Sarah Ann (1811 ship)

[8] Lloyd's List (LL) reported that an American privateer had taken Elizabeth, Hannah, master, and taken her into Savannah.

[11] Variable and the boats of Rhodian, Captain John George Boss, captured Sarah Ann, of one 12-pounder gun and 44 men, on 16 September 1812.

[6][a] When Sarah Ann arrived at New Providence, six men of her crew, including Baltimorean George Roberts, were identified as possibly British subjects and were sent to Jamaica on Sappho for further investigation.

[15] Captain Moody wrote a letter attesting to the fact that the six were American citizens, five native born and one naturalized.

[16] Eventually Vice Admiral Charles Stirling, commander of the Royal Navy's Jamaica Station, had the men reclassified as prisoners of war, not British subjects.