Royal proved a thorn in the side of New England
colonies and helped the beleaguered Acadian settlements offer some
resistance in frontier wars with the English. Litle has been published in
English on this subject although active scholarship is underway.
See the Acadian Privateering Links
section for more information.French Privateers from Quebec
Although Quebec is not an ideal privateering base as it is far inland, the
large colony of New France fielded privateers in several campaigns,
especially those against Newfoundland. Research has only recently been
publsihed on these privateers. See the reference to James Pritchard's work
on this subject in my privateering
bibliography.French Privateers from Louisbourg
English Privateers from Halifax During the Seven Years War
Source: "Notes of Nova Scotian Privateers" by George Nichols in
Collections of the Nova Scotia Historical Society Vol. 8, 1908.
The American Revolution - 1775 to 1783
Source: Ross, James Henry. "Privateering in Nova Scotia During the
American Revolutionary War 1775-1783". BA Honours thesis Mount Allision
University, 1957.
Canadian Privateer Vessels in the Napoleonic Wars
Canadian Privateer Vessels in the War of 1812
Privateer Vessels by Name
Most recorded privateer vessels in Canadian history are listed, both
predatory vessels and merchant ships armed mainly for defence but still
commissioned and capable of capturing enemy vessels. Many are
illustrated by a drawing or silhouette illustrating the type of rig
that they most resembled.
Back to Start of List
Copyright Dan Conlin 1997 Revised March 31, 2000