Keying had been purchased in August 1846 in secrecy by British businessmen in
Hong Kong, defying a Chinese law prohibiting the sale of Chinese ships to foreigners. She was renamed after the Manchu official
Keying.
Keying was manned by 12 British and 30 Chinese sailors (the latter all
Cantonese). She was commanded by Captain
Charles Alfred Kellett, also British.
Hong Kong Keying left
Hong Kong in December 1846. Before her departure she was visited by
Sir John Davis, the Governor of Hong Kong;
Admiral Sir Thomas Cochrane, and officers of the fleet, the Commander-in-Chief and most of the principal residents of the Colony.
Cape of Good Hope and St Helena She rounded the
Cape of Good Hope in March 1847, 114 days out, having been delayed by strong westerly gales, and a severe hurricane.
Sale and final fate The
Keying was sold to Messrs Crippin & Forster of
Rock Ferry,
Cheshire and towed from London to the river
Mersey by the steam tug Shannon, arriving 14 May 1853. It was moored at the Rock Ferry slipway for public exhibition. On 29 September 1853,
Keying was preparing to leave for foreign ports in three weeks. But instead it was dismantled "for research" at the shipyard of Redhead, Harling, and Brown. The
Plymouth and Devonport weekly journal for Thursday, 6 December 1855 reported :The Chinese junk once a most popular attractive exhibition, is now rotting neglected and uncared for on the shore at Tranmere Ferry opposite Liverpool. ==Commemoration==