Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Razee" ¶ 23
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

HMS and Rodney
Other than HMS Rodney, HMS Warrior and her sistership HMS Black Prince ( 1861 ) | HMS Black Prince were the last British battleships to carry the feature.
An exception was HMS Rodney which was the last British battleship to carry a figurehead.
At least four serving warships of the Royal Navy have been named HMS Rodney in his honour.
He joined HMS Alexander as a brevet major, serving under Admiral Richard Rodney Bligh in the Channel fleet's blockade of Brest.
* HMS Rodney ( 1949 )
Elsewhere, at Gibraltar, at Halifax, Nova Scotia and at sea in the Atlantic were the battleships Revenge, Rodney and Ramillies, the battlecruisers Repulse and Renown, and the aircraft carriers HMS Ark Royal and Victorious.
Six ships of the Royal Navy have been named HMS Rodney, at least the last five after Admiral George Brydges Rodney.
* HMS Rodney was to have been an Admiral-class battlecruiser.
de: HMS Rodney
es: HMS Rodney
fr: HMS Rodney
it: HMS Rodney
hu: HMS Rodney ( egyértelműsítő lap )
nn: HMS « Rodney »
pl: HMS Rodney
ru: HMS Rodney
sl: HMS Rodney
fi: HMS Rodney
sv: HMS Rodney

HMS and 1809
In January 1809 Bligh was given the control of HMS Porpoise on condition that he return to England.
She was captured in 1806, renamed HMS Blanche in 1809, and was broken up in 1814.
An English journal reported that during an 1809 storm, three " balls of fire " appeared and " attacked " the British ship HMS Warren Hastings.
* HMS Galatea ( 1794 ) was a 32-gun fifth rate launched in 1794 and broken up 1809.
* HMS Royal Oak was a 74-gun third-rate launched in 1809, on harbour service from 1825, and broken up in 1850.
The Macquaries departed from England in May 1809 aboard the HMS Dromedary, accompanied by the HMS Hindostan.
* 1809HMS Macedonian ; frigate captured by USS United States during the War of 1812.
* The first HMS Calcutta was a 54-gun fourth rate, originally the East Indiaman Warley and purchased in 1795, captured by the French in 1805 and destroyed by British ships in 1809.
* Comeet was the Dutch brig Komeet, captured in 1795, renamed HMS Penguin later that year or early the next, and sold in 1809.
In 1809 he went on to command HMS Venerable, which he continued to command with success against the French in Spain.
* HMS Hunter was an 18-gun brig-sloop purchased in 1801 and broken up in 1809.
* HMS Sophie ( 1809 ), British warship
* The fifth-rate HMS Iris was renamed Solebay in 1809.
In June 1809 HMS Nyaden participated in at least one and possibly two actions.
He was given command of, flagship of Rear Admiral Thomas Bertie, in 1809 and and then HMS Pyramus in 1812.
* HMS Curacoa, a 36-gun fifth-rate ship launched in 1809.
One of the East Indiamen, Windham, her captain John Stewart and many of her crew had been engaged and captured by Hamelin on 22 November 1809 in the Bay of Bengal and recaptured a month later by HMS Magicienne off Île de France.
On 18 May 1809, the 74-gun Third Rate HMS Standard, under Captain Askew Hollis, led in a squadron that also included the frigate Owen Glendower,,, and.
In 1807 the shipbuilder George Parsons, who had lost the lease of his former shipyard up-river at Bursledon, began construction of a shipyard at Warsash at a site where the present Shore Road was later built ; all the buildings at the former Bursledon site, including a graving shed and a mould-loft, were dismantled and re-erected at Warsash In partnership with his son John Parsons and grandson John Rubie, Parsons then built a number of vessels during the following four years, including four ships for the Royal Navy-the 18-gun brig-sloop HMS Peruvian in 1808, the 36-gun frigates HMS Theban and HMS Hotspur in 1809 and 1810, and the 38-gun frigate HMS Nymphe in 1812.

HMS and renamed
Tonnant and Spartiate, both of which later fought at the Battle of Trafalgar, joined the Royal Navy under their old names while Franklin, considered to be " the finest two-decked ship in the world ", was renamed HMS Canopus.
The Baralong Incidents were naval engagements of the First World War in August and September 1915, involving the Royal Navy Q-Ship, later renamed HMS Wyandra, and two German U-boats.
The Royal Navy named a King George V-class battleship after Beatty, but this ship was renamed HMS Howe before completion, as another battleship of the same class, intended to be named after Jellicoe, was renamed HMS Anson.
* was a 91-gun second-rate ship of the line, originally laid down as HMS Edgar, but renamed in 1848 and launched in 1859.
She was used for harbour service from 1881, as a barracks from 1905, was renamed HMS Calcutta in 1909, HMS Fisgard II in 1915, and was sold in 1932.
The explorer George Vancouver renamed the mountain for 3rd Lieutenant Joseph Baker of HMS Discovery, who saw it on April 30, 1792.
She was renamed in 1922 as HMS President and served as the London Division RNR drill ship until 1988, when she was sold privately and remains moored at King's Reach.
* USS Cordova, an escort aircraft carrier renamed HMS Khedive ( D62 ) upon transfer to the Royal Navy
* HMS Invincible was to have been the world's second ocean-going iron-hulled armoured frigate, and sister to HMS Warrior, but she was renamed HMS Black Prince before her launch.
She was renamed HMS Liverpool five months before her launch in 1741.
She was renamed HMS Enterprise in 1744 as a 44-gun fifth rate and was broken up in 1771.
Resource was rebuilt as a 22-gun floating battery in 1804, renamed HMS Enterprise in 1806 and sold in 1816.
She was laid down in 1861, renamed HMS Circassian in 1862 but cancelled in 1863.
* was an ironclad sloop ordered as HMS Circassian, but renamed in 1862.
She was purchased in 1830 as, renamed HMS Hermes in 1832, became a coal hulk and was renamed HMS Charger in 1835, and was broken up in 1854.
* HMS Hermes was a 74-gun third-rate launched in 1816 as, renamed HMS Hermes in 1866, and broken up in 1869.

0.873 seconds.