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Life and Naval Career of Admiral Sir Richard J. Strachan, Baronet, G.C.B.

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 February 2009

Thomas A. Wise
Affiliation:
Fellow of the Royal Historical Society

Extract

The duties required of a captain of the navy during the Continental war, at the beginning of the present century, were peculiarly difficult. They often involved questions of great national importance, which required intelligence, judgment, and energy, not always united in the same person. On the possessors of such qualities we look back with pride and satisfaction, as to them we owe our high position among the nations. Similar occasions may not again occur for developing such qualities. International and maritime law is now more correctly defined, and the same scope is not given to commanders of iron-clads, as to those who commanded wooden ships. The latter depended on their sailing qualities and power of manoeuvring; the former have only to find out the weak parts of their antagonists, and by the weight of artillery to send their opponents to the bottom. But while these changes in ships have taken place, the race of seamen continues the same. The like courage remains, ready to fight the country's battles and to gain victories, as in former days, when the sailor was prepared to undergo every hardship, and with calmness and sagacity to take advantage of every passing event for maintaining the national glory.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Royal Historical Society 1873

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References

page 43 note * Victoires et Conquétes, tome xvi. p. 195.

page 46 note * “Memoirs of R. P. Ward,” by the Hon. Ed. Phipps, vol. i. p. 275.