Publications of the Navy Records Society, Volume 51Navy Records Society, 1918 - 244 pages |
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Page xviii
... V. An Act of Parliament of 14951 laid down the following scale of payments : - 1 ' An Act for Servants ' Wages , ' II Henry VII , c . 22 . From Candlemas to Michaelmas . Master Ship Carpenter with charge xviii INTRODUCTION.
... V. An Act of Parliament of 14951 laid down the following scale of payments : - 1 ' An Act for Servants ' Wages , ' II Henry VII , c . 22 . From Candlemas to Michaelmas . Master Ship Carpenter with charge xviii INTRODUCTION.
Page xix
From Candlemas to Michaelmas . Master Ship Carpenter with charge of work and men under him Other Ship Carpenter called a Hewer An able Clincher Holder Master Caulker . A mean Caulker With meat and drink , a day Without meat and drink ...
From Candlemas to Michaelmas . Master Ship Carpenter with charge of work and men under him Other Ship Carpenter called a Hewer An able Clincher Holder Master Caulker . A mean Caulker With meat and drink , a day Without meat and drink ...
Page xxv
... charged with an innovation . " " The ' innovation ' was evidently the grant of a 1 Add . MS . 9299. I have not been able to find his patent . He built the Warspite in 1596 and the Malice Scourge for the Earl of Cumberland , and in 1598 ...
... charged with an innovation . " " The ' innovation ' was evidently the grant of a 1 Add . MS . 9299. I have not been able to find his patent . He built the Warspite in 1596 and the Malice Scourge for the Earl of Cumberland , and in 1598 ...
Page xxxvii
... charged to assist them . In 1641 the right of freedom from impressment and from attendance on juries was again in question , and although the decision of the Lord Admiral was then favourable the troubles of the Company still continued ...
... charged to assist them . In 1641 the right of freedom from impressment and from attendance on juries was again in question , and although the decision of the Lord Admiral was then favourable the troubles of the Company still continued ...
Page lvii
... charge , a long boat full , and towed down to Whitechapel by Boatswain Vale , or his man , at a ketch's stern . At the term after , I served Phineas Pett upon a battery , and Sir John and Sir Henry procured my Lord Admiral's warrant to ...
... charge , a long boat full , and towed down to Whitechapel by Boatswain Vale , or his man , at a ketch's stern . At the term after , I served Phineas Pett upon a battery , and Sir John and Sir Henry procured my Lord Admiral's warrant to ...
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Common terms and phrases
Admiralty aforesaid anchored annuity appointed art or mystery attended barge boats breadth brother brought building built Burrell Captain charge charter Chatham Clerk clock command Commissioners Corporation Deptford deputies divers Earl entertainment favour Fleet friends gave George Waymouth granted Gravesend heirs and successors honourable journey keel King King's launched letters patent Limehouse lodged London Lord Admiral Lord High Admiral Lordship Majesty Majesty's Navy malicious Master Shipwrights Master Wardens Mathew Baker month morning mystery of Shipwrights night ordinances ordnance person or persons Peter Pett Pett's Phineas Pett pinnaces plank pleased present Prince's Highness Principal Officers ready received repairing returned rode servant set sail shipbuilding ships pinnaces Sir Henry Palmer Sir John Trevor Sir Robert Mansell Suffolk thence thereof Thomas timber tonnage Trinity House unto vessels voyage Wardens and Assistants Wardens and Commonalty Waymouth whatsoever wife William wind Woolwich workmen yard
Popular passages
Page v - SOCIETY desire it to be understood that they are not answerable for any opinions or observations that may appear in the Society's publications; the Editors of the several Works being alone responsible for the same.
Page 174 - Society was first incorporated by letters patent under the great seal of England, bearing date at Westminster the...
Page 173 - England, by his letters patent, under the great seal of England, bearing date at Westminster, the...
Page xlii - -• I am credibly informed that that mystery of shipwrights for some descents hath been preserved faithfully in families, of whom the Petts about Chatham are of singular regard.
Page xlii - Majesty's navy, whose ancestors, as father, grandfather, and great-grandfather, for the space of two hundred years and upwards, have continued in the same name officers and architects in the Royal Navy,' he was, it may be presumed; recording the local tradition of the Pett family.
Page lxi - Chancellor of the Exchequer ; Sir Thomas Parry, Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster...
Page 60 - almost disheartened and out of breath, but the prince's Highness, standing near me, from time to time encouraged me as far as he might without offence to his father, labouring to have me eased by standing up, but the king would not permit it.
Page 178 - Clerk. . . . [Power to meet in their hall and] to entreat consult determine constitute ordain and make any Constitutions Statutes Laws Ordinances Articles and Orders whatsoever...
Page 215 - Therefore three tier of ordnance must not be, neither can the art or wit of man build a ship well conditioned and fit for service with three tier of ordnance.
Page 2 - ... was on the site now occupied by the Foreign Cattle Market. in Kent, to one Mr. Webb, with whom I boarded about one year, and afterward lay at Chatham Hill in my father's lodging in the Queen's House, from whence I went every day to school to Rochester and came home at night for three years space. Afterwards, by reason of my small profiting at this school, my father removed me from thence to Greenwich to a private school kept by one Mr. Adams, where I so well profited that in three years I was...