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A portrait of the East Indiaman ‘Atlas’, shown off South Foreland, near Dover, in broadside view. She sailed on her first voyage to India in 1813 and made at least nine more thereafter until 1830. The ‘Atlas’ was built in 1812 at Paul's Yard near Hull, her managing owner being James Staniforth. She was mounted with 26-guns and had a complement of 130 men at full strength. During her East India Company service she sailed to Madras, Bengal and China under the command of Captain Charles Otway Mayne, who was able to accumulate a fortune as a result of these voyages. This was not always without problems, since in 1817, the surgeon and second mate of the ‘Atlas’ complained to the council at Canton that Mayne had taken all the extra 30 tons of private cargo normally allowed by the Company to ships officers.
The National Maritime Museum holds another painting of the ‘Atlas’ by Huggins, see BHC3214. The painting is signed and dated 1822.
Title
The East Indiaman 'Atlas'
Date
1822
Medium
oil on canvas
Measurements
H 80.6 x W 127 cm
Accession number
BHC3213
Work type
Painting