Before the age of industry, the timber-built ship was one of the most complex and technologically advanced objects built by man. The ships were so expensive to construct that meticulous records were kept, from the purchase of timber to the last details of their furnishings. For this beautiful and hi
Building the Wooden Fighting Ship
✍ Scribed by James Dodds, James J Moore
- Publisher
- Naval Institute Press
- Year
- 2022
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 128
- Edition
- New
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Royal Navy vessels in the eighteenth century were so expensive to construct that meticulous records were kept, from the purchasing of timbers to the last details of their furnishings and armament, including even the individual names of some of the shipwrights and craftsmen. From intensive study of these records the authors tell, in extraordinary detail, the building of HMS Thunderer, a two-decked, 74-gun ship-of-the-line, which represented one of the most successful types of warship of the world's leading maritime power of the time. In words, and specially drawn illustrations, as well as contemporary prints and paintings, the authors illustrate every stage of building, from the purchase and cutting of timbers in the forests right through to the launching in 1760. There are descriptions of the dockyard, Woolwich, where she was built and explanations of all the skills and trades which were involved in her construction. First published in 1984, this new edition will appeal to enthusiasts, modelers, historians and anyone with an interest in traditional crafts.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
Philadelphia, Unated States Shipping Board Emergency fleet corporation, 1918, 150 p.<div class="bb-sep"></div>Книга описывает все этапы разработки и постройки современного для времени написания деревянного судна и необходимое для этого оборудование верфи. Особенно ценна толковым словарем морских и с
Chicago, Frederick J. Drake & Company publishers, 1919, 250 p.<div class="bb-sep"></div>The text is the outgrowth and development of a pioneer course organized early in the war by Pratt Institute, Brooklyn, N.Y., in response to the demand caused by shortage of skilled labor in these industries.<br/>
From coast to coast, home boatbuilders have turned to Chris Kulczycki for everything they needed to know about making their own kayaks from high-grade marine plywood and epoxy. In The Kayak Shop, a long-time popular standard, Kulczycki provided explicit directions and plans for building three sea ka