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Wednesday, 22 April 2026

French civil training ship Almak 2012-

Scheveningen, Netherlands 17 April 2026

France-flagged, homeport Concarneau, IMO 9682033, MMSI 228037900 and call sign FIIA. Laid down by Chantier Piriou Freres, Concarneau, France in September 2012, launched on 11 July 2013 and commissioned on 27 September 2012. Preceded by Léopard-class. Based on the P43 design developed by her builders. Owner Defense Council International (DCI), manager Navocean, Paris, France. Used for training cadets of foreign navies of Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Libya and Quatar.

The estimated material and personnel strength of the Japanese Maritime Self-Defence Force in 1960 according to the Australia Station Intelligence Summary dated 1 June 1955

An item reported that under the present 6-year programme the Japanese Maritime Self-Defence Force would have in 1960 totally 120,700 tons naval shipping, 179 aircraft including jets and a personnel strength of 33,600 men.

Source

Website Royal Australian Navy, Sea Power Centre.

American battleship preliminary design for a hypothetical 63,500 tons battleship dated 13-12-1916

©Warshipsresearch.blogspot.com

Dimensions 975.0 (water line)-998’0” (over all) x 103.0 (extreme on waterline)-105’6” (molded on water line) x 32.9 feet. Freeboard maximum at stem 29’6”, at A.P. 29’6” feet and at side 28’6”.

Total normal displacement: 63,500 tons.

Hull 30,150

Hull fittings 3,065

Protection 13,300

Steam engineering 6,250

Reserve feed 1,200

Battery 2,850

Ammunition 2,000

Equipment 775

Outfit and 2/3 stores 1,050

Fuel oil 2/3 full supply 2,850

Margin 10

 

Length boiler room 24, engine room 120, motor rooms 56, total machinespace 264.

Main side belt armor 19.8 1/2 extreme width 9’0”below water line-thickness 13”-13”-7”.

Barbettes thickness 12.5” (heavy part)-4’ (light part).

Turrets thickness 18’(port)-10-9” (sides)-5” (top)-9”(rear).

Conning tower proper thickness 16”and top 8”.

Conning tower tube thickness 16” (heavy part)-6” (light part).

Uptake protection thickness 10-7-5”.

Protective deck total thickness middle 3”after 4”.

Speed 30 knots with 90,000 shp. Electric drive propulsion. Cruising radius 10 knots/12,000 nautical miles. 24 Boiler rooms.

Armament 4x3-16” 50 cal guns, 21-5” quick firing guns, 3” high powered anti aircraft guns and 4-21” submerged torpedo tubes.

Note

1. Benjamin Ryan Tillman (11 August 1847-3 July 1918), Democratic Party plotician, governor of South Carolina 1890-1894 and senator 1895-1918. See for instance: Construction of battleships. Remarks of Hon. Benjamin R. Tillman,... relative to the construction of 60,000-ton battleships; also copy of a Senate resolution instructing the Committee on Naval Affairs to make an investigation of the matter, together with an article entitled "Build the Limit," by Commander W.A. Moffett, United States Navy. Presented by Mr. Tillman. June 20, 1916. It deals with the maximum size of a battleship still able to pass the Panama Canal.

Source

S. Naval History and Heritage Command. Bureau of Ships Spring Styles Book 1 1911-1925. S-584-104. 

France hired transport Canton for French expedition to Madagascar in 1895

With the First Madagascar Expedition (May 1883-December 1885) started the Franco-Hova War. In December 1885 was a Treaty signed which the French interpreted as being a Protectorate Treaty which was denied by Queen Ranavalona III. The result was the Second Madagascar Expedition December 1894-1 October 1895) ending in Madagascar becoming a French colony (1897-1958). The Malagasy Republic was an autonomous French territory until she became independent as the Democatric Republic of Madagascar in 1975. Left Philippeville [nowadays Skikda, Algeria] on 1 April with Algerian regiment.

Source

Captain Pasfield Oliver, “The Madagascar expedition”: The United Service Magazine, volume XI. New Series. April 1895 to September 1895, p. 136-137. 

