A Narrative of the Loss of the Royal George: of 108 Guns, Sunk at Spithead, August 29th, 1782; with a Concise Account of Colonel Pasley's Operations on the Wreck in 1839 & 1840
Book Description
Scarce first edition with the wooden boards being made from recovered timber from the wreck. Leather spine with "Relic of the Royal George" in gilt. 16mo. 4 1/8" by 2 1/2". [ii] 80pp (2) with three engraved plates and engraved frontispiece of Rear Admiral Richard Kempenfelt. Marbled endpapers. All edges gilt. Binding fully intact. Pages unmarked. Very good.
H.M.S. Royal George was a ship of the line of the Royal Navy and was the largest warship in the world at the time of her launch on 18 February 1756. After seeing service in the Seven Years war and the American War of Independence she sank during planned minor repairs in home waters off Spithead, Portsmouth in 1782. An estimated 1200 people were aboard the ship at the time including up to 300 women and 60 children who were visiting the ship in harbour. Only 255 people were saved, including eleven women and one child.
Dealer Notes
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Author
Anon.
Date
1840
Binding
Wooden Boards
Publisher
John Miller, Jun., Portsmouth
Condition
Very Good
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