Several ships have been named Juno for the
Roman goddess Juno.
Juno (1793 ship) was launched at Hull as a
West Indiaman. French privateers once detained her and once captured her, but the
Royal Navy recaptured her. She made one voyage as a
whaler in the Southern Whale Fishery, and then participated as a transport in a naval expedition. She then disappears from readily accessible records. However, she may be the ship Juno which sailed out of Bremen for the Seal Coast and Greenland in February 1853.[1]
Juno (1797 ship) was an English merchantman launched at Lancaster. A French frigate captured her in a notable
single-ship action in 1804 off the American coast and later burnt her.
PS Juno (1868), a twin funnelled iron-built paddle
steamer on the Bristol to Cork run (1868–1900)
PS Juno (1937), a Clyde steamer, requisitioned to serve as the auxiliary
minesweeper HMS Helvellyn and declared a constructive loss after an enemy bombing raid over London in 1941
^Ancestry.com Operations, Inc. (2008).
"Bremen, Germany Ships Crew Lists, 1815-1917". Ancestry.com. Retrieved 27 Nov 2023[Reference regarding ship Juno found in image 1b. Original data: Staatsarchiv Bremen. 4,24, Seemannsamt Bremen:-E.4: Musterungen der Grönlandfahrer 1815-1872 (FS 5363).]{{
cite web}}: CS1 maint: postscript (
link)
List of ships with the same or similar names
This article includes a
list of ships with the same or similar names. If an
internal link for a specific ship led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended ship article, if one exists.