The Cambridge History of the British Empire, Volume 1John Holland Rose, Arthur Percival Newton, Ernest Alfred Benians, Henry Dodwell The University Press, 1929 - Commonwealth countries |
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Page 51
THE TUDOR NAVY 51 to place the victualling on a more satisfactory footing under a permanent surveyor , instead of relying , as previously , upon emergency contracts made as occasion arose . During the campaigns against France and ...
THE TUDOR NAVY 51 to place the victualling on a more satisfactory footing under a permanent surveyor , instead of relying , as previously , upon emergency contracts made as occasion arose . During the campaigns against France and ...
Page 117
SUPERIORITY OF THE ENGLISH NAVY 117 there were at the earlier date 16,306 . This growth , coming after the experience gained in Atlantic voyages , was in fast , sound , weatherly ships , which provided an invaluable reserve in days when ...
SUPERIORITY OF THE ENGLISH NAVY 117 there were at the earlier date 16,306 . This growth , coming after the experience gained in Atlantic voyages , was in fast , sound , weatherly ships , which provided an invaluable reserve in days when ...
Page 760
Failures and blunders in the British conduct of the war by land there certainly were , but the crucial failure lay in the Navy's inability to retain its challenged control of the seas . The Navy was not beaten , neither Ushant nor the ...
Failures and blunders in the British conduct of the war by land there certainly were , but the crucial failure lay in the Navy's inability to retain its challenged control of the seas . The Navy was not beaten , neither Ushant nor the ...
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