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dockyard and on
The Royal Naval dockyard on Ireland Island played a role similar to that it had during World War I, overseeing the formation of trans-Atlantic convoys composed of hundreds of ships.
Three miles ( 5 km ) from Norwood on this long level is Bulls Bridge Junction, once the site of the Grand Union Canal Carrying Company's main dockyard.
Although the film makers took great care to conceal locations, some of the final scenes were shot at Plymouth's naval dockyard in Devon and the naval station on the Isle of Portland.
* Portsmouth: Portsmouth is a naval dockyard, and has some famous ships on display, including the Mary Rose, and HMS Victory, all within its Historic Dockyard.
There were two main aspects to Ehrensvärd's design for the fortress: a series of independent fortifications on each of the linked islands and, at the very heart of the complex, a dockyard for the navy fleet.
After taking over the fortress the Russians set about on an extensive building program, mostly extra barracks, but also extending the dockyard and reinforcing to the fortification lines.
Other famous UK shipyards include the Harland and Wolff yard in Belfast, Northern Ireland, where the Titanic was built, and the naval dockyard at Chatham, England on the Medway in north Kent.
An American force supported by a naval flotilla landed on the lake shore to the west, defeated the defending British force and captured the fort, town and dockyard.
The Americans took over the dockyard, where they captured a brig ( the ) in poor state of repair, and twenty 24-pounder carronades and other stores intended for the British squadron on Lake Erie.
In Rangoon workers were arrested at the Insein railway yard, and troops opened fire on workers at the Thamaing textile mill and Simmalaik dockyard.
In 1703, he threatened to demolish any buildings within range of the cannons mounted on the dockyard walls.
Designed to be extremely strong but easy to maintain, these engines had a very short wheelbase that allowed them to operate on dockyard railways.
In an attempt to standardise the Navy's birches, the Admiralty had specimens called patterned birch ( as well as a patterned cane ), kept in every major dockyard, for birches had to be procured on land in quantities, suggesting some were worn out on the bottoms of miscreant boys.
The dockyard was founded by Queen Elizabeth I on the site of the present gun wharf, the establishment being transferred to the present site about 1622.
Over a mile long, they stretched across the neck of the dockyard peninsula, from Chatham Reach, south of the dockyard, across to Gillingham Reach on the opposite side.
The batteries faced away from the dockyard itself to forestall an attack from the landward side ; the ships and shore-mounted guns on the river were considered sufficient to protect from that side.
After the raid on the Medway in 1667, the older fortification was strengthened ; in 1669 was established the Royal Navy dockyard the town, where warships were stocked and repaired until its closure in 1960.
A " Sparviero " was the first plane to fall on Maltese soil in World War II: on 10 July 1940, an estimated twenty SM. 79s without escort arrived to bomb the dockyard, Manoel Island, Tarxien and Żabbar.
In addition, Gravesend and Northfleet ( also on the south shore ) both became vitally important to shipping on the Thames: the former as the first port of call for foreign shipping bound for London, and the latter as a naval dockyard.
The fifteenth century Rosyth Castle stands on the perimeter of the dockyard complex, at the entry to the ferry terminal and was once surrounded by the Firth of Forth on almost all sides, until land reclamation by the docks in the early 1900s.

dockyard and Ireland
He was transported to Ireland Island, Bermuda, where the Royal Navy was notoriously using convict labour to carve out a dockyard and naval base.

