Fortitude (1842 ship)

Fortitude was a barque launched at Scarborough in 1842. In the 1840s she brought free settlers to the colonies of South Australia and Queensland. Thereafter she sailed to India and China, and made one more voyage carrying female immigrants to Port Phillip. She was wrecked circa 1866.

History
Fortitude first appeared in Lloyd's Register (LR) in 1842.

Migrants to South Australia
Fortitude, Captain James Douglas, arrived in South Australia on 5 April 1842, bringing 27 free settlers to Adelaide.

Migrants to Queensland
In 1848–9, she was the first of three ships chartered by the Rev Dr John Dunmore Lang to bring free immigrants to Brisbane, Australia, arriving on 21 January 1849. Captained by John Christmas, with the medical superintendent Henry Challinor, she departed Gravesend on 14 September 1848 and arrived at Moreton Bay on 21 January 1849.

Subsequent trade
In 1852–1853, Fortitude. Captain Heyward, carried 50 women to Port Phillip. The women were the 21st party to travel under the auspices of the Female Emigration Fund. Some women who paid their own way also made the journey.

With the change of ownership from Tidalls to Guy, Fortitude's homeport changed from Sunderland to Newry.

Fate
In 1865 Fortitude, Booth, master, sailed to Toulon, then Singapore, and back to London. There is no readily available ship arrival and departure data after her return in November 1865. A typhoon drove a barque named Fortitude ashore at Kowloon, damaging her. At this point it is a conjecture that the barque in Kowloon was the Fortitude of this article.

LR for 1866 carried the annotation "Wrecked" under Fortitude's name.

South Australia

 * W.P. Auld, Adelaide vigneron and explorer
 * James Philcox, land speculator who named two villages (now suburbs) in Adelaide

Brisbane

 * Henry Challinor, physician and politician of Ipswich
 * Robert Cribb, politician of Brisbane
 * William Pettigrew, politician and mayor of Brisbane
 * Edward Barton Southerden, draper and mayor of Sandgate