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... Publications of the Navy Records Society - Page xlii1918 - 244 pagesFull view - About this book
| Alfred John Dunkin - 1855 - 580 pages
...ancestors, father, grandfather and great grandfather, for the space of two hundred years and upwards, having continued in the same name, officers and architects in the royal Navy." As this ship, observes Mr. Willett, was built in 1037, the account would carry something like a regular... | |
| William Clark Russell - 1893 - 352 pages
...work,whose ancestors — father, grandfather, and great grandfather — for the space of two hundred years, have continued in the same name, officers and architects in the Royal Navy." This, ns Willett points nut, indicates a regular establishment as far back as 1*37, the reign of Uenry... | |
| Samuel Pepys, Mynors Bright - 1899 - 362 pages
...centuries, and Heywood the historian, speaking of Phineas Pette (157e-164o), says, "whose ancestors — father, grandfather, and great-grandfather, for the...same name officers and architects in the Royal Navy." In Le Neve's "Pedigrees of Knights" Peter Pett (died 1589) is described as "great-grandson of Thomas... | |
| Phineas Pett - 1918 - 358 pages
...Unvail'd, p. 70. * Vol. xiv. p. 482. 4 Prince George of Denmark, then Lord High Admiral. the 7th Nov. 1704, declares his opinion that it will be much for the...fact that Mansell, writing to Thomas Aylesbury 1 in 1620 to propose Peter Pett as builder of the new pinnaces; recommended him on the ground that ' his... | |
| John Evelyn - 1920 - 258 pages
...Medway. 268. Phineas Pett (1570-1647). Thomas Hey wood (England 's Remembrance) says, ' his ancestors ... for the space of two hundred years and upwards have...continued in the same name, officers and architects of the Royal Navy'. In 1637 this was rather a prophecy than a fact. The Royal Navy was not so old,... | |
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