NLV POLE STAR - buoy/lighthouse tender vessel heading for harwich 19/7/18
51.52m length buoy/lighthouse tender vessel arrives at harwich harbour on her way into harwich.
Heather Lodge at Mount Stuart | Isle of Bute, Scotland
We stayed at the Heather Lodge on the grounds of the Mount Stuart Estate. We loved the location and privacy. Earlier in the day, there were dozens of cows in the corral and we were hoping to get them in our video. Somehow, they all disappeared. We hope they're all right :)
The property provides ideal living space for family holidays, corporate weekends, wedding parties and relaxing breaks.
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Iranian frigate Sahand
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Iranian frigate Sahand , a British-made Vosper Mark V class frigate , was commissioned as part of a four-ship order.The ship was originally called Faramarz, named after a character in Ferdosi's Shahnameh.However after the 1979 Islamic Revolution, it was renamed Sahand, after the Sahand volcano.
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About the author(s): Service Depicted: Other Service Camera Operator: THOMASSY
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HMS Naiad
Dedicated to the memory of all former crew members of all HMS Naiads.
New HMS Arethusa Leaves The Stocks
Lady Tyrwhitt launches latest British man of war to bear great name, at Chatham dockyard.
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waverley
PS Waverley, the last sea-going paddle steamer in the world, steams past Portland on her way from Weymouth to Swanage.
[Wikipedia] HMS Active
Twelve ships of the Royal Navy have been named HMS Active or HMS Actif:
HMS Active (1758) was a 28-gun sixth rate launched in 1758 and captured in 1778 by two French frigates off San Domingo.
HMS Active (1776) was a 14-gun brig-sloop launched in 1776 and captured in 1780 by the American privateer General Pickering off New York.
HMS Active (1779) was a 12-gun cutter that entered service in 1779 and surrendered that same year to the French cutter Mutin when Active encountered and was unable to escape the combined Franco-Spanish fleet in the English Channel. The French took her into service as Actif and later Activ No.1 (1782). She was paid off at Brest in December 1782 and broken up there early the next year.
HMS Active (1780) was a 32-gun fifth rate launched in 1780 and wrecked in 1796 on Anticosti Island at the mouth of the Saint Lawrence River.
HMS Active (1782) was a 14-gun brig-sloop listed in 1782.
HMS Actif (1794) was a 16-gun privateer that Iphigenia captured from the French on 16 March 1794; unfortunately she foundered on 26 November, though all her crew were saved.
HMS Active (1799) was a 38-gun fifth rate launched in 1799. She was placed on harbour service in 1826, renamed HMS Argo in 1833, and was broken up in 1860.
HMS Active (1845) was a 36-gun fifth rate launched in 1845, becoming a training ship and being renamed HMS Tyne in 1867 and HMS Durham in 1867. She was sold in 1908.
HMS Active (1869) was a Volage-class iron screw corvette launched in 1869 and sold in 1906.
HMS Active (1911) was an Active-class scout cruiser launched in 1911 and scrapped in 1920.
HMS Active (H14) was an A-class destroyer launched in 1928 and broken up in 1947.
HMS Active (F171) was a Type 21 frigate launched in 1972. She was sold to the Pakistan Navy in 1994 and was renamed Shah Jehan.
The schooner Active, which was under the command of Lieutenant Michael Fitton, was a tender to the flagship on the Jamaica station. She assisted Nereide at the capitulation of Curaçao on 13 September 1800.
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Launch of HMS Apollo
Cruiser. Sailors marching. Elevated shot. Lady Boyle names the ship. Shot of the ship entering the water. Part of ship in water past camera.
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(Vid 143) The 'P.S. Waverley' at Minehead
The last sea going paddle steamer in the world (P.S.Waverley) arrives and departs Minehead (Somerset) on 29th Aug 2012 on a mini cruise from Penarth in South Wales
(across the Bristol Channel)
Paddle Steamer Waverley at Weymouth - 09/10/18
Paddle Steamer Waverley calls at Weymouth enroute from London to Glasgow. Pictures recorded 10.am Tuesday 9th October 2018
Paddle Steamer PS Waverley on her Kyle of Lochalsh Sailings April 2011.
Here is my footage of the Paddle Steamer PS Waverley on her April sailings from the port of Kyle of Lochalsh.
First we see Waverley leaving the Kyle of Lochalsh and passing under the Skye Bridge on her way to the Isle of Raasay on Wednesday 27th April.
then later in the day we see Waverley going down through the Kylerhea Narrows and in to the Sound of Sleat, this footage was filmed from the Kylerhea car ferry.
The final shot was of Waverley returning from its cruise round the Isle of Raasay on Friday 29th April passing under the Skye Bridge and returning to the Kyle of Lochalsh.
Hope you enjoy and a special thanks to the captain of the Kylerhea Ferry for following the Waverley for me.
The Waverley August 2011
The Waverley trip from Helensburgh to Tighnabruach
Robert W. Paul: The Launch of HMS Albion (1898)
Breve Storia del Cinema - La scuola di Brighton:
When the HMS Albion launched on June 21st, 1898, it produced a wave that swept hundred of onlookers in the water, drowning dozens, many of them children who’d been brought to the front of the pier by their parents to get a better view of the warship. There are at least two surviving films of the Albion launch—both intrinsically interesting, because they represent one of the first times that the boundlessly creative new technology of cinema faced a boundlessly destructive one.
The first, The Launch of HMS Albion at Blackwall, was filmed E.P. Prestwich. It consists of a single breathtaking bird’s eye view of the launch, with the ship lurching into the water from the top right corner of the frame.
This is the second film, shot by R.W. Paul—a remarkably modern-looking record of the chaos and commotion around the launch, often framed over and around the shoulders of onlookers.
Braunton on the Torbay express 17/08/2014
via YouTube Capture
By the Short Cut to the Rosses
Provided to YouTube by The state51 Conspiracy
By the Short Cut to the Rosses · Kenneth McKellar
Classic Celtic Songs
℗ 2017 Black Cat Productions
Released on: 2017-01-01
Music Publisher: Boosey and Hawkes
Composer: Fox
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