Russian survey vessel Okhotsk 1934-1960s

©Warshipsresearch.blogspot.com

Part of Okean-class consisting of the Murman, Okean and Okhotsk. Laid down by No. 194/A. Marti, Leningrad/St. Petersburg, Russia with yard number 203 on 27 June 1934, launched on 1 November 1935, commissioned on 20 April 1937 and stricken in the 1960s.

Sources

Breyer, S. and N. Polmar. Guide to the Soviet Navy, 2nd edition.

Huan, Cl. La Flotte rouge.

Budzbon, P., J. Radziemski, and M. Twardowski. Warships of the Soviet Fleets 1939-1945, volumes I-3.

Kouznetsov, N. La Marine sovietique en guerre 1941-1945.

Meister, J. Soviet Warships of the Second World War.

Pavlov, A.S. Warships of the USSR and Russia 1945-1995.

Rohwer, J. and M.S. Monakov. Stalin’s Ocean-going Fleet. Soviet naval strategy and shipbuilding programmes 1935-1953.

Schulz-Troge, U. Die sowjetische Kriegsmarine.

Far Eastern Sighting Guide (ONI-F-31-FE).

Jane’s Fighting Ships several editions.

Warshipsresearch.blogspot.com

British whaler Narwhul visited Bay of Islands, New Zealand in 1836

Arrived on 15 December, barque, name master Brind, tonnage 350 tons, belonged to London, England, active in the sperm oil fishery, cargo 1,000 barrels oil

Source

Accounts and papers of the House of Commons: seventeen volumes. Colonies; Emigration; Australia; Prisons, West Indies;etc. Session 15 November 1837-16 August 1838. Vol. XL. 

German cargo ship (ex-Analena 2006, MSC Portugal 2006-2008, Analena 2008-2020, NCL Averoy 2020-2025) Elbia 20225-

Bremerhaven, Germany 19 April 2026

Antigua&Barbuda-flagge , homeport St. John's, IMO 9326990, MMSI 305573000 and call sign V2IE4. Owner/manager Danz&Tietjens Schiffahrtsgruppe, Burg, Germany. Built by JJ Sietas Schifsswerft, Hamburg, Germany in 2006. Germany-flagged, 2006, United KIngdom-flagged 2006-2008, Germany-flagged 2008-2009, United Kingdom-flagged 2009-2014, Portugal-flagged 2014-2025). 

Russian submarine L-19 1935-1944

©Warshipsresearch.blogspot.com

Part of L Series XIII-class. In 1938 intended to be christened in Gor’kovets. Laid down by Baltic Works, Leningrad, Soviet Union with yard number 276 on 26 December 1935, disassembled and sent to 202 (Dalzavod), Vladivostok and assembled, launched on 25 May 1938, completed on 4 November 1939, commissioned on 4 November 1939 and sunk after 23 August 1945 probably striking a mine in the La Pérouse Strait. Pacific Fleet.

Sources

Breyer, S. and N. Polmar. Guide to the Soviet Navy, 2nd edition.

Huan, Cl. La Flotte rouge.

Budzbon, P., J. Radziemski, and M. Twardowski. Warships of the Soviet Fleets 1939-1945, volume I.

Jordan, J. Soviet submarines 1945 to the present.

Kouznetsov, N. La Marine sovietique en guerre 1941-1945.

Meister, J. Soviet Warships of the Second World War.

Pavlov, A.S. Warships of the USSR and Russia 1945-1995.

Polmar N. and J. Noot. Submarines of the Russian and Soviet Navies 1718-1990.

Rohwer, J. and M.S. Monakov. Stalin’s Ocean-going Fleet. Soviet naval strategy and shipbuilding programmes 1935-1953.

Schulz-Troge, U. Die sowjetische Kriegsmarine.

Far Eastern Sighting Guide (ONI-F-31-FE).

Jane’s Fighting Ships several editions.

Warshipsresearch.blogspot.com

Construction status of the German kriegsfischkutter KFK 455 in 1944

©Warshipsresearch.blogspot.com

List of planning with deadlines for new construction of warships dated Berlin 22 May 1944. Built by Gusto, Schiedam, Netherlands. Yard number 154. Date building ordered3 October 1942. Date completion unknown depends on delivery propulsion allowing a future maximum completion of 5-7 Kriegsfischkutters possible.

