How Can We Help?
You are here:
< Back

St David in an action of the English Succession

HMS St David was a 54-gun fourth rate ship of the line of the English Royal Navy, launched in 1667 at Lydney.[1]

She foundered in Portsmouth Harbour in 1689 [2] and was raised in 1691 under the supervision of Edmund Dummer, Surveyor of the Navy.

The ship was later hulked and finally sold in 1713.

This is the ship about whose voyage John Baltharpe wrote “The Straights Voyage, or, St. Davids Poem”. while this may not be the most literary effort, it is very engaging and, being written by one of the crew, as opposed to an officer is rollicking, earthy, and illustrative of the lives of working seamen, John Baltharpe had been enslaved by the north africans previously, and so was well up for a scrap with the Algerians, which was the voyage the poem illustrates

Notes

  1. ^ Lavery 2003, p. 161.
  2. ^ ADM 106/390/13

References

The straights voyage, or, St. Davids poem https://quod.lib.umich.edu/e/eebo/A30597.0001.001?rgn=main;view=fulltext


Categories
Table of Contents