[5] Mariner, John Herbert, master, left England in June 1816 with destination Port Jackson.
[9] On 2 February 1824 the East Indiaman Fame caught fire about 50 miles south-west of Bencoolen in the evening after she had left there for England.
Fortunately all aboard were able to leave the ship in two boats before the fire reached the magazine, which exploded; there were no deaths.
Captain Young, his passengers, including Sir Stamford and Lady Raffles and their children, and Fame's crew shipped aboard Mariner for the voyage to England.
She left the Cape of Good Hope on 28 March, having picked up some six more prisoners, who had been sentenced to transportation for crimes they had committed there.
[14][15] The Register of Shipping for 1829 shows Mariner, Swinton, master, sailing between London and New South Wales.
[21] Mariner appears for the last time in the 1856 volume of Lloyd's Register with J. Walker as master, Redman & Co. as owner, and trade as London—Africa.