
HMS Eurydice (1843) - Wikipedia
HMS Eurydice was a 26-gun Royal Navy corvette which was the victim of one of Britain's worst peacetime naval disasters when she sank in 1878.
HMS Eurydice - Wikipedia
HMS Eurydice (1843) was a 24-gun post ship launched in 1843. She became a training ship in 1861, and foundered in 1878.
HMS Eurydice - The Shipwreck Centre & Maritime Museum
2023年10月27日 · Over the years, sailors have sighted a phantom ship, thought to be HMS Eurydice. There is a story involving Commander F. Lipscomb of a Royal Navy submarine which took evasive action in the 1930s to avoid the ship, only for it to disappear.
BBC - Hampshire - Haunted history of HMS Eurydice - BBC News
2009年10月28日 · The sinking of HMS Eurydice in 1878 with the loss of 364 lives was one of Britain's worst peace-time naval disasters. The ship sailed from Portsmouth to the West Indies and Bermuda in 1877. On...
HMS Eurydice (1843) | Military Wiki | Fandom
HMS Eurydice was a 26-gun Royal Navy corvette which was the victim of one of Britain's worst peace-time naval disasters when she sank in 1878.
The Last Four Days of the Eurydice - Royal Museums Greenwich
2017年5月9日 · Explore the personal story behind one of Britain’s worst peace time disasters. This blog delves into the tragedy of the sinking of the HMS Eurydice, through Sir Edmund Verney's work, with a specific focus on the 281 men who lost their lives.
What Happened on Final Four Days of Eurydice - RealClearHistory
2022年3月4日 · One of the Britain’s worst peace-time naval disasters, much has been written about the events of 24 March 1878. However, what makes this work particularly notable is its focus. Whilst the disaster is described, it serves as a backdrop to the true motivation for the book; the great human loss.
HMS Eurydice (1843) - Wikiwand
HMS Eurydice was a 26-gun Royal Navy corvette which was the victim of one of Britain's worst peacetime naval disasters when she sank in 1878.
HMS Eurydice - pdavis.nl
The Eurydice was a sailing ship of ancient type, built in pursuance of the old traditions which had gradually established certain accepted rules of shipbuilding; she was very bluff and broad in the beam, denuded of most of her guns for convenience as a training ship, and presumably possessed of all imaginable advantages for safety and stability ...
WRECKSITE - EURYDICE FRIGATE 1843-1878
The Eurydice was a wooden fully-rigged fast sailing ship, which had been built in 1843 and later converted to a purely sail-training vessel. On 24th March 1878 it was returning from a training cruise in the West Indies with 300 young seamen on board as well as 35 passengers.