Source

Deutsches Historisches Institut Moska. Records 500 findbuch 12453-file 152. 

British anti-submarine frigate HMS Loch Eyenort 1945

River-class ©Warshipsresearch.blogspot.com

Loch-class. ©Warshipsresearch.blogspot.com

Bay-class. ©Warshipsresearch.blogspot.com

Modified River-class hull and improved armament. Of this class were 28 ships built and 54 cancelled. To be built by Harland & Wolff. Cancelled in 1945.

Sources

Jane’s Fighting Ships 1944-1945

David K. Brown. Nelson to Vanguard. Warship design and development 1923-1945.

David K. Brown. Atlantic Escorts. Ships, Weapons and Tactics in World War II.

J.J.. Colledge/Ben Warlow. Ships of the Royal Navy. The Complete Record of all Fighting Ships of the Royal Navy from the 15th Century to the Present.

Norman Friedman. British Destroyers&Frigates/ The Second World War and After.

Leo Marriott. Royal Navy Frigates since 1945. 2nd edition.

G.M. Stephen. British warship designs since 1906.

A.W. Watson. ‘Corvettes and frigates’ in: Transactions of the Institution of Naval Architects, 1947, p. 165-185

British mule transport Empress hired for the Abyssinian expedition in 1867

According to a letter dated Admiralty, Somerset House 6th September of the Director of Transport Services W.R. Mends to the Under Secretary of State for India was the mule transport Empress for service in the Mediterranean. Number transport 14. Tonnage 780 tons. Horsepower 140hp. Rate per ton per month. If discharged at home 30s10d and abroad 30s0d. Date of acceptance 6 September. Likely to sail not yet known. On passage to Deptford. Engaged for three months certain. The British Abyssinian Expedition found place between 4 December 1867-13 May 1868 against the Ethiopian Empire or Abyssinia to release the imprisoned missionaries and representatives of the British government.

Source

Accounts and papers: thirty-five volumes. Army. Abyssinian expedition. Session 19 November 1867-31 July 1868. Vol. XLIII., p. 115.

Australian whaler Wolf visited Bay of Islands, New Zealand in 1836

Arrived on15 December, barque, name master Evans, tonnage 265 tons, belonged to New South Wales, active in the sperm oil fishery, cargo 800 barrels oil

Source

Accounts and papers of the House of Commons: seventeen volumes. Colonies; Emigration; Australia; Prisons, West Indies;etc. Session 15 November 1837-16 August 1838. Vol. XL. 

German sail training schip Deutschland 1927-

Bremerhaven, Germany 19 April 2026

Launched by Joh. C. Tecklenborg, Geestemünde, Germany on 14 June 1927, delivered late 1927, at the end of the Second World War used as hospital ship, nowadays museum ship. 

Construction status of the German submarine U 2288 in 1944

List of planning with deadlines for new construction of submarines by foreign shipyards dated Berlin 22 May 1944. Type XXVII. Yard Simmering (Cantieri Riuniti dell’Adriatico), Monfalcone, Italy. Date building ordered 28 March 1944. Date completion July 1944.

Source

Deutsches Historisches Institut Moska. Records 500 findbuch 201253-file 152. 

British destroyer HMS White Bear 1918

Seymour, Parker-class flotilla leader. ©Warshipsresearch.blogspot.com

Sistership Veteran. ©Warshipsresearch.blogspot.com

HMS Amazon D39 (1925-1927). ©Warshipsresearch.blogspot.com

An Admiralty modified W-class destroyer ordered under the 14th War Programme . Of the 38 ships ordered were just 7 completed, the other 31 were cancelled. Preceded by S-and Parker-classes and succeeded by Thornycroft type destroyer leaders Ambuscade and Amazon. To be built by Fairfield Shipbuilding&Engineering Company, Govan, Scotland. Order cancelled on 26 November 1918.

