Flag and Fleet: How the British Navy Won the Freedom of the Seas. William Wood

Flag and Fleet: How the British Navy Won the Freedom of the Seas - William Wood


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href="#ulink_ada552aa-bfb8-5cd3-959a-3d438e92b60f">Table of Contents

       "DUG-OUT" CANOE

       ROMAN TRIREME—A vessel with three benches of oars

       WILLIAM THE CONQUEROR'S TRANSPORTS

       Eddystone Lighthouse, 1699. The first structure of stone and timber. Build for Trinity House by Winstanley and swept away in a storm. Eddystone Lighthouse, 1882. The fourth and present structure, erected by Sir J. N. Douglass for Trinity House.

       The Santa Maria, flagship of Christopher Columbus when he discovered America in 1492. Length of keel, 60 feet. Length of ship proper, 93 feet. Length over all, 128 feet. Breadth, 26 feet. Tonnage, full displacement, 233.

       DRAKE

       One of Drake's Men-of-War that Fought the Great Armada in 1588.

       ARMADA OFF FOWEY (Cornwall) as first seen in the English Channel.

       SIR FRANCIS DRAKE ON BOARD THE REVENGE receiving the surrender of Don Pedro de Valdes.

       SAILING SHIP. The Pilgrim Fathers crossed in a similar vessel (1620).

       LA HOGUE, 1692.

       H.M.S. Centurion engaged and took the Spanish Galleon Nuestra Senhora de Capadongo, from Acapulco bound to Manila, off Cape Espiritu Santo, Philippine Islands, June 20, 1743.

       The ROYAL GEORGE

       NELSON

       FIGHTING THE GUNS ON THE MAIN DECK, 1782.

       THE BLOWING UP OF L'ORIENT DURING THE BATTLE OF THE NILE.

       THE BATTLE OF COPENHAGEN, APRIL 2nd, 1801. (Note the British line ahead.)

       The VICTORY. Nelson's Flagship at Trafalgar, launched in 1765, and still used as the flagship in Portsmouth Harbour.

       TRAFALGAR. 21st October, 1805.

       MODEL OF THE BATTLE OF TRAFALGAR. (Reproduced by permission from the model at the Royal United Service Institution.)

       THE SHANNON AND THE CHESAPEAKE.

       THE ROYAL WILLIAM. Canadian built; the first boat to cross any ocean steaming the whole way (1833), the first steamer in the world to fire a shot in action (May 5, 1836).

       BATTLESHIP.

       Seaplane Returning after flight.

       DESTROYER.

       A PARTING SHOT FROM THE TURKS AT GALLIPOLI.

       JELLICOE.

       BEATTY.

       LIGHT CRUISER.

       H.M.S. Monmouth, Armoured Cruiser. Sunk at Coronel, November 1st, 1914.

       BATTLESHIP FIRING A BROADSIDE.

       Jellicoe's Battle Fleet in Columns of Divisions. 6.14 P.m.

       THE BATTLE OF JUTLAND—PLAN II. Jellicoe's battle line formed and fighting. 6:38 P.m.

       British Submarine.

       Minesweeper at work.

       H.M. KING GEORGE V.

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       THE ROWING AGE

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       THE VERY BEGINNING OP SEA-POWER

       (10,000 years and more B.C.)

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      Thousands and thousands of years ago a naked savage in southern Asia found that he could climb about quite safely on a floating log. One day another savage found that floating down stream on a log was very much easier than working his way through the woods. This taught him the first advantage of sea-power, which is, that you can often go better by water than land. Then a third savage with a turn for trying new things found out what every lumberjack and punter knows, that you need a pole if you want to shove your log along or steer it to the proper place.

      By and by some still more clever savage tied two logs together and made the first raft. This soon taught him the second advantage of sea-power, which is, that, as a rule, you can carry goods very much better by water than land. Even now, if you want to move many big and heavy things a thousand miles you can nearly always do it ten times better in a ship than in a train, and ten times better in a train than by carts and horses on the very best of roads. Of course a raft is a poor, slow, clumsy sort of ship; no ship at all, in fact. But when rafts were the only "ships" in the world there certainly were no trains and nothing like one of our good roads. The water has always had the same advantage over the land; for as horses, trails, carts, roads, and trains began to be used on land, so canoes, boats, sailing ships, and steamers began to be used on water. Anybody can prove the truth of the rule for himself by seeing how much easier it is to paddle a hundred pounds ten miles in a canoe than to carry the same weight one mile over a portage.

      Presently the smarter men wanted something better than a little log raft nosing its slow way along through dead shallow water when shoved by a pole; so they put a third and longer log between the other two, with its front end sticking out and turning up a little. Then, wanting to cross waters too deep for a pole, they invented the first paddles; and so made the same sort of catamaran that you can still see on the Coromandel Coast in southern India. But savages who knew enough to take catamarans through the pounding surf also knew enough to see that a log with a hollow in the upper side of it could carry a great deal more than a log that was solid; and, seeing this, they presently began making hollows and shaping logs, till at last they had made a regular dug-out canoe. When Christopher Columbus asked the West Indian savages what they called their dug-outs they said canoas; so a boat dug out of a solid log had the first right to the word we now use for a canoe built up out of several different parts.

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      Dug-outs were sometimes very big. They were the Dreadnought battleships of their own time and place and people. When their ends were sharpened into a sort of ram they could stave in an enemy's canoe if they caught its side full tilt with their own end. Dug-out canoes were common wherever the trees were big and strong enough, as in Southern


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