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59-4 NRJ Inside Pages Version 2_40555_Text_a.qxd.qxd
HMS Ardent: A King’s Ship, But Which King? . . . . . by Ron Neilson Figure 1. Starboard view, full broadside. The model is 54 inches long. All photographs by the author. The Historical Perspective HMS Ardent was a 64-gun, thirdrate ship-of-the-line of the Royal Navy, launched on August 13, 1764. The warship was built under contract at Hull, England according to the plans of Royal Navy architect, Sir Thomas Slade. Ordered nearly three years earlier, in December 1761, Ardent was one of Slade’s lesser known NAUTICAL RESEARCH JOURNAL nautical design achievement; for period sailing ship modelers he is most famous for his design of HMS Victory. Slade also designed Ardent’s progenitor, Asia, the first true 64-gun warship. The Royal Navy abandoned earlier 60-gun ships and commissioned additional 64’s that incorporated alterations learned from trials with Asia. Subsequent ships were larger; the first of the new 64’s being 289 Figure 2. The starboard stern view. Ardent, the lead ship of its class. Slade’s Ardent Class used the lines of a captured French 64-gun ship, Le Fougueux, a prize taken in 1747. Ardent was built to incorporate important elements of the French ship’s design, particularly the increased tumblehome of the hull. As the weight and total number of armaments escalated during the mid-eighteenthcentury, so did the need to pay closer attention to a warship’s center of gravity vis-à-vis its sailing qualities. The renowned English frigate, Indefatigible, also built to the identical 64gun plans as Ardent, was not launched until twenty years later in 1784. Slade’s successful design was revived in 1777 for five further Ardent-class ships: Raisonnable, Agamemnon, Stately, Belliqueux, and Nassau, for a total of seven ships built to his plans. Slade himself had died six years earlier, in 1771. The basic Ardent-class specifications were: 290 Length on keel: 144 feet Beam: 44 feet 6 inches Displacement: 1,376 tons Crew complement: 500 Armament upon commissioning: Main gun deck: twenty-six 24-pounders Upper gun deck: twenty-six 18-pounders Quarterdeck: ten 4-pounders Forecastle: two 9-pounders Ship and armaments technology was escalating rapidly by the 1780s. As a consequence, the mid-century 64-gun third rates were underpowered to stand in the line. Additionally, most captains preferred smaller, faster ships (including the razée frigates cut-down from 64’s) over the “old school 64” that was much too slow and difficult to maneuver against the faster warships of England’s adversaries. The frigate was fast becoming a marauder of choice for Vol. 59, No 4 WINTER 2014 Figure 3. The starboard bow view. Figure 4. The forecastle and partial bow. Anchors are shipped and chained for action. many types of naval engagements. As noted, the 64 had become an underpowered warship and 74-gun capital ships had taken their place as the preferred third rate ships-of-the-line. The 74’s (and many frigates) could throw a heavier weight of ordnance than the outmoded 64. The technological development and rapid deployment of the carronade—a devastating, close-range naval weapon—quickly tipped the scales in favor of the fast frigate and the 74’s as fleet “staples.” Increasingly, close-action battles, “cutting out” boarding actions and prize captures favored this new armament technology, too, as resources for both shipbuilding and manning the Royal Navy were being depleted rapidly. By the close of the eighteenth century, third rate 64’s consequently served other important roles, such as deployment on colonial expeditions and blockading duty. Indeed, by the beginning of the Napoleonic Wars in 1803, the notional total number of ships-of-the-line in seagoing condition was approximately one hundred and eleven, according to noted British naval historian, Brian Lavery. Of this total, there were no less than thirty-eight commissioned 64’s still in service in the Royal Navy. The 64’s were particularly well suited for intimidation, especially in far-flung colonial ports. They helped immensely in warding off pesky privateers. They also became a rou- tine military escort ship for convoys, accompanying the Indiamen of the lucrative East India Company. Ardent had a somewhat tumultuous career. The ship was captured by the French in 1779 in the English Channel and then re-captured by Britain in April 1782 at the Battle of the Saintes in the West Indies. My research was unable to uncover Ardent’s service background for its first ten years of life; the period from its launching in 1764 to 1774 remains a mystery. The only known fact from this period is that Ardent was one of the first 64-gun ships put into commission as a consequence of conflicts with Spain over possession of the Falkland Islands. We do know that Ardent was deployed to the North American station, based at Halifax, Nova Scotia, in October 1774 under Captain Sir George Douglas. This appears to be the first record of its service. In 1778, under