British merchant ship Batavia chartered for the Anglo-Egyptian War of 1882

Between July-September 1882 was the United Kingdom in war with Egyptian and Sudanese troops ending in the British occupation of Egypt. The British government chartered between July-August a lot of merchant steamships for transporting troops, stores etc. from the United Kingdom to Egypt including the Batavia of the Cunard Line.

Source

The Nautical Magazine. Fifty-first year. Volume VII. July 1882. 

Japanese auxiliary patrol boat No. 84 1945-1948 and MS 19 1948-

©Warshipsresearch.blogspot.com

Type B ordered under the 1943-1944 Programme to be part of the coastal forces. Of the 280 ordered were just 56 laid down and even a less number finally completed when the Second World War ended. To serve as convoy escorts were the boats also fitted out with minesweeping gears. Based on a traditional wood built fishing boat. With a displacement of 238 tons and as dimensions 93.5 (between perpendiculars)-105. 3/4 (over all) x 20.2 x 7.75 feet. Geared diesel propulsion with 400bhp via one shaft and speed 9 knots. Crew numbered 26 men. Armament consisted of 2/4x1-2.5cm guns and 8-12 depth charges. Built by Yonago. Completed on 7 June 1945, handed over to the Japan Maritime Safety Agency and renamed MS 19 on 1 May 1948.

Australian whaler Genii visited Bay of Islands, New Zealand in 1836

Arrived on 15 December, brig , name master Banks, tonnage 164 tons, belonged to New South Wales, active in the sperm oil fishery, cargo 500 barrels oil

Source

Accounts and papers of the House of Commons: seventeen volumes. Colonies; Emigration; Australia; Prisons, West Indies;etc. Session 15 November 1837-16 August 1838. Vol. XL. 

Tuesday, 21 April 2026

Dutch sailing passenger vessel (ex-Marie 1903-1945, Sea Explorer 1945-1965, Ruth 1965-1985, Elektra 1985-2008) Oban 2008-

Scheveningen, Netherlands 17 April 2026

Netherlands-flagged, homeport Kampen, Netherlands, IMO 9096650, MMSI 246085000 and call sign PDWJ. Built at Emden, Germany as herring lugger Marie AE95 by Cassens Werft in 1903, sold to Denmark in 1930 active between the Danish islands and Sweden, since 1985 passenger ship. 2-Mast schooner. 

Australian whaler Mary visited Bay of Islands, New Zealand in 1836

Arrived on 11 December, barque , name master Dryborough, tonnage - tons, belonged to New South Wales, active in the sperm oil fishery, cargo 1,600 barrels oil

Source

Accounts and papers of the House of Commons: seventeen volumes. Colonies; Emigration; Australia; Prisons, West Indies;etc. Session 15 November 1837-16 August 1838. Vol. XL. 

Japanese patrol vessel PS 73 1950s

PS 66. ©Warshipsresearch.blogspot.com

Operated by the Maritime Safety Board. Length about 121.6 feet

British screw steam transport Harbinger in the Crimean War on 28-10-1854

According to a list of the return of the disposition in the Black Sea on 28 October 1854 drawn up by Captain and Principal Agent of Transports P. Christie, “Melbourne”, Balaklava, Crimea: number transport 86, present position Constantinople, Turkey, remarks sent for vegetables for the army. The Crimean War found place between 16 October 1853-30 March 1856 between Ottoman Empire, France, United Kingdom and Sardinia at one side and Russia and Greece on the other side. The British Government chartered a large number of merchant ships for transporting troops and stores.

Source

Reports from Committees: eight volumes. 3-Part II. Army before Sebastopol. Session 12 December 854-14 August 1855. Vol. IX-Part II. 

British anti-submarine frigate HMS Loch Linnhe (K 632) 1945

River-class ©Warshipsresearch.blogspot.com

Loch-class. ©Warshipsresearch.blogspot.com

Bay-class. ©Warshipsresearch.blogspot.com

Modified River-class hull and improved armament. Of this class were 28 ships built and 54 cancelled. To be built by William Pickersgill. Cancelled in 1945.

