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Ships in San Francisco during the 1800s.


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Born October 29, 1818 in Edinburgh, Scotland
Died 1850s in San Francisco (not verified)

John Carphin was named after his parental grandfather as per Scottish naming tradition. He was the oldest of four children born to John Carphin and Jane Lindsay Hay. Sometime around 1825 John Sr. and Jane moved their family to the St. Pancras district of London. The senior John Carphin disappears from all records by 1841.

About 1844 John married Josephine Maria Lowden and they lived in the Stepney district of London. Their son, John William Carphin, was born on December 19, 1845.

Both John and his younger brother George became ship masters.

Lloyd’s register of 1844-45 records John Carphin’s first vessel as the 283-ton barque Lanchester out of London (we do not have the names of the ships he served on as a mate prior to that time). His second ship, the 599-ton Good Hope, sailed between London and Bombay.

It was on a voyage in 1845 that we get an understanding of the character of John. It was recorded that near the Cape of Good Hope they came upon the ship Arabia. John and the other captain, Mr. Johnston, dined and drank heavily while the seas became rougher. Two of John’s crew were left to wait for him in a small, unseaworthy vessel trailing along in the wake of the Arabia. The ship’s boat eventually succumbed to the waves, one poor fellow made it to the Arabia but the other drowned. According to witnesses John’s attitude towards his crew, even while they were drowning, was belligerent and abusive. This complaint must have got back to England because he did not remain the master of the Good Hope.

In 1846 he moved his family to Liverpool and began working for William Sharp, shipowner from Birkenhead. His vessel was the newly constructed 588-ton Victoria (built in Nova Scotia). Carphin made two very successful runs to Calcutta in the Victoria in 1847 and 1848 and won Sharp’s praise. At this time certification exams for merchant officers were introduced and John is recorded as passing his exam in Liverpool on the 13th of April 1849.

Just days later he left Liverpool, bound for Plymouth to take on passengers, then on to Sydney, Australia. Josephine and little John William accompanied him on this voyage. They arrived in Sydney on September 2, 1849 amid the usual complaints from the passengers about the shortage of food and ill-treatment by the captain.

In Sydney he hooked up with an overzealous charterer, C.S. Deacon, who booked passengers bound for San Francisco by the hundreds. The Victoria was overflowing with between 230 and 270 souls. They left the docks with cargo piled high on the decks such that they were stopped by the port authorities and forced to remove cargo until they were lighter. This caused substantial delay and dissatisfied passengers began to grow restless. Eventually they got underway but ship supplies began to run low quickly and the passengers were put on half-rations until they reached Honolulu.

Either in Honolulu or on route, Josephine gave birth to their daughter, Florence. She was christened in Honolulu on December 9, 1849. After re-fitting in Honolulu, the Victoria continued on to San Francisco and arrived on February 18, 1850 with 272 passengers on board. More problems must have occurred on the way as John handed over twelve mutinous crew members to the USS Warren upon arrival.

As with other vessels of the time, most of the remaining crew deserted in San Francisco to seek their fortunes in gold.

From San Francisco, John and the Victoria returned as quickly as possible to Sydney for more cargo and supplies but ran into some foul weather and the vessel was damaged. Other events occurred during this voyage to Australia in 1850 that are not completely clear, having to do with loans for ship repairs from agents Thornton and Church, which ended with John being imprisoned for 11 days. After his release, he quickly refitted the Victoria and returned to San Francisco, arriving there in early 1851.

His problems were following him: Lawsuits were filed, in the court of admiralty of Judge Ogden Hoffman, by Thornton and Church against the ship Victoria concerning a cargo of 800 tons of coal in June 1851. It seems that John had had enough and in July 1851 he also filed suit against the ship Victoria although his motive for doing this is not clear. It may be that he thought he could pre-empt actions by Thornton and Church against the ship. The outcome of the proceedings did not appear to be in John’s favour.

Not much else is known about John Carphin’s time in San Francisco, but it must have been turbulent. In the spring of 1852, Wm. Sharp declared bankruptcy, as other ships belonging to Sharp were also embroiled in court battles. The weight of these occurrences led to an early death for Sharp in 1855 or 1856.

The Sacramento Daily Union of June 3, 1852 reports from San Joaquin that Oscar Livingstone was recovering from a wound that he received in an “affray” with Captain Carphin. This is the last reference to John Carphin and it is quite probable that he died in San Francisco in 1853. There is an 1853 listing in the Yerba Buena cemetery for Josephine Carpine, a common mis-transcription of Carphin (Carplin is another).

However, we know that Josephine was still alive at his death as she married Hugh Pelan in 1854, so this grave plot may be for her husband John. Their children, John William and Florence, continued to reside in California. John William, a ranch hand and drifter, passed away after a short illness on the ranch of J.W.C. Pogue in Lemon Cove in December 1906. Florence’s married name remains a mystery but, according to John William’s death notice, she was still living in 1906.

The Victoria got a new captain in 1852—Joseph Wallis (or Wallace)— and made another voyage to Australia before returning to Liverpool.

In 1856, after the death of Wm. Sharp, the Victoria was sold to James De Wolf of Liverpool. The Victoria, the ship that brought two men together, in the end, destroyed both of their lives.
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Page: http://www.maritimeheritage.org/captains
Date Entered: April 2008
Source: Compiled and written by T. & K. Tompkins


Research and WebDesign: D.B.A. Levy
Contact: D. Blethen Adams Levy
www.MaritimeHeritage.org
Post Office Box 2878
Sausalito, California 94966
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The Maritime Heritage Project is a U.S. registered 501(c)(3) tax-deductible nonprofit charity established in 1998.