Year: 1986 Language: english Author: John Fitzugh Millar Genre: History Publisher: Thirteen Colonies Press Format: PDF Quality: Scanned pages Pages count: 266 Description: This book contains extensive information on North American ships built through the year 1790. An introductory section explains basic features common to all ships of the period, including design, construction, color-schemes, rigs and purposes for which they were built. It gives an outline of the history of American involvement in the evolution of those features, as well as comparisons with the major European types, accompanied by profuse illustrations. A four-page chart shows 64 important flags in full color, some of them not available in any flag-books. The rest of the book is devoted to details of over 200 ships of all sizes (in alphabetical order), giving an account of the history and significance of each ship, as well as partial and complete lines plans of each hull, either redrawn from original plans found in archives around the world or reconstructed from surviving shreds of information. Nearly all the known surviving eye-witness portraits of the original ships are reproduced—some of them published for the first time in two centuries—and the text includes many fascinating facts and conclusions previously known only to a few experts. Among the more remarkable ships are the Havana-built Santisima Trinidad (by far the largest ship in the world in her day); a 1730 cargo-schooner recently dredged from the bottom of a South Carolina river; Benjamin Franklin's design for swivel-sailed yachts; the various ships commanded by John Paul Jones; early steamboats and a submarine; and a 1730 Chesapeake Bay ship discovered by archaeologists while the foundation was being dug for a Manhattan skyscraper in 1982. Appendices include a surprising account of how the American Navy came to be founded in 1775, An up-to-date Bibliography provides references for further reading. This book will appeal to readers who have some interest in early American history or sailing, and will be particularly useful to model-builders (from beginners to professionals) and marine artists.
Contents
This book contains extensive information on North American ships built through the year 1790.
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Early American Ships
Year: 1986
Language: english
Author: John Fitzugh Millar
Genre: History
Publisher: Thirteen Colonies Press
Format: PDF
Quality: Scanned pages
Pages count: 266
Description: This book contains extensive information on North American ships built through the year 1790. An introductory section explains basic features common to all ships of the period, including design, construction, color-schemes, rigs and purposes for which they were built. It gives an outline of the history of American involvement in the evolution of those features, as well as comparisons with the major European types, accompanied by profuse illustrations. A four-page chart shows 64 important flags in full color, some of them not available in any flag-books.
The rest of the book is devoted to details of over 200 ships of all sizes (in alphabetical order), giving an account of the history and significance of each ship, as well as partial and complete lines plans of each hull, either redrawn from original plans found in archives around the world or reconstructed from surviving shreds of information. Nearly all the known surviving eye-witness portraits of the original ships are reproduced—some of them published for the first time in two centuries—and the text includes many fascinating facts and conclusions previously known only to a few experts. Among the more remarkable ships are the Havana-built Santisima Trinidad (by far the largest ship in the world in her day); a 1730 cargo-schooner recently dredged from the bottom of a South Carolina river; Benjamin Franklin's design for swivel-sailed yachts; the various ships commanded by John Paul Jones; early steamboats and a submarine; and a 1730 Chesapeake Bay ship discovered by archaeologists while the foundation was being dug for a Manhattan skyscraper in 1982.
Appendices include a surprising account of how the American Navy came to be founded in 1775, An up-to-date Bibliography provides references for further reading.
This book will appeal to readers who have some interest in early American history or sailing, and will be particularly useful to model-builders (from beginners to professionals) and marine artists.
Contents
This book contains extensive information on North American ships built through the year 1790.Screenshots
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