Scots and the Sea

Scots and the Sea
ISBN-10
1840186941
ISBN-13
9781840186949
Category
History
Pages
256
Language
English
Published
2003
Publisher
Mainstream Publishing Company
Author
James D. G. Davidson

Description

Scotland has over 6,000 miles of rugged coastline. Nowhere on shore is more than 45 miles from tidal waters, and seven of the biggest towns and cities are seaports. No wonder, then, that the sea has shaped Scotland and Scots have helped to shape maritime history, trade and communications. Scots and the Sea is an intriguing account of this continuing interaction. It takes a look at some of the peronalities involved; at the courage and endurance of fisherman and their families, and the individual brilliance of Admiral Cochrane, who helped establish free nations across the globe; at the self-serving activities of pirates like Captain Kidd and the bravery of lifeboat volunteers. It visits ports, harbours and shipyards and looks at Scotland's role in ship construction and marine engineering from the galleys and longships of early history to clippers, steamships, ocean liners, hovercraft and oilrigs- and research into wave and tidal power. The book details the origins of Scotland's maritime traditions, the founding of a Scottish navy, the pressures towards Union, development of trade, ports, harbours, Shipbuilding and marine engineering and acts of courage at sea. It also recounts the exploits and achievements of Scots in all these fields from Sir Andrew Wood to Sir Andrew Cunningham

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