item: #1 of 7 id: 10694 author: Bridge, Cyprian, Sir title: Sea-Power and Other Studies date: None words: 80292 flesch: 62 summary: Calculations founded on the experience of manoeuvres show that in war time ships would require nearly three times the quantity used in peace. The experience of naval war, down to the close of that in which Trafalgar was the most impressive event, led to the virtual abandonment of ships of the line[92] above and below a certain class. keywords: admiral; army; battle; british; case; century; coal; command; communications; country; course; day; defence; empire; enemy; england; english; expedition; experience; fleet; footnote; force; french; general; history; invasion; land; line; lord; mahan; maritime; men; merchant; military; money; naval; navy; nelson; number; officers; peace; position; power; question; sea; seamen; service; ships; stores; supply; time; tons; trafalgar; vessels; war; way; years; | | cache: 10694.txt plain text: 10694.txt item: #2 of 7 id: 15299 author: Runciman, Walter Runciman, Baron title: Drake, Nelson and Napoleon date: None words: 93937 flesch: 65 summary: This is a form of cant to which those whom we regard as great men are a prey. Troubridge was audaciously requested to appoint a hangman (it may be he was asked to combine this with his other naval duties), and knowing the fine sense of noble dignity in the average sailor, we can easily imagine the flow of adjectives that accompanied the refusal, and how he would relate the outrage to which he had been subjected in quarterdeck language, that need not be here repeated, to his superior officer, Admiral Nelson, who must have felt the degradation of being selected to carry out as dirty a piece of work as ever devolved upon a public servant. keywords: action; admiral; battle; brave; british; cadiz; captain; chief; collingwood; commander; country; court; day; days; death; drake; emma; enemy; england; fleet; france; french; gallant; genius; god; good; government; great; guns; hamilton; hand; head; heart; high; king; lady; letter; life; line; little; lord; lord nelson; love; man; men; mind; naples; napoleon; nation; nelson; opinion; order; people; power; public; queen; right; sailors; sea; ships; sir; spanish; spirit; thought; time; victory; villeneuve; war; way; wife; world; years cache: 15299.txt plain text: 15299.txt item: #3 of 7 id: 17547 author: Fiske, Bradley A. (Bradley Allen) title: The Navy as a Fighting Machine date: None words: 105058 flesch: 51 summary: But surely the foolishness of such an idea would promptly disappear from the brain of any one if he would remind himself that simply because a man joins the army or navy he does not cease to be a human being, with the same emotions of fear as other men, the same sensitiveness to pain, the same dread of death, and the same horror of leaving his family unsupported after his death. It seems clear that such a thing would be a national disaster, for any loss of money to one man always means a loss of money or its equivalent to other men besides. keywords: army; attack; base; battle; case; coast; country; course; defense; end; enemy; enemy fleet; fact; fleet; force; general; long; machine; man; material; means; men; military; nations; naval; navy; offensive; officers; operations; parts; people; personnel; plans; power; reason; sea; ships; skill; strategy; time; training; war; work; years; | b; | period; | |; | |damage; | |value cache: 17547.txt plain text: 17547.txt item: #4 of 7 id: 28377 author: Mahan, A. T. (Alfred Thayer) title: Lessons of the war with Spain and other articles date: None words: 63281 flesch: 51 summary: To such successful operation, however, there is needed not only ships individually powerful, but numbers of such ships; and that the numbers of Sampson's fleet were maintained--not drawn off to other, though important, operations--even under such sore temptation as the dash of Cámara's fleet from Cadiz towards the Philippines, was due to the Department's ability to hold fast the primary conception of concentration upon a single purpose, even though running thereby such a risk as was feared from Cámara's armored ships reaching Dewey's unarmored cruisers before they were reinforced. The net result, therefore, of the argument, supported, as the writer believes, by the testimony of history, is: (1) that a navy which wishes to affect decisively the issues of a maritime war must be composed of heavy ships--battleships--possessing a maximum of fighting