the command of Captain George Keppel, Ardent was posted to Admiral Lord Howe’s squadron off New York, defending the British colonial city from a larger French fleet attack under the command of Admiral le Comte d’Estaing. The two forces engaged in battle off Rhode Island on August 11, 1778, though both fleets were scattered by a storm over the following two days. Ardent returned home to Portsmouth, England and was paid off in NAUTICAL RESEARCH JOURNAL 291 Figure 5. Midships and fore chains. One can see the belfry and galley stack. January 1779. Six months later, in June 1779, following storm repairs, Ardent was quickly re-commissioned under the command of Captain Phillip Boteler, sailing from Plymouth to join Sir Charles Hardy in the English Channel by August. Neither Boteler nor the captain of Marlborough (74), in whose company Ardent was sailing, were aware that a French fleet had put to sea. Ardent encountered this enemy fleet only two days after sailing into the Channel. After receiving correct replies to coded signals, the two English capital ships ran down to meet the others they assumed were also English. The fleet they encountered was, in fact, a combined FrancoSpanish fleet, in possession of the Royal Navy signal codebook that permitted the deception; a correct response to Ardent’s “who are you?” signals. With Ardent within range, the 292 French frigate Junon fired two broadsides before raising the colors to reveal its true allegiance. Three further French frigates, and the Spanish ship of the line, Princesa, joined the action shortly afterward. In response, Ardent offered sporadic and inaccurate return fire before striking its colors to the vastly superior enemy force. HMS Marlborough escaped unscathed and beat a course back to England. At his subsequent court martial, Captain Boteler blamed his failure to return fire on an inadequate supply of gunpowder for Ardent’s cannons, a statement strongly denied by the ship’s gunner, who presented evidence there was enough powder for fifty minutes of vigorous engagement. The court martial rejected Boteler ’s claims, finding instead that the inexperience of the crew was the principal cause of Ardent’s failure to respond to the attack. According to ship’s logs, in 1779 as much Vol. 59, No 4 WINTER 2014 as eighty percent of Ardent’s crew comprised pressed landsmen. Boteler was dismissed from the Navy for his failure adequately to defend his ship. Little is known of Ardent’s career while flying the flag of Bourbon France before the English re-captured the ship less than three years later, on April 12, 1782, at the Battle of the Saintes, a large naval action in the West Indies that took place over four days, April 9 – 12, during the American War of Independence. It was a decisive victory for the British fleet under Admiral Sir George Rodney over the French led by Admiral Comte de Grasse; the outcome forced the French and Spanish to abandon a planned invasion of Jamaica, a British stronghold. The battle is named after a small group of islands between Guadeloupe and Dominica in the West Indies. Ironically, the French fleet was the very same that, several months earlier, had blockaded the British army, facilitating George Washington’s victory over Lieutenant General William Cornwallis at the siege of Yorktown. The following lines of poetry saluting the English victory at the Saintes are attributed to Charles Cornwallis, captain of HMS Canada at the battle. He was the brother of the same William Cornwallis who surrendered to Washington at Yorktown on October 19, 1781. de Grasse in his flagship, crowded by nine, Strikes Ville de Paris colours o’er the brine, HMS Barfleur, Hood’s flagship takes the fame, De Grasse offered his sword, the Ad’mril’s shame, Ardent, Glorieux, Hector soon followed suit, César blew up; a sad final salute, Thus four ships captured, an Ad’mril Figure 6. Midships; anchors hauled and shipped, pinnace hoisted from the skids. NAUTICAL RESEARCH JOURNAL 293 as well, Rodney’s fame and fortune made; tales to tell, His dogged tenacity in pursuit, Showered forth prize money,Vict’ry’s fair loot. Following its recapture, Ardent was recommissioned under Captain Richard Lucas. On August 28, 1783, the ship was renamed Tiger. It was sold out of service in June, 1784. The Model: The Best of Kit and Scratch For my build of Ardent, I drew inspiration from visits to the National Maritime Museum in London and the Maritime History Museum in Sweden during the summer of 2013. Added to this was my desire to challenge my modeling skills and knowledge by taking a readily available, good quality ship kit to a higher level; much higher. My work proceeded over a period of approximately eight months from the fall of 2013 to the spring of 2014. I estimate that I put in approximately 900 hours into my project. My model of Ardent is a hybrid, a quite substantial kit-bash that began with a Caldercraft Agamemnon kit’s plank-onbulkhead keelformer and bulkheads. The kit is to 1:64 scale, my personal favorite. I used the