Bacchus (1786 ship)

She was condemned in 1807 at Trinidad after she had delivered the captives she had brought on her fifth voyage transporting enslaved people.

[1] The issue of Lloyd's Register for 1785 is not available on line, so there is no clear indication of what her name was before Samuel Span purchased her.

1st voyage transporting enslaved people(1799–1800): Captain John Ford acquired a letter of marque on 17 July 1799.

Bacchus touched at Barbados before arriving at Montego Bay, Jamaica on 27 April 1800.

[8] 3rd voyage transporting enslaved people (1804–1805): Captain Richard Hughes sailed from Liverpool on 29 April 1804.

Bacchus sailed from Kingston on 21 April and arrived back at Liverpool on 6 July.

[9] 4th voyage transporting enslaved people (1805–1806): Captain Alexander Nicholson sailed from Liverpool on 27 September 1805.

[12] The database on the trans-Atlantic slave trade reports that Bacchus was condemned at Trinidad.