There is no sworn statement for this ship.
There is no captain's name listed for this ship. (See Correspondence below)
List or Manifest of all the Passengers taken on board the Schooner Alexander, from S. Thomas, Virgin Islands
Columns represent: Passenger Names, Age, Sex, Occupation, Country to which they belong, Country of which they intend to become inhabitant.
1 A. Thompson 54 male mariner U. States U. States
2 A. Shaw 30 male mariner U. States U. States
Transcriber's Notes:
An * indicates additional information in the Transcriber's notes.
Passengers were numbered by the transcriber.
No births or deaths were recorded.
*District and Port of Baltimore
Collectors Office
September 1820
(signed) Jas. H. McCulloch Coll.
*The Quarterly List of the 3rd Quarter of 1820 carried
the Collector's Office statement following the last ship.
Correspondence added September 9, 2008 Master's name could be IVES
While doing some research on my family tree, I found the following website: http://www.genealogybank.com/gbnk/list.html?p_topdoc=1&p_multi=GBNEWS&p_perpage=5 My 4th great grandfather, Capt. Jeremiah Ives, who married Martha Lockhart Mackey (an older sister of the Masonic scholar Albert Galatin Mackey) was apparently one of the Masters of the schooner Alexander. The Alexander is most likely registered out of South Carolina, although I have not been able to confirm this, it would almost make perfect sense. My 4th great uncle (son of Jeremiah and Martha), Edward Rutledge Ives, brought Scottish Rite Masonry from South Carolina to Florida and was Florida's first Sovereign Grand Inspector of the Scottish Rite (what that means exactly, I have no idea. I'm not a member of the Scottish Rite, as of yet). The reason I say this makes perfect sense is that my 4th great grandfather was murdered on his way to court in 1828 in St. Augustine, Florida. From what I can gather, my 4th great grandfather was lost at sea around June 15, 1827. He had to have been rescued, but by whom, and what vessel, is still unknown. At this point in time, I can only assume that it probably had something to do with him being lost at sea (or possibly the loss of the Alexander). I know that prior to the time of his murder, he was authorized by the Federal Government to survey lighthouse locations in and around Cape Florida (which would also make sense since he was a Captain of a ship) on April 26, 1827. What I am looking for is a picture, or better yet, a schematic of the Alexander. I haven't been able to find much regarding the Alexander, nor do I even know where to look. A little bit of my family's history can be found in the Florida Heritage Collection at: http://fulltext.fcla.edu/cgi/t/text/pageviewer-idx?idno=SF00000009_0001_000;q1=SF00000009; seq=604;cc=fhp;view=image;size=s;start=1;c=fhp I hope that this may clear things up a little as far as the ship's registry is concerned, and hope that you might be able to assist me in my own search. Thank you, and have a great day. Sincerely, Bill Ives
National Archives and Records Administration, Film M596, Reel 1.
Transcribed by Robert W. Grose
a member of
the
Immigrant Ships Transcribers
Guild
3 March 2004
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