kit’s quite well-documented full-scale plans to extensively modify and, in most circumstances, scratch-build the balance of the ship’s wood components, which included all the planking, deck furniture, and bow and stern components. All non-visible skeletal wood—bulwarks framing, deck beams, hanging knees amidships, and the like— was basswood, while the principal hull planking was crafted from Swiss pear that I purchased in precision-milled wood strips 294 and multiple-thickness sheets from HobbyMill USA. Throughout the project I worked in metric units of measurement, which I find easier. For both aesthetic and practical reasons, I chose to employ thin walnut strip wood for the planking below the main wale down to the waterline. The painted black wale itself was made from pear strips. I found it unnecessary to spile or employ tedious bending techniques for the visible planked area of the hull. Neither stealers nor drop planks were required at either bow or stern, partially owing to the very thin (0.020-inch) walnut strips I used to form the severe tucks at the stem and at the transom line. Beneath the ship’s full waterline-to-keel coppering is a single layer of basswood planking. Although the kit provided for a customary European doubleplanked plank-on-bulkhead approach, I found this was not necessary. With proper beveling of bulkheads, adding a carved rabbet and a nicely tapered bearding line, a single run of basswood strips yielded a smooth, graceful shape to skin the ship’s structure. The false keel, attached to the bottom of the basswood keelformer, was made from boxwood strip. HobbyMill USA also supplied all the model’s boxwood, walnut and cherry. On almost every plank-on-bulkhead model I have built, I have used balsa filler blocks at the bow and stern. Ardent was no exception. Getting these added scratchmade filler pieces properly shaped and placed contributed immensely to making one of the most difficult aspects of planking the stem and stern plank tucks a little easier to do with any plank-on-bulkhead -style build. I used the copper plates provided with the kit to complete the hull’s exterior. The tedious and fiddly process took a full two week’s work and required 2,300 of the thin copper plates. Once finished, I used a commercial-grade etching solution to Vol. 59, No 4 WINTER 2014 accelerate the aging of the shiny platelets so they would present a desirable brownhued patina that over time will continue to look even more attractive. Following some experimentation with my aging solution’s dilution proportions and after cleaning the copper free of residual glue and finger oils, I simply brushed the solution on with a ½inch-wide brush and had plenty of wiping rags nearby. Typically, I finish the woods on my models with a natural oil-based stain. On most components, I use it full-strength, right out of the can. This was the case for Figure 7. Quarter and poop deck towards the stern. The ship’s wheel and binnacle was tucked under the foremost support beam for the poop deck, just ahead of the officer’s movable bulkheads. Figure 8. The lower yard chain slings and platform swivel guns hauled up to the fighting tops. NAUTICAL RESEARCH JOURNAL 295 the majority of the visible woods for Ardent. However, I also used mixtures of acrylic paints on some wood pieces where I had to match the colors of the painted pewter or photo-etched brass decorative components so they would better blend visually against the tone of the adjacent pear planking. For example, on the stem, I colored the pear headrails and carvings to match the lion figurehead and decorative trailboard castings provided in the kit. I used a multi-color, layered painting technique to make both the cast pewter and brass pieces provided in a kit look more like wood carvings. This was especially important in the stern area. I used primary paint colors, as well as metallic gold leaf color, very sparingly. Gold (and any hue of red) does tweak the retina, soto-speak. I used my preferred dark-hued crimson red acrylic for the inner bulwarks—gun deck and quarterdeck—the edges (only) of all gunport lids and port openings, the background for King George III’s cameo profile and, rather profusely, on the officers’ pinnace. I used a black acrylic (typically, two or three coats) on the main wale and all other areas that were painted (flat) black on eighteenth-century warships: yards, tops, timbers, cap rails, lower stem area, and so on. I always use non-reflective flat acrylic paints. Once dry, the black-painted wood was given a thin coat of Minwax Wipe-On polyurethane finish to it a subtle sheen. In keeping with my understanding of color painting standards for the eighteenth-century English capital warships, I painted all the outer planks of the gun ports in black too. Warships of the era loved to advertise their potency; the more gun ports spotted by a lookout or visible in the watch officer ’s telescope, the better. To scare-off pirates, merchant ships often deployed a canvas disguise that draped over the sides of