Preston (1809 ship)


Preston was a Dano-Norwegian vessel that the British captured c.1809. As a British merchantman she initially traded with the Iberian peninsula. An American vessel captured and released her in 1812 and she foundered later that year.
Preston first entered Lloyd's Register in 1809 with Simpson, master, Ditchburn, owner, and trade London–Gibraltar.
YearMasterOwnerTradeSource & notes
1811Simpson
Ditchburn
DitchburnLondon–GibraltarLR; thorough repair 1806
1812DitchburnDitchburnLondon–CorunnaRegister of Shipping; small repairs 1811

Preston, Ditchburn, master, was sailing from Newfoundland to Trinidad in 1812 when she encountered the American letter of marque Lottery at. Lottery took sails, cables, and other stores. Lottery then released Preston, which arrived at Trinidad on 15 September. When Preston arrived at Trinidad, Ditchburn reported that the Americans had behaved more like pirates than privateersmen, looting private property and cabin stores.
In October Preston foundered while on her way from Trinidad to London. The Register of Shipping for 1813 carried the annotation "Lost" by her name.