Empress of China (1783) American

- 00.30

Customer Service | First American
photo src: www.first-american.net

Empress of China, also known as Chinese Queen, was a three-masted, square-rigged sailing ship of 360 tons, initially built in 1783 for service as a privateer. After the Treaty of Paris brought a formal end to the American Revolutionary War, the vessel was refitted for commercial purposes. She became the first American ship to sail from the newly independent United States to China, opening what is known today as the Old China Trade and transporting the first official representative of the American government to Canton.


North American Bancard Holdings and Total Merchant Services ...
photo src: www.prnewswire.com


Maps, Directions, and Place Reviews



First voyage

The first American merchant vessel to enter Chinese waters left New York harbor on Washington's birthday, February 22, 1784. The Empress returned to New York on May 11, 1785 after a round voyage of 14 months and 24 days. The success of the voyage encouraged others to invest in further trading with China.

The ship's captain John Green (1736-1796) was a former U.S. naval officer, its two business agents (supercargos), Samuel Shaw (1754-1794) and Thomas Randall (1723-1797), were former officers in the U.S. Continental Army, and its syndicate of owners, including Robert Morris (1734-1806) were some of the richest men in the new nation.


Customer Service | First American
photo src: www.first-american.net


Legacy

  • In 1986, China minted a silver 5-yuan to commemorate the voyage of the Empress

Source of the article : Wikipedia



EmoticonEmoticon

 

Start typing and press Enter to search