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Tom Cunliffe |
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Historical research work Not so long ago I held a seat on the National Historic Ships Committee,
working up the Core Collection of heritage vessels on behalf of the United
Kingdom. Because of this and my other links with traditional sail, I have become
interested in researching historical information. The results often appear in articles written for the
journal, Maritime Life and
Traditions and, in France, in the review Le Chasse-maree. The
authoritative three-volume work, Pilots, which
was published late in
2001 offers many examples of my research work. The extract below is Research in response to private enquiries concerning individual yachts, ships, seamen and passengers, shipwrecks, genealogy, etc., is now passed on to my daughter Hannah who, as a graduate in history with an unusual knowledge of seafaring, runs her own business at www.researchthepast.com. Her work has spread from discovering the seafaring ancestors of a family of immigrants from the Far East to pinpointing the whereabouts of the wreck of the explorer Dampier's ship, HMS Roebuck. Hannah's involvement allows me to keep such exciting projects more or less 'in-house' and still leaves me on-hand for overview or specialised analysis where requried. Extract from Pilots - 'Swansea' chapter:- Boarding pilots from Swansea schooners in the early 19th century In calm weather, the Swansea schooners were propelled by twenty-foot sweeps. A ten-foot punt was towed for boarding in airs too light for the schooner to work herself alongside ships. Later, larger boats seem to have carried the punt on deck out at sea and launched it for boarding as was customary throughout the Bristol Channel.
(Picture - Oil on Canvas, signed Jas. Harris 1848, published in Under Sail)
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