In 1780,
Resolution was converted into an armed transport and sailed for the
East Indies in March 1781.
Sphinx and
Annibal of
Suffren's (French) squadron captured
Resolution on 9 June 1782. In early July 1782, during the run-up of the
Battle of Negapatam, Suffren sent
Resolution to
Manila to purchase spare
spars, food and ammunition to resupply his fleet. She then sailed on 22 July 1782 and was never seen again. On 5 June 1783, Suffren wrote that
Resolution had last been seen in the
Sunda Strait, and that he suspected she had either foundered or fallen into the hands of the English. An item from the Melbourne
Argus, 25 February 1879, said that she ended her days as a Portuguese coal-hulk at
Rio de Janeiro, but this has never been confirmed.
Viscount Galway, a
Governor-General of New Zealand, owned a ship's figurehead described as that of
Resolution, but a photograph of it does not agree with the figurehead depicted in Holman's famous
watercolour of her. Alternatively, in 1789 she may have been renamed
Général Conway, in November 1790
Amis Réunis, and in 1792
Liberté. Martin Dugard's biography of Cook,
Farther Than Any Man, published in 2001, states: "Her fate, by some cruel twist of historical irony, is as incredible as
Endeavours – she
[Resolution] was sold to the French, rechristened
La Liberté, and transformed into a
whaler, then ended her days
rotting in
Newport Harbor. She settled to the bottom just a mile from
Endeavour." (p. 281, Epilogue) In 1881, the British Consul in
Alexandria, looking from the
Ras El Tin Palace, pointed out a ship in the harbour he identified as the
Resolution, to William N. Armstrong, attendant to Hawaiian King
David Kalākaua during his trip around the world. ==See also==