power, and so similar in type as to facilitate that uniformity of movement and of evolution upon which concentration, once effected, must depend for its maintenance, whether during a passage or in actual engagement; (2) that in such ships, regarded as fighting factors, which is their primary function, size is limited, as to the minimum, by the advisability of concentrating as much fighting power as possible under the hand of a single captain; but, on the other hand, size is also limited, as to its maximum, by the need of retaining ability to subdivide the whole fleet, according to particular exigencies; (3) as regards that particular form of mobility called speed, the writer regards it as distinctly secondary for the battleship; that, to say the least, the present proportions of weight assigned to fighting force should not be sacrificed to obtain increase of speed. keywords: action; admiral; blockade; case; cervera; cienfuegos; coast; conditions; course; cruisers; cuba; day; defence; department; division; enemy; fleet; force; general; havana; men; military; national; naval; navy; new; operations; port; power; present; santiago; sea; ships; spain; spanish; speed; squadron; states; time; united; vessels; war; west; writer cache: 28377.txt plain text: 28377.txt item: #5 of 7 id: 33445 author: Thursfield, James R. (James Richard) title: Naval Warfare date: None words: 40139 flesch: 57 summary: This is not always possible, because if the naval forces of the two belligerents are very unequally matched, it is always open to the weaker of the two to decline the conflict by keeping his main fleets in ports unassailable by naval force alone, and seeking to reduce the superiority of his adversary by assailing him incessantly with torpedo craft. They may merely be waiting in a position unassailable by naval force alone until the blockading forces are so weakened through incessant torpedo attack, through the wear and tear inflicted on them by the nature of the service on which they are engaged, through stress of weather, through the periodical necessity which compels even the best found ships to withdraw temporarily from the blockade for the purposes of repair, refit, and replenishment of their stores, and through the fatigue imposed on their officers and crews by the incessant vigilance which a blockade requires as to afford them a favourable opportunity of challenging a decision in the open. keywords: admiral; adversary; base; battle; blockade; british; case; command; commerce; conflict; craft; enemy; england; expedition; fleet; force; french; invasion; line; maritime; military; naval; nelson; power; sea; ships; state; time; torpedo; torrington; war; warfare cache: 33445.txt plain text: 33445.txt item: #6 of 7 id: 34459 author: Corbin, Thomas W. title: The Romance of War Inventions A Description of Warships, Guns, Tanks, Rifles, Bombs, and Other Instruments and Munitions of Warfare, How They Were Invented & How They Are Employed date: None words: 88994 flesch: 75 summary: All warships are in one sense destroyers, since it is their prime duty to destroy other ships, so why should one particular kind of boat be given this name specially? Its speed is not great, when compared with other ships, but it is constructed to carry enormous guns. keywords: 8vo; action; air; bridge; carbon; case; course; crown 8vo; current; earth; electricity; end; engine; extra; fact; feet; form; good; gun; guns; hand; illustrations; iron; life; light; machine; means; men; metal; modern; moment; oxygen; parachute; place; power; purpose; result; romance; round; second; set; shell; ship; speed; steam; steel; stories; story; submarine; surface; things; time; torpedo; use; war; water; way; weight; wire; work cache: 34459.txt plain text: 34459.txt item: #7 of 7 id: 40958 author: Dana, Richard Henry title: The Seaman's Friend Containing a treatise on practical seamanship, with plates, a dictionary of sea terms, customs and usages of the merchant service date: None words: 91902 flesch: 87 summary: In other vessels, 156. An old vessel fitted with shears, &c., and used for taking out and putting in the masts of other vessels. keywords: aft; anchor; block; board; boom; brace; crew; cross; deck; duty; end; fore; forward; haul; head; helm; jib; lee; line; main; master; mate; port; rigging; rope; round; royal; sail; seaman; second; set; ship; tack; time; topgallant; topmast; topsail; vessel; wages; watch; way; weather; wind; work; yard cache: 40958.txt plain text: 40958.txt