Short URL:
Photo Sharing & Video Hosting by SmugMug
  Photo Sharing  Login  Help  
 
 
Shipping > andrewstransport  > Ships > HMS Trincomalee, Hartlepool, 2010
Trincomalee is one of two Leda class frigates built for the Rpyal Navy by the East India Company in Bombay (now Mumbai). She was built of teak, a highly durable timber which largely accounts for her survival. Trincomalee was launched in 1817, 12 years after Trafalgar and the death of Nelson. and was designed to carry 46 guns. She was not commissioned until 1847, when her obsolescence was offset by the good condition of her teak hull. She served in the north and south Atlantic, and the Caribbean, and then in the Pacific. In 1860 Trincomalee became a drill ship, and was then a youth training ship until 1986. Restoration began the following year and was completed in 2005. Trincomalee is now the oldest ship afloat in Europe, and still retains over 60% of her original timber.
gallery pages:  1  2  >  
< Prev 1 of 30 Next >
andrewstransport > Welcome to Hartlepool!  Tues 10 August 2010.  Hartlepool is home to two historic ships, paddle steamer Wingfield Castle and Royal Navy frigate HMS Trincomalee.  Wingfield Castle was built for the LNER in 1934 at Hartlepool for the Hull - New Holland ferry service across the River Humber, along with Tattershall Castle.  They were withdrawn in 1972 and 1973 respectively.  In 2013 Tattershall Castle survives in central London.
andrewstransport > Welcome to HMS Trincomalee!  Hartlepool, Tues 10 August 2010.  Trincomalee is one of two Leda class frigates built for the Rpyal Navy by the East India Company in Bombay (now Mumbai).  She was built of teak, a highly durable timber which largely accounts for her survival.  Trincomalee was launched in 1817, 12 years after Trafalgar and the death of Nelson. and was designed to carry 46 guns.  She was not commissioned until 1847, when her obsolescence was offset by the good condition of her teak hull.  She served in the north and south Atlantic, and the Caribbean, and then in the Pacific.  In 1860 Trincomalee became a drill ship, and was then a youth training ship until 1986.  Restoration began the following year and was completed in 2005.  Trincomalee is now the oldest ship afloat in Europe, and still retains over 60% of her original timber.
andrewstransport > HMS Trincomalee, Hartlepool, Tues 10 August 2010 2.  Trincomalee is a frigate, with a single gun deck.  She was launched in 1817 in Bombay, arrived at Portsmouth in 1819, and was then placed in reserve without being commissioned.  Trincomalee has largely been restored to her planned original condition.
andrewstransport > HMS Trincomalee, Hartlepool, Tues 10 August 2010 3.  Frigates were fast, manoeuvrable and powerful for their size.  Too small to join line of line of battle ships in major fleet actions, frigates were used for scouting, raiding enemy and protecting British commerce, coastal and amphibious operations.  They roamed the world and often operated alone, making them prized commands for ambitious young officers.
andrewstransport > HMS Trincomalee, Hartlepool, Tues 10 August 2010 4.  The figure is thought to be Jamsetjee Bomanjee Wadia, the master builder of Bombay dockyard.  He supervised the building of Trincomalee by an Indian workforce.  They built many other warships for the Royal Navy.
andrewstransport > HMS Trincomalee, Hartlepool, Tues 10 August 2010 5.   Cathead, bearing the traditional carving of a cat's head.
andrewstransport > HMS Trincomalee, Hartlepool, Tues 10 August 2010 6.
andrewstransport > HMS Trincomalee, Hartlepool, Tues 10 August 2010 7.  Trincomalee's stern was modified in 1847, and has been preserved in that condition.
andrewstransport > HMS Trincomalee, Hartlepool, Tues 10 August 2010 8.  Trincomalee is an anchorage on the eastern coast of Sri Lanka (Ceylon).  In 1795 Britain seized Trincamalee from the Dutch, thereby gaining complete control of the Indian Ocean and keeping it until Sri Lanka became independent in 1948.
andrewstransport > HMS Trincomalee, Hartlepool, Tues 10 August 2010 9.
andrewstransport > HMS Trincomalee, Hartlepool, Tues 10 August 2010 10.  The building in the background is part of the modern Hartlepool historic quay, which has been built around Trincomalee.
andrewstransport > HMS Trincomalee, Hartlepool, Tues 10 August 2010 11.  The signal flags say Welcome to Trincomalee.
andrewstransport > HMS Trincomalee, Hartlepool, Tues 10 August 2010 12.
andrewstransport > HMS Trincomalee, Hartlepool, Tues 10 August 2010 13.
andrewstransport > HMS Trincomalee, Hartlepool, Tues 10 August 2010 14.  The fo'c'sle.
Welcome to Hartlepool! Tues 10 August 2010. Hartlepool is home to two historic ships, paddle steamer Wingfield Castle and Royal Navy frigate HMS Trincomalee. Wingfield Castle was built for the LNER in 1934 at Hartlepool for the Hull - New Holland ferry service across the River Humber, along with Tattershall Castle. They were withdrawn in 1972 and 1973 respectively. In 2013 Tattershall Castle survives in central London.
andrewstransport > Welcome to Hartlepool!  Tues 10 August 2010.  Hartlepool is home to two historic ships, paddle steamer Wingfield Castle and Royal Navy frigate HMS Trincomalee.  Wingfield Castle was built for the LNER in 1934 at Hartlepool for the Hull - New Holland ferry service across the River Humber, along with Tattershall Castle.  They were withdrawn in 1972 and 1973 respectively.  In 2013 Tattershall Castle survives in central London.
Welcome to Hartlepool! Tues 10 August 2010. Hartlepool is home to two historic ships, paddle steamer Wingfield Castle and Royal Navy frigate HMS Trincomalee. Wingfield Castle was built for the LNER in 1934 at Hartlepool for the Hull - New Holland ferry service across the River Humber, along with Tattershall Castle. They were withdrawn in 1972 and 1973 respectively. In 2013 Tattershall Castle survives in central London.
Other sizes: S • Medium • L • O |
Share photo: links, forums, blogs |
Keywords: frigate hms trincomalee photos
gallery pages:  1  2  >  
< Prev 1 of 30 Next >

Comments

| hide gallery comments |


Photo Sharing · About SmugMug · API · Browse Photos · Prints & Gifts · Terms · Privacy · Contact · Login
© 2013 SmugMug, Inc.