Don't Forget Your Old Shipmate
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- Опубликовано: 8 фев 2025
- I don't own the rights to the original sources and I'm making no profit from playing with them. I'm just having some harmless fun.
For a Minor Characters Challenge. Long we've tossed on the rolling main, now we're safe ashore, Jack...
The footage is from the Hornblower TV mini series (A&E/Meridian) and the film Master & Commander: The Far Side of the World (20th Century Fox), with a couple of bits from HMS Defiant (Damn the Defiant, in the US), which is also 20th Century Fox, I believe.
Both excellent films.
I alone pushed him into the hold...
We need another good sailing movie. Or maybe I just need to watch Master & Commander again
You probably need to watch Master & Commander again! Not that you should need an excuse to watch it all over again. 😉
Read the books. Patrick O'Brien's Aubrey/Maturin series is worth the time. The movie is actually two books combined. Must admit they did a fine job splicing two complete novels into one, 2 hour film. Just can't expect the true nature of capt jack and stephen's relationship to be revealed. Maturin is actually a brittish spy.
@@nealrose8653 The books are good, if only they were more plot driven and less about Maturin's inner feelings. It drags the plot too much. Because of this aspect I prefer the Sharpe series.
You read my mind bro
Both? Both. Definitely both.
To the wives and sweet hearts, may they never meet
An excellent rendering, nothing effeminate here, thank you.
This singing reminds me of the old boys, the last British sailor men to work cargos without engines, who taught me my basic seamanship on the same waters Drake, Cook and Nelson learned their small boat handling.
You'd probably really like The Longest Johns. Great shanty band that actually understands how a shanty is supposed to sound. I can't even count how many singers I've seen who miss the whole point of the music
Yeah that's the sad part for me, @@filmandfirearms. I am happy that these songs are being sung again, but all the autotuned crap and excessive instrumentation that worms its way in when modern musicians get a hold of them is really offputting for me.
The thing that makes shanties so beautiful as music is they are sung by working men who can often barely sing to begin with, but so many people singing in shared purpose creates a harmony nonethless. There's nothing else like it.
@ It's a pretty common problem overall. I love the democratizing effect the internet has had, but it's also lead to a lot of people trying to replicate things they don't understand. I've heard plenty of covers of 50s and 60s songs that, for some unknown reason, are done with large groups of singers who cut in and out like they have a maximum number of words they're allowed to sing, completely missing that the reason guys like Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin, and Bobby Darin were so popular was because their style was all about a single clean, powerful voice. That's why they were famous as individuals, not groups
Love these old Sea Shanties some of the finest songs I've ever heard!🤗⛵⚓🌅🎵🎶🎼🇬🇧
I can't believe this is so good you right on brother
I'm a new Master and Commander fan, finally watched it for the first time a couple weeks ago and am on my 7th time now I believe. I've always loved sea shanties but this is my new favorite.
Very well done, and thank you for using clips from the Horatio Hornblower series.
I have a small facebook page for my first platoon I was deployed with in Iraq on my first tour. This hits home, we have been home now for some years but I do not want us to forget each other and the hardships we experienced together. It is a small but lively group, none of us have forgot and we keep in touch through it.
First let me thank you for your service. I am a destroyer veteran and have deployed to Vietnam three times in the sixties and totally understand your attachment to your brothers in arms. My shipmates and I had a fifty-year reunion several years ago and it was one of the finest times of my life. I had anticipated a getting reacquainted period, but it wasn't so. Once we met at the hotel after all those years it was as if we had been together the day before. The thing I noticed most was that everyone had gotten older and larger lol. Again, thank you for your service. Everyone who has worn the uniform of this country are brothers and sisters.
@@oldhendy785 Thank you for your service Sir, and welcome home brother.
15 sailors from the Acheron disliked this video
Jason Willis LOL
22 now
23
The Hornblower TV serial was one of the best show ever, every character was well done, pity that they stopped doing it, there were so many novels to adapt yet.
