By: Derek Hunnisett Entitled ‘Fleet Admiral Coming Aboard’, this exquisite extreme miniature model depicts the PRINCE-Class British Warship off Chatham ca. 1670. The tiny model...
By Lloyd McCaffery American Privateer 1813 Full-hull model built in 1987 · Glazed case of Acacia burl veneer This stately model with its rakish masts...
By: William E. Hitchcock Illustrious 20-gun Salem, Massachusetts privateer was constructed by maverick naval architect John Peck as a ‘miniature frigate’ at Plymouth between 1779...
By: William E. Hitchcock Massachusetts Privateer, probable built at Plymouth, 1781. Owned by John Andrews and other Salem Merchants, 18 - 20 guns. This midget...
By: William E. Hitchcock The 16-gun privateer ship Rattlesnake was built at Plymouth, Massachusetts, in 1779 or 1780 to designs by the maverick designer John...
By: Donald McNarry, FRSA This tranquil waterline portrait depicts this small gallant ship-rigged American privateer of 1781, having been built for a Salem, Massachusetts owner....
By: Robert H. Mouat - Royal Navy Nelson Class battleship RODNEY, launched in 1925, served with distinction and occasionally as Flagship - almost without respite...
By: William H. Eisele This 8-gun American-built schooner of 1767 was built to a "Marblehead" design, similar to the so-called "heeltapper." Solid cherry hull planked-over...
By: William H. Eisele - Beautiful ivory model depicts this well designed British 12-gun ketch, built at Chatham Dockyard and launched on October 21, 1752...
By: Michael Costagliola SWIFT was a 10-gun, late Revolutionary War privateer brig, precursor of the famous Baltimore clipper. Built on the Chesapeake Bay ca.1778, she...
By: Robert H. Mouat Diorama shows the 74-Gun First-Rate Ship-of-the-Line HMS Swiftsure (built1804) being towed away in 1846 to be broken up. She took place...
By: Henry Meyer This 18-gun US Navy brig with her crack crew proved formidable in South Atlantic and Caribbean service. Designed by Benjamin Hutton, Jr.;...
By: Bernd Braatz 18-gun brig designed by Benj. Hutton, Jr., built at Philadelphia, by Nath. Hutton c.1803; for service in the So. Atlantic and Caribbean...