BRITAIN'S ARMED PEACE: HMS THUNDERER 1878
BRITAIN'S ARMED PEACE: HMS THUNDERER 1878
Another Etching from 'The Penny Illustrated Paper', March 9, 1878.
The report says:
It was most seasonable as well as hospitable and graceful on the part of the chief officers of her Majesty's ship Thunderer to invite the Speaker and a goodly number of hon. members to view the floating fortress on Saturday last , and also to see with their own eyes that England is by no means wanting in those new means of offence and defence at sea ...
#vintage #etching #ship
Sail and steam. Crew training must have been pretty intense!
ReplyDeleteMy word she lays low in the water
ReplyDeleteFloating fortress is a good term for this vessel! Quite a hulk.
ReplyDeleteDarran Hughes I was reading that the Thunderer had 12 inches of ironclad armour from end to end, weighing over 6,000 tons - so no wonder it was low in the water!
ReplyDeleteMike Martin The Thunderer was classed as one of the world's first mastless battleships.
ReplyDeleteAnn Kennedy At the time appeared quite a fortress - though was sold for scarp in 1909.
ReplyDeleteI would like to know how many million tons of steel went down to the bottom during WW 1 & 2, how many million tons of coal were needed to produce the steel and how many million tons of CO2 resulted from burning the coal !
ReplyDeleteLT
Laurent TRUILLET Indeed, but at the time there wasn't really an alternative. I guess we'll never know the answer to your question.
ReplyDeleteMike Perry You are right ! No aternative !
ReplyDeleteBut Jesus ! What a mess !
And we are only talking about a material mess here. About people, it is anothe chapter...
Laurent TRUILLET ... and 'we' still haven't learned the lessons.
ReplyDeleteMike Perry I have a French saying for that (and I'm sure you can understand) :
ReplyDelete"L'Histoire est un professeur dont l'homme est condamné à ne jamais apprendre les leçons"
(In English, it could be something like "History is a teacher from whom mankind is condemned never to learn any lesson")
LT
Laurent TRUILLET Haven't heard that saying before - thanks!
ReplyDeleteMike Perry It's quite normal that you haven't heard it before. I invented it !
ReplyDeleteI've got a few others...
LT
Laurent TRUILLET :-)
ReplyDeleteNo longer Iron clad, but the "Iron Ships". No vestiges of a sail ship, any more...
ReplyDeleteOshi Shikigami We have moved on - for better or worse ...
ReplyDelete