their ships upon which were 296 painted black false gun ports. A careful study of the ship’s plans while gearing-up for the build led me to a decision to construct the model’s bulwarks from scratch; this allowed me to frame all the ship’s gun ports more accurately while also yielding a thin, and scale-accurate, cross section to all the ship’s bulwarks. I have learned from past experience that this area of a kit build can be especially problematic; bulwarks (especially those with significant tumblehome) can be challenging to execute properly; it is frustrating to realize too late that a series of small but cumulative building errors in this critical area can result in a quite irregular sheer line from stem to stern. Rather than using a paper template to locate and drill holes arbitrarily through planked sides that would have been built much too thickly, I chose to build up the extensive bulwark framing so that, when the interior and exterior planking was applied I had a quite reasonable replication of the actual full-size building practice, with sills, lintels and verticals. As well as much better looking topsides symmetry, a much stronger overall construction resulted from this worthwhile effort. This is a good time to mention that, mid-way through my build, I acquired an excellent reproduction print of Ardent’s original 1761 plans from the National Maritime museum (to 1:48 scale and 84 inches long). I used this document extensively to compare with the kit’s hull and sheer lines, and also for a multitude of other hull construction details. This print will be suitably framed and displayed behind my completed model. This same original plan was used to build Ardent’s six siblings in later years—including Agamemnon and even the razée frigate Indefatigible two decades after Ardent’s launch in 1764. Vol. 59, No 4 WINTER 2014 Figure 9. The mass of rigging. At The Bow: Of Hawse Bucklers, Gripes and Cant Washes In the stem and beakhead area I used various thicknesses of pear and boxwood for scratch-building the beakhead itself, all headrail, cheeks and hawse pieces, timbers, roundhouses, seats of ease, catheads, bumpkins and other decorative wood elements. The lion figurehead however, was a pewter casting I purchased from an Italian manufacturer. After doing some research in James Lees’s and Brian Lavery’s tomes, I decided to add hawse bucklers (basically, removable hole plugs) to the normally open anchor hawse holes. Because I was attempting to show my model in an action-ready configuration, it made sense to secure the anchors to frame timbers (with chains) and close up NAUTICAL RESEARCH JOURNAL the large anchor cable openings at the bow. Hawse bucklers had a mechanism that would permit a sailor (inside or topside) to pull a chain and quickly open them to ready the anchor cables. Additionally, I added a layer of protection to the leading edge of the stem’s cutwater; this was called a gripe. The gripe was made from a sheet of lead. It protected the stem from several sea-going hazards, especially during action when all manner of debris could hit and foul the stem area. Another important detail rarely shown on contemporary models of this era is the cant wash. This angled piece, located just below the lowest cheeks on the stem, helped to minimize the intake of seawater through the hawse holes and also enhanced the stem’s thrusting action in rough seas. I took creative license and sourced some attractive, micro-thin green abalone (mother-of-pearl shell), cut small pieces, 297 and affixed them to the fronts and rears of both catheads and the headrail support timbers, starboard and port. I highly doubt this embellishment was added in full-size shipbuilding practice. but I liked the result on my model, particularly after seeing a similar treatment on more than one historic model at the National Maritime Museum. Stern Details All the wood components of the stern were scratch built from pear: main stern facings, transom, galleries, rails, and decorative moldings. I used the kit’s gallery railings, balustrades, columns, and finish pieces—virtually all of the kit’s decorative pewter pieces (which were quite nicely cast). In addition, I included a small handful of decorative carvings (brass photoetched items) from other kits that were leftovers from previous builds. The kit provided three stern lanterns but I decided to mount only two, purely for aesthetic reasons. My engineering-oriented, historical accuracy sensibilities are continuously doing battle with my artistic ones. On balance, I lean toward art because, at the end of the day, I believe that, as a modeler—and not an engineer or contract builder pitching a project to an Admiralty Board—the properly proportioned, visually-attractive ship model should be an objet d’art. In addition to rudder chains, I created emergency fall lines seized to the ends of the chains and tied them off to cleats on the poop deck. It was a good thing to be able to quickly retrieve an unshipped rudder, particularly during a battle! Some may