Sources

Jane’s Fighting Ships 1944-1945

David K. Brown. Nelson to Vanguard. Warship design and development 1923-1945.

David K. Brown. Atlantic Escorts. Ships, Weapons and Tactics in World War II.

J.J.. Colledge/Ben Warlow. Ships of the Royal Navy. The Complete Record of all Fighting Ships of the Royal Navy from the 15th Century to the Present.

Norman Friedman. British Destroyers&Frigates/ The Second World War and After.

Leo Marriott. Royal Navy Frigates since 1945. 2nd edition.

G.M. Stephen. British warship designs since 1906.

A.W. Watson. ‘Corvettes and frigates’ in: Transactions of the Institution of Naval Architects, 1947, p. 165-185

Construction status of the German submarine U 2287 in 1944

List of planning with deadlines for new construction of submarines by foreign shipyards dated Berlin 22 May 1944. Type XXVII. Yard Simmering (Cantieri Riuniti dell’Adriatico), Monfalcone, Italy. Date building ordered 28 March 1944. Date completion July 1944.

Source

Deutsches Historisches Institut Moska. Records 500 findbuch 201253-file 152.

German sailing passenger ship (ex-Vilm 1952-1992) Roald Amundsen 1992-

Scheveningen, Netherlands 17 April 2026

Germany-flagged, homeport Eckernförde, IMO 8994489, MMSI 211215170 and call sign DARG. Built as a fish- annex tank lugger, homeport Peenemünde by Rosslau shipyard, Wolgast, DDR in 1952. Part of the East German navy Project RL 235 tanker, derived from tank luggers as built by Matthias Thesen Werft, Wismar? Converted into a brig in 1992 and maiden vyoage in 1993. Ex-Vilm renamed January 1992. 

American whaler Erie visited Bay of Islands, New Zealand in 1836

Arrived on 1 December, ship , name master Dennis, tonnage - tons, belonged to USA, active in the sperm oil fishery, cargo 1,500 barrels oil

Source

Accounts and papers of the House of Commons: seventeen volumes. Colonies; Emigration; Australia; Prisons, West Indies;etc. Session 15 November 1837-16 August 1838. Vol. XL. 

American destroyer minelayer USS Sproston DD-173 1918-1937

Destroyer of the DD 75-347 type. ©Warshipsresearch.blogspot.com

Wickes-class light minelayer. ©Warshipsresearch.blogspot.com

Part of Wickes-class preceded by Caldwell-classs succeeded by Clemson-class divided into Little-subclass, Lamberton-subclass and Tattnall-subclasses. Laid down by Union Iron Works, San Francisco, California, USA on 20 April 1918, launched on 10 August 1918, commissioned on 12 July 1919, reclassified as minelayer DM-13 on 17 July 1920, decommissioned at Pearl Harbor, Hawaiion 15 August 1922, stricken on 1 December 1936 and sunk as a target on 20 July 1937. 

British merchant steamship Nyanza hired for the Sudan campaign in 1885

Engaged by the British government for the new expedition to the Sudan. Gross tonnage 1,870 tons. Transported stores for Bombay. Due to the despressed state of the shipping trade was the Admiralty able to hire troop transports towards Suakin, Sudan for just 17s 6 ton/month in contrary to the 28s ton/month in the 1882 campaign. The first Suakim expedition was in February 1884, the second one in March 1885. The campaigns were part of the Mahdist War (1881-189) between the Mahdist Sudanese and the Khedivate Egypt later the United Kingdom resulting in the condominium Anglo-Egyptian Sudan 1899-1956 and then succeeded by the Protectorate of Uganda, Italian Libya and the Republic of Sudan, nowadays Egypt, Libya, South Sudan, Sudan and Uganda. On 26 January 1885 fell Khartoum and the British garrison was massacred. In March was a British expeditionary force sent to Suakin but lacking success and finally withdrawn.

Source

The Steamship dated 16 February 1885, p. 64. 

