Thames was launched in 1794 in London. The French captured her in late 1795, but the British Royal Navy recaptured her within a few weeks. She then disappeared...
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1794, she became the Hull-based whaler Ranger (1786 ship). She was last listed in 1798, but with no record of voyages after 1794. Thames (1786 ship)...
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in 1807, Thames returned to trading with the West Indies. A French privateer captured Thames on 17 July 1811 and burnt her. Thames (1794 ship) was launched...
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Company of Watermen and Lightermen (redirect from Thames Watermen Act 1794)
goods and cargo, between the Port of London and vessels moored in the River Thames. Although modern river workers are licensed by the Maritime and Coastguard...
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Cornwall was launched in 1794 as a West Indiaman. In a little more than three years later she had left on the first of three whaling voyages to the Southern...
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Company. She is last listed in 1811. Prince of Wales (1793 ship) was launched on the Thames. She spent much of her career sailing for the Hudson's Bay...
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A Thames sailing barge is a type of commercial sailing boat once common on the River Thames in London. The flat-bottomed barges, with a shallow draught...
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Duff was a ship launched on the Thames in 1794. In 1796 the London Missionary Society engaged her to take a party of missionaries to the South Pacific...
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Mercury (1772 ship) was launched on the Thames. In 1791 she made the first of two voyages as a whaler to Delagoa Bay. She was reported in February 1794 to have...
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HMS Avenger (category Royal Navy ship names)
Pakistan in 1994 and renamed Tippu Sultan. Ships named Avenger have earned the following battle honours: Martinique, 1794 North Africa, 1942 Arctic, 1942 Falkland...
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male roe deer: Roebuck (1794 ship) was built in New England. In 1795 she came to England, performed one voyage as a slave ship, and then returned to the...
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and 1794. A squadron of the French navy drove her onshore on the coast of Africa in 1794. Lady Penrhyn (1786 ship) was built on the River Thames in 1786...
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Several ships have been named Brunswick. Brunswick (1791 ship) was launched on the Thames as a West Indiaman. She later carried immigrants from Ireland...
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HMS Scorpion (category Royal Navy ship names)
vessel in 1848 and on loan to the Thames Police from 1858. She was broken up in 1874. HMS Scorpion (1863) was a turret ship, one of two being constructed...
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William Barnard (shipbuilder) (section Ships of Note)
Company launched at Barnard's Thames Yard in Deptford in 1772 HMS Sultan – 74-gun ship of the line launched at Barnard's Thames Yard in 1775 Royal Admiral...
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extreme that it was said to be possible to walk across the Thames simply by stepping from ship to ship.[citation needed] London's Docklands had their origins...
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The list of ship launches in 1794 includes a chronological list of some ships launched in 1794. "British Fifth Rate frigate 'Artois' (1794)". Threedecks...
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ship of the line of the French Navy, laid down in August 1794 and given the name Formidable, on 5 October, but renamed Figuieres on 4 December 1794,...
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prison ship Chatham 1812, powder magazine 1814, lazaretto Sheerness 1825, broken up 1826 Mars class (Henslow) Mars 74 (1794) – hulked as receiving ship Portsmouth...
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built in 1794 at Cork. She made one voyage as a sealer and was lost on the coast of Patagonia in March 1826. Camden (1799 ship) was a merchant ship built...
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List of frigate classes of the Royal Navy (category Lists of Royal Navy ships by type)
cancelled 1832 1794 razees 44-gun (converted from 64-gun ships of the line in 1794) HMS Indefatigable converted 1794 HMS Anson converted 1794 HMS Magnanime...
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tons (bm), was built on the Thames in 1753 or 1754. She was the former Pearl. Parnassus (1769 ship) was launched on the Thames in 1769. She first sailed...
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Razee (category Naval sailing ship types)
was razeed as a 74-gun third rate in 1805. Three 64-gun ships were cut down (razeed) in 1794 into 44-gun frigates. The most successful was HMS Indefatigable...
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Antelope (1780 packet) (redirect from Antelope (1780 packet ship))
Indian packet ship launched in 1780. The French captured her in 1781, 1782, and finally, in 1794. She is most famous for a desperate single-ship action in...
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HMS Albion (1763) (category Albion-class ships of the line (1763))
[citation needed] In 1794 Albion was consigned to the role of a 60-gun floating battery armed with heavy carronades and moored on the Thames Estuary. She was...
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in 1792 on the Thames. She was primarily a West Indiaman but between 1803 and 1805 she served the Royal Navy as an armed defense ship. She was last listed...
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HMS Bellona was a Thames sailing barge, one of 11 that the Admiralty purchased in 1794 and stationed at Woolwich. Mr. J. Woodward, a sailing master, commissioned...
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HMS Africa (1781) (category Ships of the line of the Royal Navy)
HMS Africa was a 64-gun third-rate ship of the line of the Royal Navy, launched by William Barnard at Barnard's Thames Yard in Deptford on 11 April 1781...
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Marine navigation (redirect from Ship navigation)
1838. Active navigation on the Thames in the mid-19th century, in an engraving by Frederick James Smyth. Tall-masted ships crowd downstream, while barges...
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fifth-rate frigate of the Royal Navy. She was launched in 1794 and broken up in 1819. Launched in June 1794, Seahorse was commissioned the following month by...
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