notice the canvas boot surrounding the rudder where it passes through the transom. This is a very important detail that I have rarely seen on contemporary sailing model warships. A lot of water passes across and around the stern, 298 not to mention what happens in a following sea. Without a well-sealed rudder boot, a ship’s captain would be taking non-stop baths from seawater spouting up and through his stern cabin’s rudder trunk. Last, but not least, there was Ardent’s badge. Most likely it would have been painted in 1764; I chose to affix photo-etched brass letters in a creme color that matched that of the stern and quarter galleries mullions. I like the appearance of raised typography, the precise letters casting a slight shadow on the transom’s wood. The Masts and Rigging I crafted all masts and yards from square stock boxwood. I followed the eighteenth-century conventions described by James Lees and gleaned modeling techniques from David Antscherl’s excellent Swan series. I made all other wooden rigging components from pear (all channels, bees, bibs, fids, mastcaps, crosstrees, planked tops, hounds, mastheads). I used a combination of kit-supplied photo-etched brass pieces and various scratch built items to create the yard stirrups, boom irons, straps, and platform rail stanchions for all the tops. Although I used the kit’s deadeyes for all shrouds, I exclusively used pear blocks in several sizes from Syren Ship Model Company for all the rigging, which was based on Lees’s rigging plans for third rate vessels. All of the rope on the model also came from Syren Ship Models. I used ten different sizes for both the standing and running rigging. Concerning rope, I chose to use dark brown rather than black for all standing rigging (this is particularly evident with the wouldings on all the lower masts, including the bowsprit). I was fortunate that this more accurate color rope was made available just a few weeks before I needed it. Created from three strands of high-quality cotton linen, I found Syren Vol. 59, No 4 WINTER 2014 Figure 10. Hawse bucklers, the gripe, the cant wash and mother-of-pearl embellishments. rope, in all sizes, consistently to be of high quality. Because this genuine rope is virtually fuzz-free it was unnecessary to use a beeswax coating. The Syren rope made the very fiddly detail work of making the more than one hundred coiled rope hanks to position on pins and other rigging belaying points much easier. The sheer volume of rope visible on a square-rigged eighteenthcentury warship means that their colors and size fidelity are critical aspects for an accurate portrayal of the real thing. While working on Ardent’s rigging, my research revealed that the Royal Navy used lighter, more efficient blocks on their ships from the 1790s onward. This advantage reduced the total weight of the blocks and cordage, so their ships had considerably less top hamper than equivalent French vessels. Often overlooked, a number of these small but significant rigging improvements gave the Royal Navy a technological advantage over their adversaries. NAUTICAL RESEARCH JOURNAL After more research regarding a warship’s preparations for action, I decided to rig iron chain slings for the two lower yards (fore and mainmast). These chains provided additional insurance against crippling damage in this sensitive area of the rigging from direct hits by an enemy’s gunners. The iron chain slings were either used alone, or in combination with heavy rope, to support the weight of the spars. The Cannon and the Fighting Tops: 64 + 8 Still Equals 64! Sixty-four turned brass cannon were supplied in the kit and I finished them with the chemical solution BiOx312 from Electrochemical Products, Inc. A full soaking in this solution for only a few minutes imparts an attractive, low luster, darkish grey pewter-like look; the result makes brass appear aged after drying and burnish299 Figure 11. Midships quarterdeck close up. ing. A simple rag was used to rub each cannon after five to seven minutes of soaking. Nothing more was done to finish the cannon barrels. To my eye, results of this chemical aging technique look superior to simply painting cast or turned cannon flat black—or using the ubiquitous “BlackenIt” chemical. In keeping with my decision to depict the ship ready for action whenever I could, I mounted four turned brass swivel guns to each of the fore and main fighting tops. The mini-cannons were finished using the same BiOx312. The support stirrups were fashioned from brass rod and flat stock. 