By 1844 the vessel was involved in the transport of cattle from
Port Albert in Victoria across
Bass Strait to Hobart in Tasmania.
Amity was wrecked after running aground on an uncharted sandbar now called
Vansittart Shoals () near
Vansittart Island, north of
Van Diemen's Land (later
Tasmania) on 18 June 1845. Captain William Marr was sailing
Amity from Hobart for Port Albert in ballast on 14 June 1845, with a crew of nine, and one passenger. They encountered a gale while entering Bass Strait and ran aground on a sand bank off Shoaly Bay on the south-east coast of Flinders Island, presumably the Vansittart Shoals, 18 June 1845. As the ship broke up, she was abandoned, all making the island safely but in so doing, both boats were damaged. The castaways came across a party of sealers who loaned them another boat, and all except Captain Marr, who was later picked up by the schooner
Letitia, headed for Cape Portland, Tasmania. ==Replica==