Capture of the Two Top Sail Slave Schooner Bolodora By H.M. Schooner Pickle, Lieut I.B.B. McHardy on the 6th of June 1829, after a chase of fourteen hours and an Action of One Hour and Twenty Minutes within Pistol shot.

On the morning of 5 June 1829, while cruising off the north-west coast of Cuba, HM Schooner ‘Pickle’ discovered a strange sail. This she stalked until she had interposed herself between the stranger and land. She closed in on her after nightfall. Action then commenced and after 80 minutes the slaver, as she proved, surrendered. She was the Spanish topsail schooner 'Voladora' - though English references tend to use ‘Bolodora’ - with a crew of 60 of which 10 were killed. The ‘Pickle’ had only half that number in her crew of which one was killed outright and three died later. (The two key columns below the image give the comparative ship and loss figures.) The prize was taken to Havana with some difficulty as she had to be jury rigged and the prisoners were in the majority. They and the slaves were delivered to the Spanish governor. For other copies see PAG9092, PAH8174: also BHC0624, which is an oil painting by John Moore based on this image. The name of the ship sometimes also appears as 'Boladora' but the Spanish name, 'Voladora', can mean 'flying fish' or refer to a witch who could turn herself into a bird in the mythology of Chiloe (an island on the Chilean coast), either appropriate for a fast and elusive vessel.

Object Details

ID: PAG9091
Type: Print
Display location: Not on display
Creator: Duncan, Edward; Huggins, William John
Vessels: Pickle (1827); Voladora
Date made: 10 Jun 1831
Credit: National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, London
Measurements: Sheet: 393 mm x 515 mm; Image: 323 mm x 460 mm; Mount: 480 mm x 635 mm
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