HMS grapplerGrappler, 1856-1883
grapplerGrappler was a 3-gun gunboat built in 1846; it arrived in Esquimalt from England, along with
the forwardForward and the termagantTermagant, on 12 July 1860, with Lieutenant Commander Alfred Herby at its helm.1
grapplerGrappler operated on the British Columbia coast from 1860-68, until it was sold at public
auction and then converted into a freighter, whereafter, it sailed under several owners
for the following 15 years.2
Prior to its conversion and sale, grapplerGrappler had a rather storied history in the Salish Sea. It was involved in the Admiralty's
efforts to, as this document puts it, prevent the illicit traffic in spirits on the East Coast of Vancouver Island,
particularly for the Indigenous population, who had, according to the same correspondence,
committed outrages on White Men.
A later despatch, from 1865, notes the grapplerGrappler's alleged illegal seizure of a vessel suspected of smuggling.
Drama and controversy followed grapplerGrappler to its fiery fate on 29 April 1883, when it burned on route up the eastern coast
of the Island and, according to Walbran's account, lost a large number of persons, said to be seventy-two, principally Chinese passengers
on their way to the canneries.
3
- 1. John T. Walbran, British Columbia Coast Names (Vancouver: Douglas & McIntyre, 1971), 216.
- 2. Andrew Scott, The Encyclopedia of Raincoast Placenames (Madeira Park, BC: Harbour Publishing, 2009), 234-35.
- 3. Walbran, British Columbia Coast Names, 216.