HMS Cassandra, HMS Myrtle and HMS Gentian, Sunk in the Russia Revolution, Located

Ninety years on, locations of Royal Navy warships sunk in Russian Revolution are found The wrecks of three British warships sunk more than 90 years ago – seeking to prevent the Bolshevik Revolution from spreading West – have been located … Continue reading

Online Tour of NS Savanah – World’s first nuclear powered merchant ship

In 1819, the SS Savannah was first steamship in the world to cross the Atlantic Ocean.   Despite this accomplishment, the Savannah was a commercial failure and was converted back to sail shortly after returning from Europe.   It is somehow fitting that … Continue reading

Lost at Sea – The Ocean in the English Imagination, 1550-1750

The Folger Shakespeare Library in Washington, DC has been hosting an intriguing exhibit:  Lost at Sea – The Ocean in the English Imagination, 1550-1750.   Unfortunately the exhibit itself is almost over, running only through September 4th.  Nevertheless, for those of us who cannot make it … Continue reading

E Ship 1 – Has the Flettner Rotor Ship Finally Arrived?

The E Ship 1 arrived in Dublin last week with a cargo of wind turbines manufactured by Enercon.    What was striking was the ship itself, with four tall pillars rising vertically from the ship, two forward and two aft.   The … Continue reading

The Sinking of the Kursk – Ten Years Later

The Russian Oscar-II class nuclear-powered cruise missile submarine Kursk sank ten years ago yesterday with a loss of all aboard.  One hundred and sixteen crew members and two weapons experts died in what is believed to have been the explosion of a faulty torpedo.  At 154m … Continue reading

Shackleton’s 101-Year-Old Whisky – Aged in Ice

We recently posted about the world’s oldest champagne found on the Baltic seabed.  While not as old, yet equally historic, a case of Shackleton’s Whisky has recently gone on display at the the Canterbury Museum in Christchurch on New Zealand’s South … Continue reading

U.S. Coast Guard Celebrates 220th Birthday

Happy birthday to the United States Coast Guard!   Two hundred and twenty years ago today, Secretary of the Treasury Alexander Hamilton, created the Revenue-Marine, later renamed the Revenue Cutter Service.  For nine years, until the re-establishment of the United … Continue reading

A Brigantine Beneath Washington Street – Identifying the World Trade Center Ship

Two weeks ago the remains of an 18th century ship were found in the excavation of the World Trade Center site in Lower Manhattan.    On Thursday Warren Riess, an archaeologist specializing in marine history, speculated that the ship was  most likely a brigantine; … Continue reading

HMS Investigator, Abandoned in 1853, Found in Arctic

Earlier this month we posted about a new expedition by Parks Canada to search for Franklin’s ships, the Terrorand the Erebus.  Parks Canada also intended to search for theHMS Investigator, a ship which was caught in the ice and sank when sent … Continue reading

North Carolina’s Oldest Shipwreck Moved to the Graveyard of the Atlantic Museum

As a follow-up to a post from early June,  the remains of what is believed to be the wreck of a merchant ship from the mid-1600s are being moved to the Graveyard of the Atlantic Museum for preservation.  The wreck was uncovered … Continue reading

The Olympias Trireme – 5th Century B.C Warship Reborn

Many historians have long suspected that the performance of the Greek triremes as reported by Esculus and others, were overstated.  Some have referred to them as “mythological.”   The  Olympias trireme, built in 1987,  designed by the naval architect John Coates, who died last week, … Continue reading