Anything revolving around early 19th century naval exploits is absolute gold to me.
As an American soldier. I love my Navy comrades. I won't forget my old shipmate, Jack.
I loved that! Great song and I loved the mix of two great films 👍🏻 Very well done 👌🏻😀
Assassin's Creed Rogue Memories... ❤🍺🍺🍺
Yann M. 🍺🍺
Dude I sing this everytime we sail down the river for fish
Good vibes, cap'ain
Correct me if i'm wrong but wasn't this song also in AC4:Black Flag.
@@wesleyvanwaeyenberghe7498 It may have but I don't remember finding it
Love the mix of videos. Great work!
mrtruculent yeah I love both of the films and it was so cool to see them together!!
Safe and sound at home again
Let the waters roar, Jack
Safe and sound at home again
Let the waters roar, Jack
Long we've tossed on the rolling main
Now we're safe ashore, Jack
Don't forget your old shipmate
Faldee-raldee-raldee-raldee-rye-aye-doe
Since we sailed from Plymouth Sound
Four years gone, or nigh, Jack
Was there ever chummies, now
Such as you and I, Jack?
Long we've tossed on the rolling main
Now we're safe ashore, Jack
Don't forget your old shipmate
Faldee-raldee-raldee-raldee-rye-aye-doe
We have worked the selfsame gun
Quarterdeck division
Sponger I, and loader you
Through the whole commission
Long we've tossed on the rolling main
Now we're safe ashore, Jack
Don't forget your old shipmate
Faldee-raldee-raldee-raldee-rye-aye-doe
Oftentimes have we laid out
Toil nor danger fearing
Tugging out the flapping sail
To the weather earing
Long we've tossed on the rolling main
Now we're safe ashore, Jack
Don't forget your old shipmate
Faldee-raldee-raldee-raldee-rye-aye-doe
When the middle watch was on
And the time went slow, boy
Who could choose a rousing stave?
Who like Jack or Joe, boy?
Long we've tossed on the rolling main
Now we're safe ashore, Jack
Don't forget your old shipmate
Faldee-raldee-raldee-raldee-rye-aye-doe
There she swings, an empty hulk
Not a soul below now
Number seven, starboard mess
Misses Jack and Joe, now
Long we've tossed on the rolling main
Now we're safe ashore, Jack
Don't forget your old shipmate
Faldee-raldee-raldee-raldee-rye-aye-doe
But the best of friends must part
Fair or foul the weather
Hand your flipper for a shake
Now a drink together
Long we've tossed on the rolling main
Now we're safe ashore, Jack
Don't forget your old shipmate
Faldee-raldee-raldee-raldee-rye-aye-doe
Oh, long we've tossed on the rolling main
Now we're safe ashore, Jack
Don't forget your old shipmate
Faldee-raldee-raldee-raldee-rye-aye-doe
There's a couple errors in this. Firstly, it's not "or nigh", it's "o'ernight". It was a very common contraction back then, and you can also hear it in "Over the hills and far away"
The line is not "toil nor danger fearin'", it's "toiled, no danger fearin'"
@@filmandfirearms Are you completely sure about either of those? "Four years gone or nigh" (Four years gone or close to it) makes more sense than "Four years gone o'ernight" (Four years gone overnight.) Same thing for the other line. "Toil nor danger fearing" (Toil/work nor danger fearing) makes more sense than "toiled, no danger fearing" (toiled/worked, no danger fearing.) You can pretty clearly hear that it's "nor" and not "no" if you listen closely.
