Read Stockwin's Maritime Miscellany Online
Authors: Julian Stockwin
St Mary Overie Dock
Cathedral St
London SE1 9DE
Telephone: 020 7403 0123
Open: daily, but in case of closure for functions it is advisable to check before visiting
This is a full-sized reconstruction of the famous Tudor warship in which Sir Francis Drake circumnavigated the world in 1577–80. Queen Elizabeth I visited the galleon on Drake’s return and decreed that the ship should be preserved at Deptford so that the general public could visit the ship and celebrate England’s success. The original
Golden Hinde
therefore became Britain’s first museum ship! This replica ship, now permanently berthed in London, has herself circumnavigated the globe.
Merseyside Maritime Museum
Albert Dock
Liverpool L3 4AQ
Telephone: 0151 478 4499
Opening hours: daily, closed over Christmas
Located in an old warehouse in Albert Dock, the museum celebrates the city’s long-held seafaring traditions and particularly the importance of the merchant navy. The museum’s exhibits reflect the city’s role in the transatlantic slave trade and emigration. One of the jewels of the museum is its collection of ships in bottles made by
Jo
Dashwood-Howard. Among the fine collection of ship models are 39 miniature ships made by French prisoners of war during the Napoleonic wars.
http://www.liverpoolmuseums.org.uk/maritime/
Nantucket Whaling Museum
15 Broad Street
Nantucket
Massachusetts
Telephone: 508 2281894
Open: check website for current details
Many people today look on whaling with revulsion, but in the past it was generally seen as a brave, romantic – and lucrative – enterprise. In the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries Yankee whaling ships sailed the oceans of the world for years at a time, returning with oil for the lamps of America and Europe. The Nantucket Whaling Museum houses a fascinating record of the heyday of whaling, including ships’ logs, a huge finback whale skeleton and scrimshaw.
http://www.nha.org/sites/index.html
The Museum of America and the Sea
Mystic Seaport
Connecticut
Telephone: 860 572 5315
Open: daily. Closed Mondays in the winter months and over Christmas
Located on the banks of the Mystic River, an area with centuries-old maritime traditions, this foremost living history museum features a re-created nineteenth-century seafaring village, an impressive collection of sailing ships and boats (including the
Charles W. Morgan
, the world’s last wooden whaleship) and a preservation shipyard where craftsmen keep alive old skills with the use of traditional methods and tools. As well, over the 15-hectare site, there are many formal exhibits and galleries plus a planetarium that demonstrates how seamen used the stars for navigation.
The Mariners’ Museum
Newport News
Virginia
Telephone: (757) 596-2222
Open: daily, closed over Christmas
Over 5,600 square metres of gallery space showcase all manner of splendid sea artefacts. The collection of 1,200 nautical navigation instruments includes such treasures as a mid-seventeenth-century silver astrolabe and a marine barometer thought to have been on Cook’s voyages. Among the other permanent exhibitions is ‘The Age
of
Exploration’, which chronicles the developments in shipbuilding, ocean navigation and cartography that made possible the voyages of the period between the fifteenth and eighteenth centuries. A perennial favourite is the ship model collection of August F. Crabtree.
http://www.mariner.org/index.php?oatsad=29
USS
Constitution
Building 5, Charlestown Navy Yard
Charlestown
Massachusetts
Telephone: (617) 242 – 5670
Open: see website for current details
Affectionately known as ‘Old Ironsides’, she’s the oldest warship afloat still in commission and America’s ‘Ship of State’. The vessel was launched on 21 October 1797 from a shipyard a stone’s throw from her current berth just across the Charles River from Boston. USS
Constitution
was one of six frigates built to form the genesis of the US Navy. In the War of 1812 in an encounter with HMS
Guerriere
a cannonball bounced off her thick hull, at which a sailor reportedly shouted, ‘Huzzah! Her sides are made of iron!’ She is still crewed, maintained and sailed by the US Navy.
http://www.history.navy.mil/USSconstitution/index.html
Maritime Museum of San Diego
1492 North Harbor Drive
San Diego
California
Telephone: 619-234-9153
Open: daily
This maritime museum features one of the finest collections of historic ships in the world including the world’s oldest active ship,
Star of India
. An 1863 barque, she now sails at least once a year. You can also see HMS
Surprise
, the replica of an eighteenth-century Royal Navy frigate that featured in the film
Master and Commander
. The museum’s permanent collection is presented in five galleries representing major themes of maritime history.
Sail opens up the world
Square-rigged ships make heroic open-ocean voyages practical
1405 | China’s great exploration fleet sets sail |
1492 | Columbus reaches America |
1519 | Magellan captains the first voyage around the world |
1545 | Henry VIII sees |
1588 | Francis Drake and others defeat the Spanish Armada |
Race for Empire
Nations clash as they discover and colonise the world
1600s | Dutch, French and English vie for empire |
1650s–1750s | dark age of pirates |
1696 | work begins on the first open-sea lighthouse, at Eddystone Rock |
1700s | science and seamanship flourish: reliable charts, sextant, chronometer |
1758 | HMS |
1766–79 | Captain Cook’s three epic voyages; now the world is known |
Climax of Age of Sail
The struggle to dominate the seas
1780s | sea trade patterns criss-cross the globe |
1793–1815 | Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars; Britain against France |
1800s | design of ships becomes scientific |
1805 | Nelson at Trafalgar |
1815 | Napoleon goes into exile |
Sunset of Age of Sail
Steam and brute force; end of an era
1821 | first steam tug for Royal Navy |
1838 | Great Western |
1850–1865 | heyday of the clipper ship |
1866 | the Great Tea Race |
1869 | Cutty Sark |
1900s | last Royal Navy ships under square-rig |
1960s | final mercantile ocean voyages under sail |
There were hundreds of ship types in the Golden Age of Sail, ranging from the smugglers’
abari
to the corsairs’
xebec
. Here are the vital statistics of some of history’s famous wooden ships, along with three of today’s grandest vessels for comparison.