300 Hammock Cranes For 500 – More “BiOx” I used the kit’s supplied photoetched brass—hammock cranes, quarter gallery lights, ship’s wheel—and some of the pewter castings (mostly for the stern). Specifically, I also used the same BiOx solution described above on all hammock cranes to match the antiqued look achieved on the brass cannon barrels. Modelers have known about tulle fabric—a finely knit synthetic fabric that is used in women’s fashion, especially bridal veils. I was fortunate to locate tulle in a Vol. 59, No 4 WINTER 2014 Figure 12. The stern with French Bourbon ensign beneath the Union Jack. NAUTICAL RESEARCH JOURNAL ing. A simple rag 301 Figure 13. You can judge a ship by its boats. Here, the officers’ 32-foot pinnace is hauled up. A protective web of overhead rope netting was spread across the skids to protect the gun crews from falling overhead objects—and to hinder potential enemy boarding actions. Sharp weapons—like cutlasses and pikes—were at the ready and could thrust up through the netting. light brown color and I used it to make the ship’s extensive hammock netting. Tulle was also used to fabricate the safety netting on the aft sides of the fighting tops and on the forward headrails near the heads. In all instances I tied off small attachment ropes to the hammock and safety nettings in addition to using Allene’s fabric glue—a staple for securing rigging. The Plinth and the Pegasus To display my completed model I wanted something that was, in itself, a complementary work of art. Fancy, but not over-the-top. I am fortunate to have had several opportunities to view numerous historic models in world-class maritime museums and paid close attention to the materials and methods used to display them. For HMS Ardent, I decided to design my own plinth; a slightly elevated plat302 form. The plinth’s complex routed profile was made from six-quarter cherry. The baseboard within the cherry rails is halfinch Baltic birch plywood covered with a glossy paper print of Aegean marble. I created a high-resolution digital photographic file of real marble and generated a document large enough to cover the entire baseboard. By substituting a mounted print over the plywood base for the real thing, the large baseboard was a tiny fraction of the weight had I employed genuine marble (not to mention a small fraction of the cost!). The cherry rails were stained natural and then given three coats of semi-gloss MinWax Wipe-On polyurethane finish. The “French provincial profiled” cherry rails had their inner perimeter edges inset with 1/16-inch-thick polished brass. This was done to achieve a visual accent to the darker marble base piece and separate it slightly from the lighter cherry rails. Four serpent-tailed Pegasus cast Vol. 59, No 4 WINTER 2014 Figure 14. The bow of the National Maritime Museum print from the 1761 Ardent-class original plans. Seven 64-gun third rates in total were built to these plans. NAUTICAL RESEARCH JOURNAL 303 brass pedestals support the model. I acquired these from a modeling colleague and fashioned the keel support mounting blocks below them. I believe these pedestals still can be purchased from European model ship resellers. Once secured to Ardent’s Aegean marble baseboard, the equine pedestals hold the model quite securely. Flags: A Tricolor Becomes a Bourbon Surmounted by the Union Jack. National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, England Swedish Maritime Museum (Sjøhistoriska museet) Stockholm, Sweden Sources Antscherl, David, Rigging A Sixth Rate Sloop of 1767-1780. (Florence, Oregon: SeaWatchBooks, 2010). Lavery, Brain, The Arming & Fitting of English Ships of War 1600-1815. (Annapolis: Naval Institute Press, 1987). Early on in my model’s “life,” I had decided to show it recaptured by the English as a result of the Battle of the Saintes, with the Union Jack flying proudly above the French Tricolor. Only after posting some preliminary photographs of my Ardent on the Internet forum, Model Ship World, did I discover that I had hoisted the wrong French flag at the stern. An expatriate Englishman living in Sweden pointed out to me, via the forum, that the correct French naval ensign of 1782 would have been a variation of the plain vanillawhite, fleur de Lis-checkered Bourbon flag of Louis XVI. I immediately went back to the Internet for flag research and, subsequently, to my computer drawing board. I printed out the correct French flag (on paper) and crafted its folds to replace the Napoleon-era tricolor that fluttered over the nation’s ships several years later, following the French Revolution. ——-Nelson’s Navy. (Annapolis: Naval Institute Press, 1989). C’est La Guerre! Electrochemical Products, Inc. Industrial Chemicals Manufacturer www.epi.com Acknowledgements Caldercraft Agamemnon kit, from the manufacturer ’s “Nelson’s Navy” range. Model Ship World Forum www.modelshipworld.com 304 ——-Empire of The Seas. (London: Conway Maritime Press, 2009). James Lees, The Masting & Rigging of English Ships of War, 1625-1860. (Annapolis: Naval Institute Press, 1984). Darcy Lever, Darcy, The Young Sea Officer’s Sheet Anchor. (New York: Dover Publications, 1998). Rodgers, N.A.M., Command of the Ocean: A Naval History of Britain 1649-1815. (New York: W.W. Norton & Company, 2006). Winfield, Rif, British Warships in the Age of Sail, 1714-1792 Design, Construction, Careers & Fates. (Barnsley: Seaforth Publishing, 2005). HobbyMill Custom Wood Milling www.hobbymillusa.com Syren Ship Model Company Vol. 59, No 4 WINTER 2014