@@DariusOfPersia How do either of those make more sense? Firstly, every sailor remembers the day he left home, even years after returning, it's not an uncertain thing, and we all know how even long stretches of time can seem like the blink of an eye in hindsight. Since the song is about two men finishing their service, it only makes sense they'd be talking about how quick the time seemed. Secondly, why would you fear work? Operating a ship is still a pretty dangerous job today, but back then, it wasn't uncommon for men to die on deck, even on civilian ships, most often from falling from the rigging. Since the surrounding lines all mention foul weather, which would make already very dangerous work even more dangerous. Lastly, there is clearly no "r" in that. When you consider that the singer clearly has a more northern accent, the "r" should be even more prominent, as you hear two lines later in the word "rearing"
@@filmandfirearms If you look up the song, the version listed as used in the movie uses these exact lyrics. O'ernight makes no sense at all. The word "rearing" doesn't appear in the song at all.
@@filmandfirearms And as for the "uncertainty" about the length of the voyage, it's not as if calendars were commonly owned items at the time. Not for the average sailors on warships, at least. It also could just be something poetic included to make the line fit the song, which realistically is what it is.
Yes, from Germany: i like this combination of M&C and Hornblower in Moviepictures & this song. I like it!
AYYEE I grew up on master and commander stories from my dad!! Best sea shanty that brings me memories!
i've heard old sailing men belt this out with enough rum between em to drown a lesser man
I know one of those movies are "A master and commander
the far side of the world"
There's also footage from the Hornblower TV series and a 1962 film called HMS Defiant (or 'Damn the Defiant' in America')
thanks for telling me
I was going to tell you the others first, But it seems someone beat me by a whole year heads start.
any know about any movies similar to Master and Commander where they show some more about sailship life?
Master and Commander is by far the most accurate WRT to the realism, but there's also the Horatio Hornblower TV series made in the 90s that starred Ioan Gurffudd. But I really can't think of any other films or anything that are at all accurate when it comes to showing life at sea in this period.
God Save the RN!
+chris hawkins
Poseidon sure wont.
British Naval distasters and Blunders - caused by everything from poor sailing, navigation to outright incompetence.
