SS Alexander Macomb | ... in the canal on June 28, 1942. Shipping was routed around Cape Cod, and the | was torpedoed on July 3 with the loss of 10 lives. The canal reopened on J ... |
Mary Rose | ... ever. More than 3,500 arrows and 137 whole longbows were recovered from the | , a ship of Henry VIII's navy that sank at Portsmouth in 1545 |
Zeewijk | ... great many ships have been wrecked in the Pelsaert Group, most notably the | , which was wrecked on the Half Moon Reef in 1727, the survivors staying o ... |
Mary Rose | ... nd, in the dockyard, HMS Victory, the remains of Henry VIII's flagship, the | (raised from the seabed in 1982), (Britain's first iron-hulled warship) an ... |
Mary Rose | ... for the draw of these bows varies considerably. Before the recovery of the | , Count M. Mildmay Stayner, Recorder of the British Long Bow Society, esti ... |
Najaden | ... involving the destruction of the last large Dano-Norwegian ship—the frigate | |
Zuytdorp | ... gy, anthropology. There are many examples. One is the wreck of the VOC ship | lost in 1711 on the coast of Western Australia and where there remains con ... |
HDMS Najaden | ... sunk the last major vessel and the pride of Norway: the line-of-battle ship | |
Queen Anne's Revenge | ... and direct streaming of projects. Another example is the excavation of the | |
Prinz Eugen | ... man E-boats and destroyers defended the flotilla of Scharnhorst, Gneisenau, | and several smaller ships against RN MTBs |
Tonquin | In early 1811, the supply ship | left supplies and men to establish Fort Astoria (Oregon) at the mouth of t ... |
Hunley | ... for example, can be traced via underwater archaeological research, via the | which was the first submarine to sink an enemy ship (Hunley also had uniqu ... |
Thomas W. Lawson | ... larger volume of cargo. The only seven-masted (steel hulled) schooner, the | , was built in 1902, with a length of , the top of the tallest mast being ... |
Mary Rose | Only one significant group of arrows, from the | , has survived. Over 3500 arrows were found, mainly made of poplar but als ... |
CSS Virginia | In early 1862, the Confederate ironclad warship | was rebuilt using the burned-out hulk of USS Merrimack. Virginia engaged t ... |
USS Oklahoma | ... chmitt (1909–1941), the first chaplain to die in World War II, on board the | during the Pearl Harbor bombin |
Baden | The British did eventually manage to beach the battleship | , the light cruisers Nürnberg, Frankfurt and Emden, together with 18 destr ... |
Kaga | The D3A1 commenced carrier qualification trials aboard the Akagi and | during 1940, while a small number of aircraft made their combat debut from ... |
SS Normandie | ... y threat to the docks, he said, had been manufactured by the sinking of the | directed by Anastasia's brother, Anthony Anastasio. The Normandie, a Frenc ... |
Resurgam II | ... vessels and was one of the only historic warships ever raised intact), the | , the first powered submarine, and Holland 5, which provides insight into ... |
Lützow | ... Sheffield and Jamaica jointly attacked and drove off the pocket battleship | (sister ship to the Graf Spee), and the heavy cruiser Admiral Hipper, at t ... |
Le Griffon | ... fellow French explorer René-Robert Cavelier, Sieur de La Salle on the ship | in exploring the Great Lakes in 1679. The Sacred Heart Roman Catholic Chur ... |
CSS Virginia | ... t sea. After some success against the Union blockade, in March the ironclad | was forced into port and burned by Confederates at their retreat. Despite ... |
RMS Lusitania | ... German, so Julius played him with a German accent. After the sinking of the | in 1915, public anti-German sentiment was widespread, and Marx's German ch ... |
Amagiri | ... yed afloat for 12 hours after she was cut in half by the Japanese destroyer | . PT-323 (Elco) was cut in half by a kamikaze aircraft on December 10, 194 ... |
Scharnhorst | ... 43 both Sheffield and Jamaica participated in the sinking of the battleship | at the Battle of North Cape; Sheffield, with Belfast and Norfolk, opened t ... |
Scharnhorst | ... n February 1942 when German E-boats and destroyers defended the flotilla of | , Gneisenau, Prinz Eugen and several smaller ships against RN MTBs |
