An exhibition standard 1:72 scale rigged and partially planked model of the 74 gun ship 'Alfred' of 1774

細節
An exhibition standard 1:72 scale rigged and partially planked model of the 74 gun ship 'Alfred' of 1774
built by W.M. Brown with bound masts, yards with stun's'l/booms, and foot ropes, standing and running rigging and full suit of stitched linen sails with rope bindings, carved figurehead in the form of King Alfred holding a scroll, hair rails, heads, anchors, catheads, bitts, belaying rails and pins, rope coils, gratings, stove pipe, capstan, deck rails, companionways, balustrading, bell and canopy, deck light and double helm, main and upper deck guns in carriages, finely carved and decorated stern and quarter gallery details and glazed windows, the hull unplanked below the main whale revealing Navy Board style framing and with partially planked decks revealing beams and 'tween decks and two carved planked and framed ships boat's with bottom boards and thwarts, in chocks, the whole finished in matt varnish, black and grey -- 39 x 51in. (99 x 129.5cm.)
See illustration

拍品專文

This model was awarded Gold Medal M.E. Exhibition London 1997.

H.M.S. 'Alfred', the nameship of her class of four seventy-four gun Third Rate's, was ordered from Chatham Dockyard on 13 August 1772 and her keel was laid there in November the same year. Launched on 22 October 1778, she was 169 feet in length with a 47 foot beam, and was measured by her builder at 1,620 tons. By the time she was completed, the American War of Independence was under way and France and Spain had both allied themselves with the colonists to make mischief at England's expense. As a large new ship-of-war, 'Alfred' was commissioned immediately and took part in all major sea actions beginning with Rodney's so-called 'Moonlight' battle off the Virginia coast (5 September 1781), at the defense of Basse Terre [St. Kitts] against three determined French assults (25 January 1782), with Hood off Dominica (9 April 1782), and at the crowning victory of the Battle of the Saintes (12 April 1782)

With the experience of that conflict behind her, she took part in the Napoleonic Wars, being present at the Glorious First of June 1794, the capture of St. Lucia in May 1796, the bombardment of Copenhagen 1807, and the capture of Guadeloupe in February 1810. By then however her active career was drawing to a close and, even before peace came, she was no longer deemed fit for sea and was broken up in May 1814.