dockyard and Island
During 1867 a viaduct was constructed from the north wall of the dockyard to the south-east corner of Big Whale Island which allowed spoil to be moved from dredging the docks ( part of the expansion of HMNB Portsmouth ), reclaiming the land between Big Whale Island and Little Whale Island, forming the basis of the island as it is today.
Although some large workshops, slipways, wharves, residences and other buildings remain, major buildings were demolished after Cockatoo Island closed as a dockyard in 1991 ; pictured right.
A five-horsepower Lundell electric motor used at the Cockatoo Island dockyard between 1900 and 1980 is now in the collection of the National Museum of Australia in Canberra.
Both forts were inside the 1756 brick-lined earthwork bastions known as the Cumberland Lines, which surrounded the whole east side of the dockyard down to St Mary's Island.
At this time, the naval dockyard on Haulbowline Island was constructed as well as a fort on Spike Island ( later to become Fort Westmoreland ) and a number of Martello Towers around the harbour.
At the time of Irish independence, Cork Harbour was included, along with Berehaven and Lough Swilly, in a list of British naval establishments that would remain under the control of the Royal Navy, although, the naval dockyard on Haulbowline Island was handed over to the Irish Free State in 1923.
In 1979, Costa began work as a rigger at the Garden Island naval dockyard.
* Hong Kong had an RN dockyard from 1859 to 1959, now in the custody of the Chinese PLAN, the yard is located on Stonecutters Island.
The dockyard moved to United Dockyards at the west shore of the Tsing Yi Island in late 1970s, and Taikoo Shing was constructed over the site in stages, with constructions of all main residential buildings complete by the early 1990s.
Hong Kong United Dockyard ( Chinese: 香港聯合船塢 ) or simply United Dockyard ( 聯合船塢 ) is a dockyard in Shek Wan, on the Tsing Yi Island of Hong Kong.
Due to their significance in Canadian naval history, four sites at CFB Esquimalt ( the dockyard, the former Royal Navy Hospital, the Veterans ’ Cemetery and the Cole Island Magazine ) have been designated the Esquimalt Naval Sites National Historic Site of Canada.
Informal portrait of four of the crew members of Motor Launch ( ML ) 1321 and NX73110 Sapper ( Spr ) Edgar Thomas ' Mick ' Dennis, Z Special Unit, the only survivor of the ill fated raid on Muschu Island ( off the coast of New Guinea ), at Brisbane dockyard.

dockyard and was
The dockyard was later used by the British for military purposes.
It was fitted to the steam ship Flygfisken built at the Motala dockyard.
In 1903, Germaniawerft dockyard in Kiel completed Germany's first fully functional submarine, Forelle which was sold to Russia during the Russo-Japanese War in April 1904.
Two years later he found work at Portsmouth dockyard and — although still largely self-taught — was extending his talents to the specification, design and management of building projects.
The aim was the capture of the French East India Company's dockyard at L ' Orient, but it was not attained.
In its time, many thousands of men were employed at the dockyard, and many hundreds of vessels were launched there, including HMS Victory which was built there in the 1760s.
The importance of Chatham dockyard gradually declined as Britain's naval resources were reduced or moved to other locations, and eventually, in 1984, it was closed completely.
As Bermuda became the primary Royal Navy headquarters and dockyard in the Western Atlantic, following American independence, there was a parallel build-up of military defences to protect the naval base.
It was shut down from 1830 to 1844 before being closed as a dockyard in 1869, and is currently known as Convoys Wharf.
Erith owes its existence to the Thames and was, until the 1850s, essentially a small riverside port, given prominence by King Henry VIII's decision to open a naval dockyard in the town.
Because of Kingston's military tradition and the fact that several military buildings already existed at the old naval dockyard, Point Frederick was chosen as the location for Canada's first military college, the Royal Military College of Canada ( RMC ).
During the time of the United Provinces Hellevoetsluis was the naval port of the Admiralty of de Maze ( Rotterdam ) and could accommodate an entire fleet within a special land-enclosed fortress with harbour and dockyard facilities, accessible through a canal.
After the Battle of Jutland, the German High Seas Fleet rarely ventured out of its bases at Wilhelmshaven and Kiel, and in the last two years of the war the British fleet was considered to have such a commanding superiority of the seas that some components moved south, to the first-class dockyard at Rosyth.
The town was named after Chatham, Kent, England, which was also developed around a naval dockyard.
Their house, Sayes Court ( adjacent to the naval dockyard ), was purchased by Evelyn from his father-in-law Sir Richard Browne in 1653 and Evelyn soon began to transform the gardens.
West Kowloon was once home to a dockyard for the Royal Navy.
His father was a reporter with the Kent Messenger newspaper, his mother a schoolteacher and his maternal grandfather a dockyard worker.
He was born at Plymouth, the fourth of fourteen children born to Samuel Prout Senior, a naval outfitter in the dockyard city, and Mary Cater.
However, historian Robert Malcomson has found this return to be inaccurate: it did not include militia, sailors, dockyard workers or Native Americans and was incorrect even as to the casualties of the regulars.
The area immediately outside the dockyard was occupied by dockyard workers, who built wooden houses and decorated them with Admiralty blue paint illegally acquired from the dockyard.

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