Kalmar Nyckel | ... expedition. The members of the expedition, aboard the ships Fogel Grip and | , sailed into Delaware Bay, which lay within the territory claimed by the ... |
H. L. Hunley | ... nfederate city. The first submarine to successfully sink an enemy ship, the | , was built in Mobile. One of the most famous naval engagements of the war ... |
Derry Castle | ... s radical friends were an influence. This was followed by 'The Wreck of the | ' and then 'Golden Gully.' Prefixed to the former poem was an editorial 'n ... |
Lark | ... ragansett bay from 3 August to 6 August 1778 included the frigates Juno 32, | 32, Orpheus 32, and Cerberus 28; the galley Alarm, and the transports Bett ... |
Murmansk | In the sea off of the village of Sørvær lies the stranded Soviet cruiser | , which ran aground on Christmas Eve in 1994 after her towlines snapped of ... |
MS Oranje | ... n December 5, 1947. Together with her main competitor and running mate, the | of the Netherland Line, she became a popular fixture on the Dutch East Ind ... |
Petropavlovsk | On 12 April 1904, two Russian pre-dreadnought battleships, the flagship | and the Pobeda, slipped out of port but struck Japanese mines off Port Art ... |
Holland III | John Philip Holland also designed the Holland II and | prototypes |
Olav Tryggvason | ... Prince Olav was a naval cadet serving on the minelayer/cadet training ship | |
Admiral Graf Spee | ... it was a working vacation, and used the trip to research the defeat of the | . They came across the "hook" for their story when one of the surviving Br ... |
Mary Rose | ... uth be home of the Royal Navy he founded. In 1545, he saw his vice-flagship | founder off Southsea Castle, with a loss of about 500 lives, while going i ... |
Alan A. Dale | ... ipping channel would be removed during 2003. The largest wreck was the long | which was removed during June 2003 |
USS Monitor | Recovered artifacts from the | are displayed at the Mariners' Museum, one of the more notable museums of ... |
HMS Endeavour | ... were both pupils) nickname of "Pagan". The origin of his name is the vessel | , as Morse's mother was a Quaker (Quakers have a tradition of "virtue name ... |
Titanic | ... and its principal competition, the White Star Line, owners of the ill-fated | . After that, Cunard dominated the Atlantic passenger trade with some of t ... |
heavy cruiser | ... 6 that led to the Spanish Civil War (1936–39). Two coastal battleships, one | , one large destroyer and half a dozen submarines and auxiliary vessels we ... |
CSS Alabama | ... hn Winslow, the commander of the USS Kearsarge, which in June 1864 sank the | in the English Channel in a famous Civil War sea battle |
RMS Lusitania | ... was used to send the message to order the attack by a German U-boat on the | . After President Wilson's , the President the US Navy to take over the st ... |
Mary Rose | ... nd also home to some famous ships, including HMS Warrior, the Tudor carrack | and Lord Nelson's flagship, HMS Victory. Although smaller than in its heyd ... |
HMS Pandora | ... us mutiny on the Bounty in 1789. It was also where survivors of the wrecked | , sent to arrest the Bounty mutineers, landed in 1791 after that ship sank ... |
Lord Clarendon | ... s. Shipbuilding peaked in the 1850s, marked in 1851 by the full rigged ship | , the largest wooden ship ever built in Cape Breton |
Scharnhorst | She was sunk along with HMS Monmouth by the German armoured cruisers | and Gneisenau under Admiral Graf Maximilian von Spee with the loss of her ... |
U-151 | ... ps for the U.S. Navy from 1907–1923. During the war, German submarines like | attacked ships outside the port. In 1926, Dr. W.A.R. Goodwin, rector of Wi ... |
Mary Rose | More than 3,500 arrows and 137 whole longbows were recovered from the | , a ship of Henry VIII's navy that was sunk at Portsmouth in 1545. It is a ... |
ship Sophia | ... he towns business people and their families were lost in the sinking of the | |
HNoMS Norge | ... buried at home with every mark of honor. The Norwegian coastal defence ship | was sent to convey his remains back to his own land |
USS Oriskany | ... the Forrestal out of commission, McCain volunteered for assignment with the | , another aircraft carrier employed in Operation Rolling Thunder. Once the ... |
USS Monitor | ... g the burned-out hulk of USS Merrimack. Virginia engaged the Union ironclad | in the famous Battle of Hampton Roads during the Union blockade of Hampton ... |
