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HMS Warrior Model Ship

£770.00  £693.00

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 HMS Warrior Model Ship   HMS Warrior Model Ship   HMS Warrior Model Ship   HMS Warrior Model Ship 

Description ::
Handcrafted, scratch built and ready made. Absolutely nothing to do, except to remove from their boxes!
 
 
I have been buying online from Premier Ship Models for almost two years and having purchased about ten different models I may confidently recommend Premier Ship to all collectors.
 
The craftman is detailed and perfect. The shipment is precise. The service provided by the team is both professional and very friendly.
 
I'd like to thank everyone in Premier Ship for the extraordinary service provided each and everytime I place an order. I will definitely be coming back for more pieces for my collection.
 
Thank You
 
 
Original specifications of HMS Warrior model ship:
 
(ex-Oil Hulk, C77, Warrior, Vernon III, Warrior), Frigate (2f/3m), L/B/D 128m * 17.8m * 7.9m, Hull: Iron, Complement: 700 – 709, Armament: 26 * 68pdr, 4 * 40pdr, 10 * 110 pdr, 2 *20 pdr, 1 * 12pdr, 1 * 6pdr, Designer: Isaac Watts, Thomas Lloyd, Built: Thames Iron Works, Blackwall, England; 1861.


In response to the French Navy ordering six iron-hulled ships, the First Sea Lord, Sir John Pakington, developed plans for what would be the most powerful and heavily armoured ship afloat. On the basis of the heaviest guns alone, Warrior was classified as a 40-gun ship.

HMS Warrior’s great innovation was in being the first ocean going warship to have an iron hull. As a result, she was also the largest warship of her day. Perhaps more distinctive was Warrior’s grateful 6.5:1 length to breadth ratio.

HMS Warrior was not included as a line of battleship. Rather her superior speed enabled her to outdistance and outmanoeuvre any steam battleship that she might encounter. Although designed to fight under steam, she was also rigged as a three-masted ship.

Captain A. A. Cochrane commissioned HMS Warrior as part of the Channel fleet on August 1, 1962, and her active-duty service was confined as such to the Channel fleet, in order to face the French threat at Cherbourg. During her first commission, she sailed as far as Lisbon and Gibraltar, and made a tour of Britain.

HMS Warrior then underwent a number of refits between 1864 and 1875. One of her most remarkable accomplishment was in 1869, when she was assigned to tow the HMS Bermuda to the Royal Navy Base in Bermuda.

In 1984, she was renamed Vernon II, but later regained her rightful name in 1923. In 1942, she was again renamed Oil Hulk C77.

Interest in preserving and restoring the Warrior began in the 1960s, but the Navy held on to the ship until 1978. In 1997, she was placed under the aegis of the Maritime Trust (and later the Warrior Preservation Trust). Initial financing for the Trust came from John Smith’s Manifold Trust, and the Manpower Services Commission provided the resources. In 1987, HMS Warrior 1860, as she is officially known, was towed to Portsmouth and put on permanent public display at the Naval Base.

Lambert, Warrior. Wells, Immortal Warrior.
 
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