Pakistani seaward defence motor launch (ex-SDML 1266) SDML 3520 1950s

©Warshipsresearch.blogspot.com

HDML type. Formerly known as Harbour Defence Motor Launch, renumbered in 1951. Displacement 46 (standard)-54 (full load) tons and as dimensions 72 (over all) x 15 5/6 x 5 1/3 feet. Diesel propulsion with 2 shafts, horsepower 320 bhp and a speed if 12 knots. Crew numbered 14 men. Armament consisted of 1-3pd gun, 1-2cm anti aircraft gun. 

Yugoslavian cargo ship Niko Matkowic bound for Libya in 1940 according to a letter of the German naval attaché at Istanbul dated 12 February 1940

In his letter dated Istanbul, Turkey 12 February 1940 No. 729 g. reported the German naval attaché to the Oberkommando der Wehrmacht Abteilung Ausland the neutral ships passing Istanbul coming out of the Black Sea and loaded with contraband for or chartered by the enemy. An item reported the Yugoslavian cargo ship Niko Matkowic on 3 February 1940 with a full load boards from Constanta, Romania for Tripoli, Libya.

Source

Bundesarchiv. German Marineattaché for , Greece, Romania and Bulgaria 1939-1941. RM 12-II/459.

Dutch sailing passenger vessel (ex-Pol II 1926-1948, Lister 1948-1966) Artemis 1966-


Scheveningen, Netherlands 17 April 2026

Netherlands-flagged, IMO 5209699, MMSI 244875000 and call sign PCFB. Gross tonnage 321 tons, summer deadweight 457 tons and as dimensions 59 x 7,01 x 3,49 metres. Sail area 1.050 square metres. Speed 7 (engine)-9 (sail) knots. One 550hp caterpillar with bow thruster Built in 1926 at the Nylands Verksted, Oslo, Norway for whale fishery in the Arctic and Antartic. In the 50’s of the 20th century converted into a cargo ship operated between Asia and South-America. In 2001 bought by the Bruinsma brothers and rebuilt. 

Scottish Greenland whaler Hope in 1812

Caught 21 whales resulting in 142 tons oil. Homeport Peterhead.

Source

Annals of Peterhead from the foundation to the present time. P. Buchan, Peterhead, 1819. 

Japanese minesweeper MS 17 1950s

©Warshipsresearch.blogspot.com

Length 68.6 feet. The Chiyozuru-class with as dimensions 95 4/5 (overall) x 18 2/3 x 6 1/2 feeet and a displacement of 130 tons, wood-built between 1943-1945 as auxiliary sub chasers named after birds but which were before known as MS+number? 

British merchant ship Palmyra chartered for the Anglo-Egyptian War of 1882

Between July-September 1882 was the United Kingdom in war with Egyptian and Sudanese troops ending in the British occupation of Egypt. The British government chartered between July-August a lot of merchant steamships for transporting troops, stores etc. from the United Kingdom to Egypt including the Palmyra of the Cunard Line.

Source

The Nautical Magazine. Fifty-first year. Volume VII. July 1882. 

Japanese harbor craft CS 20 1950s

©Warshipsresearch.blogspot.com

Length 48.6 feet. Maritime Safety Board. 

Construction status of the German kriegsfischkutter KFK 454 in 1944

©Warshipsresearch.blogspot.com

List of planning with deadlines for new construction of warships dated Berlin 22 May 1944. Built by Gusto, Schiedam, Netherlands. Yard number 153. Date building ordered 3 October 1942. Date completion unknown depends on delivery propulsion allowing a future maximum completion of 5-7 Kriegsfischkutters possible.

Source

Deutsches Historisches Institut Moska. Records 500 findbuch 12453-file 152. 

Monday, 20 April 2026

Dutch work vessel (ex-Alverna 1961-2008, Diligentia 2008-2020) Thunderbird 2 2021-

Antwerpen, Belgium 10 April 2026

Netherlands-flagged, ENI 03021271, MMSI 244630162. Originally built by Haak, Zaandam, Netherlands in 1961 as inland cargo ship and converted into a fleet cleaner by TB-Shiprepair, Meppel, Netherlands between 2020-2021. Baptized on 16 July 2021 at Rotterdam. Owner Fleet Cleaner, Delft, Netherlands. 

