[4] On 15 June 1814, Lord Collingwood and HMS "Picton" sailed from Bermuda to Halifax, Nova Scotia, carrying black refugees that had come from the Chesapeake Bay area on British warships.
British ships were then free to sail to India or the Indian Ocean under a licence from the EIC.
[7] Lord Collingwood, Parkin, master, was coming out of Shields on 14 March 1818 on her way to London when she grounded.
The notice reported that she had been newly coopered, had partly new wales and topsides and a thorough repair in 1818, and had made only one voyage to India.
[9] Lord Collingwood, Freeman, master, was on a voyage in October 1828 from Bristol, Gloucestershire to Quebec when her crew had to abandon her at (40°47′N 50°42′W / 40.783°N 50.700°W / 40.783; -50.700) in the Atlantic Ocean.