United States may have operated under both that name, and under
Dauphin for some years. French records that show
Dauphin in 1785 with Paul Coffin, master. She was described as a frigate of 695 tons. Her known ports of call included Lorient (1792), New Bedford (November 1792), then Brazil,
Delagoa Bay, Saint-Laurent Bay,
Île de France, and Nantucket in November 1793. She became American again in November 1793, and was in Dunkirk in 1794. As
United States she made a second voyage to the Falklands in 1786. A whaler by the name of
United States arrived at Dunkirk in July 1787 from the Falklands. Francis Rotch commissioned her in August 1787 under the name
Dauphin. French records indicate that under Captain Uriah Swain,
Dauphin, Francis Rotch, agent, sailed to the coast of Brazil on 18 August 1787, and returned on 4 July 1788 with 1452 barrels of whale oil and 16,000 lbs of
whalebone. She returned to Dover in 1788, selling her 25,000 gallons of whale oil duty free. The 13,000 seal skins she had collected were sold in China for ten times their New York value, confirming the lucrative nature of the
China Trade. After this voyage, the vessel was sold in 1788 to the French South Sea whaling partnership. In 1791
Dauphin was under the command of Jonathan Parker. On 22 November 1792
Dauphin sailed for Brazil and
Delagoa Bay under the command of Captain Stephen Gardner. At some point he left and Captain Lallermant replaced him. She returned in November 1793 with 1900 barrels of whale oil. In May 1794
Dauphin arrived at Charleston, South Carolina. She was sold at auction on 23 June to Jean Bouteille who wished to convert her to a privateer. Despite efforts by Benjamin Moodie, the British Vice-consul in Charleston to block her conversion, in March 1795 she was ready and sailed for
Port-de-Paix. Her ultimate fate is unknown. ==See also==