Deeds of chartering for Dutch Greenland whalers De Jonge Glasemaker en de De Kous in 1660

Deed of authority dated 19 March 1660 by which merchant Hugo Grootvelt authorized his brother in law Leonard Crijser to convert what had been verbally upon into written deeds of chartering for the ships De Jonge Glasemaker en de De Kous and the ship of master Pronck to serve as Greenland whalers.

Source

Stadsarchief Rotterdam. Notary Vitus Mustelius Woutersz 18-511-123

Chinese frigate (ex-HMS Clover 1939-1947, Cloverlock 1947-) Kai Feng

Kai Feng©Warshipsresearch.blogspot.com
Flower-clas corvetteWarshipsresearch.blogspot.com

Part of Flower-class corvettes succeeded by Castle-class. Ordered on 25 July 1939, laid down by Fleming&Ferguson Ltd., Paisly, Scotland on 29 July 1940, launched on 30 January 1941, commissioned on 13 May 1941, sold to merchant shipping on 17 May 1947, renamed ss Cloverlock, later sold to People’s Republic of China. Stricken in 1989?

British proposal for an unnamed iron cased vessel with two shields dated 5 May 1862

Length 180 feet. Signed by Robert Spencer Robinson controller of the navy 1861-1871, chief constructor 1840-1863 Isaac Watts, constructor 1862 Joseph Large acting constructor Richard Abethell 1862.

Source

Website Royals Museums Greenwich Collection search. ID NPC 90-759081

Design German battle cruiser Q dated 1939

Ersatz Yorck-class. ©Warshipsresearch.blogspot.com

Design P-class. ©Warshipsresearch.blogspot.com

O-class. ©Warshipsresearch.blogspot.com

Preceded by Ersatz Yorck-class. Aim was to modify the P-class heavy cruisers design by fitting out with 3x2-38cm/15” instead of 28.3cm/11.1” calibre for the main armament. Displacement 29,364 (standard)-35,968 (full load) tons and as dimensiuons 248.2 (waterline)-256 (over all) x 30 x 8.02 metres or 814.4-839.111 x 98.5 x26.4 feet. Speed 35 knots. To be realized under the Plan Z. The project drawings were by 1940 complete and approved by Hitler and Raeder yet building finally cancelled. Ordered from the Germaniawerft, Kiel, Germany on 8 August 1939 and contract refined in September 1939. 

Axis convoy sighted in the Mediterranean according to the U.S. Joint Intelligence Committee. Daily summary dated 24 February 1942

An item reported that an Axis convoy consisting of 8 merchant ships and protected by a strong escort were sighted 270 miles north east of Misurata, Italian Libya going to the south

Source

Map Room Papers (Roosevelt Administration), 1942 - 1945. MR0423. U.S. Joint Intelligence Committee. Daily summary No. 76 dated 24 February 1942

French container ship (ex-Cosima 2004-2005, Norasia Atlas 2005-2006, Letavia 2006, Emirates Freedom 2006-2009, Letavia 2009-2021) CMA CGM Paranagua 2021-

Antwerpen, Belgium 10 April 2026

Malta-flagged, homeport Valletta, IMO 9246683, MMSI 229635000 and call sign 9HA5542. Owner/manager CMA CGM, Marseille, France. Built by New Szczecin Shipyard, Szczecin, Poland in 2005. Germany-flagged 2005, Liberia-flagged 2005-2021. 

Deed of chartering for Dutch Greenland whaler St. Pieter in 1660

Deed of chartering dated 14 February 1660 between former elderman Lieven van Coulster and Jan Pietersen Hedts master of the St. Pieter of 170 lasten to serve as Greenland whaler.

Source

Stadsarchief Rotterdam. Notary Vitus Mustelius Woutersz 18-511-69

Japanese minesweeper MS 02 1950s

©Warshipsresearch.blogspot.com

Length 68.6 feet. The Chiyozuru-class with as dimensions 95 4/5 (overall) x 18 2/3 x 6 1/2 feeet and a displacement of 130 tons, wood-built between 1943-1945 as auxiliary sub chasers named after birds but which were before known as MS+number?