Homeward-bound, she crossed the Second Bar on 9 January 1789, reached St Helena on 24 April, and arrived at Blackwall on 2 July.
Captain John Barklay acquired a letter of marque on 21 December 1793, after she had left Blackwall on 14 November.
[3] The British government held her at Portsmouth, together with a number of other Indiamen in anticipation of using them as transports for an attack on Île de France (Mauritius).
Homeward bound, she crossed the Second Bar on 19 April, reached Batavia on 6 August and St Helena on 16 October, before arriving at Blackwall on 22 January 1795.
Homeward-bound, she crossed the Second Bar on 27 February 1788, reached Macao on 27 March and St Helena on 5 August, and arrived at Blackwall on 8 November.
Albion was at Rio de Janeiro on 14 August and Tellicherry on 25 November, before arriving at Bombay on 6 December.
She sailed form Bombay on 23 January 1800 in company with Woodford to gather pepper on the Malabar Coast prior to returning to England.
Homeward-bound, she crossed the Second Bar on 8 March, reached St Helena on 10 July, and arrived at Deptford on 27 September.
[2] The British Royal Navy frigate HMS Caroline, Captain Peter Rainier, escorted Albion and Perseverance through the Gillolo Passage between Halmahera and Waigeo.
(Caroline then left them and on 27 December captured the Spanish ship St Raphael (alias Pallas), in a single-ship action.
Homeward bound, she crossed the Second Bar on 22 September, reached St Helena on 22 May 1810, and arrived at Gravesend on 1 August.