Mary Rose | ... e of the experts consulted by the archaeologist responsible for raising the | . In 1996 he was elected a Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries |
Komet | ... and as co-trustees. On 6 and 7 December 1940, the German auxiliary cruisers | and Orion sank four supply ships in the vicinity of Nauru. On the next day ... |
Rouse Simmons | ... assets included second-growth trees such as balsam and aspen. The schooner | , loaded with balsam Christmas trees, left Thompson Harbor for Chicago in ... |
Star of the West | ... y, President James Buchanan had attempted to resupply the garrison with the | , but Confederate artillery drove it away. In March, President Lincoln not ... |
RMS Titanic | Margaret was conveyed to the passenger liner | as a first class passenger aboard the tender SS Nomadic at Cherbourg, Fran ... |
RMS Titanic | In 1912, | radio operator Jack Phillips initially sent "CQD," which was still commonl ... |
USS Bonhomme Richard | During the American Revolution, Texel was used as a haven port for the | before it sank off the coast of Flamborough Head in Britain in September 1 ... |
RMS Titanic | ... r business interests in Florida. Following his demise in the sinking of the | in 1912, the estate passed to his son, Vincent. William Vincent Astor was ... |
USS Kearsarge | ... he Winslow Trail are named after Captain John Winslow, the commander of the | , which in June 1864 sank the CSS Alabama in the English Channel in a famo ... |
SMS Emden | During the First World War, in the Battle of Penang, the German cruiser | surreptitiously sailed to Penang and sank two Allied warships off its coas ... |
Zeewijk | ... e most famous being the Dutch ships Batavia, which was wrecked in 1629, and | , wrecked in 1727 |
Mary Rose | ... 8 inches. All but the last estimate were made before the excavation of the | , where bows were found ranging in length from 1.87 to 2.11 m (6 ft 1 in t ... |
HMS Hereward | ... of Belgium had done during World War I. She fled The Hague, and she boarded | , a British destroyer which was to take her south; however, after she was ... |
Russian cruiser Zhemchug | ... titiously sailed to Penang and sank two Allied warships off its coast – the | in the North Channel, and as it was leaving the island, the French torpedo ... |
Titanic | ... cal importance either because of the magnitude of loss of life (such as the | ), or circumstances of loss (Housatonic was the first vessel in history su ... |
Akagi | The D3A1 commenced carrier qualification trials aboard the | and Kaga during 1940, while a small number of aircraft made their combat d ... |
German battleship Tirpitz | In World War II, the | used Kåfjord, an arm of Altafjord, as a harbor, and was damaged here by at ... |
U-47 | On 14 October 1939, under the command of Günther Prien, | penetrated Scapa Flow and sank the World War I–era battleship anchored in ... |
USS Arizona Memorial | Manning the rail is also the traditional way to honor the | when it is passed by all U.S. Navy, U.S. Coast Guard, and U.S. Merchant Ma ... |
Gneisenau | ... unk along with HMS Monmouth by the German armoured cruisers Scharnhorst and | under Admiral Graf Maximilian von Spee with the loss of her entire complem ... |
ARA General Belgrano | ... ials in 1978 and was issued the following year. When HMS Conqueror sank the | during the 1982 Falklands war she used the "point and shoot" Mark 8 torped ... |
Blücher | The World War II German heavy cruiser | was completed in September 1939, and pronounced ready for service on 5 Apr ... |
Bismarck | ... served as the escort to HMS Ark Royal during the sinking of the battleship | , and on 31 December 1942, Sheffield and Jamaica jointly attacked and drov ... |
RMS Titanic | ... d activist who became famous due to her survival of the 1912 sinking of the | , after exhorting the crew of to return to look for survivors. It is uncle ... |
HMS Pandora | ... an incoming tide eventually saved it. One of the most famous wrecks was the | , which sank on 29 August 1791, killing 35 men. The Queensland Museum has ... |
Batavia | ... slands were the scene of a spectacular shipwreck and mutiny. The Dutch ship | under the command of Francisco Pelsaert ran aground and Pelsaert and some ... |