An exhibition standard 1:72 scale rigged and partially planked model of the Royal Naval 5th Rate Roebuck, a frigate of 1774 built by W.M. Brown

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An exhibition standard 1:72 scale rigged and partially planked model of the Royal Naval 5th Rate Roebuck, a frigate of 1774 built by W.M. Brown
with bound masts, yards with stun's'l booms and foot ropes, standing and running rigging with scale blocks, furled stitched linen sails with rope borders and reefing points, carved figurehead in the form of a lady holding a spear with dogs at her heels, hair rails, heads, anchors with bound wooden stocks, catheads, bitts, belaying rails and pins, rope coils, gratings, stove pipe, bell with canopy over, deck rails, hammock nettings with hammocks, companionways, capstan, ballustrading, double helm and carvel planked ship's boat with frames, bottom boards, thwarts and rudder, upper and main gun deck guns in carriages of waxed walnut and Brazilian cedar, unplanked below, the main whale revealing Navy Board style framing and with partially planked decks revealing interior detailing and 'tween decks has finely carved stern and quarter galleries with glazed windows, the whole finished in matt varnish and mounted on two carved wood columns -- 47 x 55in.(119.5 x 139.7cm.), Stand, fitted carrying box
See illustration and detail

Lot Essay

H.M.S. Roebuck was the nameship of a class of twenty ffth rates even though she herself was completed before any of the others had been laid down. Roebuck's keel was laid down in Chatham dockyard in October 1770 and she was launched on 28th April 1774. Measured by her builders at 886 tons, she was 140 feet in length with a 38 foot beam, and mounted 44 guns in total comprising 20-18 pounders, 22-9pdrs. and 2-6pdrs.

Shortly after completion, Roebuck was despatched to North American waters where the American War of Independence was just beginning. First in actionunder Hyde Parker in the Lower Hudson River, she was one of a three-ship squadron fired upon and badly damaged by the guns of Fort Washington on 9th October 1776. Although tactically defeated, the squadron's very presence in the river caused General Washington great concern and forced him to change his campaign plans in the area. Remaining on station off the eastern sea-board, Roebuck was in Lord Howe's fleet which played cat-and-mouse with the French during August 1778, and she then acted as flagship to Vice-Admiral Arbuthnot at the successful capitulation of Charleston, South Carolina, on 11th May 1780 where she was again badly damaged heading the line past the guns of Fort Moultrie. In her last encounter of the War on 14th April 1781, she captured, whilst in company with H.M.S Orpheus, the 36-gun American frigate Confederacy off the Virginian Capes,the latter loaded with valuable stores for Washington's army.

After a brief period as a hospital ship (1790-91), Roebuck next saw action in the West Indies during Sir John Jervis's operations of Martinique, and her final recorded engagement was the capture of the 12 gun Dutch Bataaf off Barbados on 6th July 1796. Thereafter serving as a troopship (1799), a guardship (1803) and a floating battery (1805), she was eventually broken up at Sheerness in July 1811.

This model was awarded Silver Medal at the M.E. Exhibition, Olympia, 1998


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