Reputedly a fine-looking wooden barque, she was built in a shipbuilding yard at
Coringa, near
Madras in India, where she was launched in January 1833. Registered in London at 313 tons to carry 350 tons burden, she was built of the best
teak, and had two flush decks, forecastle, bust head, and quarter galleries. She was
coppered to the
wales in
chunam and
felt. She was named after a Captain Charles Eaton, a former ship's captain, trader and owner of several ships, who gave up the sea to settle ashore as the Port Master of Coringa, a town to the north of
Madras. He died there in 1827. One of his daughters, Sophia, married William Gibson, at one time the manager of a shipbuilding yard in the region. Eaton's son, Captain Charles W. Eaton, took over his father's role as Coringa's Port Master from 1828 to 1838, and was the part-owner of at least three merchant ships.
Charles Eaton, under the command of Captain Fowle, arrived in London with 1000 chests of
indigo worth about £45,000. On 14 June 1833
Lloyd’s Shipping List had noted that: "The cargo saved from the , built in
Bombay, and wrecked on reefs off Coringa in 1832, has been reshipped per Charles Eaton". She left
Falmouth, England for good on 5 February 1834 with sundry cargo, including
calicoes and
lead. ==The wreck==