Hooghly (1819 ship)

She then reached the Cape of Good Hope on 3 March and St Helena on 5 April, before arriving back at the Downs on 30 May.

[1] Under the command of Peter Reeves and surgeon Robert Tainsh, she left Cork, Ireland on 5 January 1825, arriving in Sydney, New South Wales on 22 April.

[7] On her second convict voyage under the command of Peter Reeves and surgeon Alexander Nisbet, she left London, England on 5 November 1827, arriving in Sydney on 24 February 1828.

[9] Hooghly arrived in Clarence, off Garden Island, Western Australia on 13 February 1830, bringing 173 settlers to the Swan River Colony.

Gilmore, the first to leave, had arrived on 15 December 1829 in the Swan River Colony with Thomas Peel and 182 settlers in all.

[12] The departing former Governor of New South Wales, Sir Ralph Darling, was a passenger on the vessel.

[1] On her fourth convict voyage under the command of George Bayly and surgeon James Rutherford, she left Portsmouth, England on 28 July 1834, arriving in Sydney on 18 November.

At some point Hooghly also sailed from Cork, Ireland to Port Jackson, New South Wales, with Irish migrants.

After the crew safely abandoned her the British steamship Ida rescued them, landing them at Gibraltar five days later.