1694 HMS Sussex - 1 March 1694 off Gibraltar. 498 lost.
1702 HMS Northumberland - 27 November 1703. 220 lost
1703 Channel Storm - In November 1703 - Storm claims 1500 seamen.
1703 HMS Restoration - All 387 men were lost in the sinking.
1703 HMS Stirling Castle - 27 November 1703, all 206 men.
1703 HMS Northumberland and HMS Restoration wrecked with large losses.
1707 The Scilly naval disaster of 1707 - On 22 October 1707 over 2,000 lost
1744 HMS Victory - 4 October 1744-1,150 men lost
1749 HMS Namur - 14 April 1749 520 of her crew were drowned
1755 Doddington - On 17 July 1755 Of 270 crew and passengers, 23 survived.
1760 HMS Ramillies - 15 February 1760. Of the crew of 850 aboard, 20 seamen survived.
1761 Auguste - 15 November 1761 Of the 121 aboard, seven survived.
1780 HMS Ontario - 31 October 1780 About 130 men died with the ship
1782 HMS Royal George - 29 August 1782 More than 800 people lost
1782 HMS Glorieux - On 16-17 September 1782 all hands lost
1782 HMS Centaur - September 1782 Some 400 of her crew were lost.
1786 Halsewell - 6 January 1786 Of her 240 crew and passengers, 74 survived.
1793 Pelican - 20 March 1793 Of 134 people aboard, 102 were lost.
1794 HMS Ardent - April 1794 No trace was ever found of her 500 crew.
1796 HMS Amphion - 22 September 1796 explosion killing 300 of the 312 aboard.
1797 HMS Tribune - 16 November 1797 12 of the 244 aboard survived.
1797 HMS Vipere - A British brig-sloop, capsized in the Shannon Estuary
1799 Lutine - Sank off Vlieland in heavy weather. 269 people were lost.
1801 HMS Invincible - 16 March 1801 Over 400 crew were lost; 196 saved.
1804 HMS York - 26 December 1803 491 men lost
1805 Earl of Abergavenny - 5 February 1805. Of the 402 people aboard 263 were lost
1806 HMS Athenienne - 20 October 1806, 347 people died
1807 HMS Blenheim and HMS Java - 280 men were lost from Java and 590 from Blenheim.
1807 HMS Anson - 29 December 1807. Estimates vary from 60 to 190 lost
1810 HMS Minotaur - heavy loss of life in December 1810.
1810 Elizabeth - 28 December 1810 as high as 400, including at least eight women
1811 HMS St George - 24 December 1811. Seven of her 738 crew were saved.
1811 HMS Defence - 24 December 1811 14 of her crew of 597 men and boys lost
1815 Arniston - On 30 May 1815, 372 people were lost; 6 survived.
1825 British East India Company - 1 March 1825, 81 were lost.
1833 Lady of the Lake - loss of up to 265 passengers and crew.
1833 Amphitrite - 25 August 1833 with 108 women convicts and 12 children
1835 Neva - 224 people lost
1841 President - On 11 March 1841 136 people lost
1842 Waterloo - 28 August 1842 189 of the 302 lost
1847 HMS Avenger - 17 December 1847 Eight of her 250 crew survived.
1850 RMS Royal Adelaide - 30 March 1850: 250 men lost
1850 Edmond - 19 November 1850. About 98 people were lost
1853 Annie Jane - on 28 September 1853. Of the 450 aboard 348 were lost
1853 Madagascar - loss of about 110 passengers and about 50 crew.
1854 City of Glasgow - January 1854 loss of 480 passengers and crew aboard.
1854 RMS Tayleur - 21 January 1854 652 people aboard 380 were lost
1854 HMS Prince - 14 November 1854 six of her 150 crew were saved.
1857 Dunbar - wrecked in Australia, killing 121 people.
1859 Royal Charter - 26 October 1859 loss of 459
1863 Anglo Saxon - 27 April 1863 ran aground killing 237 people.
1863 HMS Orpheus - 7 February 1863 Orpheus sank killing 189
1865 Comet - 13 April 1865 loss of 81
1866 London - 10 January 1866, loss of 220
1867 RMS Rhone - 29 October 1867 loss of about 123 people.
1870 HMS Captain - 7 September 1870, loss of 480 men
1870 City of Boston - loss of 191
1873 RMS Atlantic - 1 April 1873, loss of 535
1873 Northfleet - 22 January 1873 loss of 293
1874 Cospatrick - 17 November 1874 Three of 472 people aboard survived.
1875 Gothenburg - loss of 112
1876 HMS Thunderer - On 14 July 1876, explosion kills 45
1878 SS Princess Alice - 3 September 1878 loss of 600
1878 HMS Eurydice - 24 March 1878 loss of 376 men
1880 HMS Juno - 31 January 1880 loss of 281 men
1881 HMS Doterel - 26 April 1881 loss of 155 men
1883 Daphne - 3 July 1883 loss of124-195
1887 Kapunda - 20 January 1887 Of the 314 aboard 299 were lost.
1890 RMS Quetta - 28 February 1890. Of 292 people aboard, 134 were lost.
1891 Utopia - Collided 17 March 1891 loss of 564
1892 Bokhara - 10 October 1892, loss of 125 people.
1893 HMS Victoria - rammed by HMS Camperdown and sunk on 22 June 1893. Loss of 358 men
1893 Naronic - 11 February 1893 loss of all 74 people aboard.
1895 Catterthun - 7 August 1895, 55 people were lost
1898 Mohegan - 14 October 1898, killing 106 people
1899 Stella - 30 March 1899, 78 of the 190 passengers and crew aboard were lost
1901 HMS Cobra - 18 September 1901. 67 men were lost;
1902 Camorta - 6 May 1902 with the loss of all 655 passengers and 82 crew
1905 Hilda - A steamship on a cross-Channel run that sank in 1905 killing 125 people.
1914 HMS Bulwark - 26 November 1914 out of her complement of 750, 14 survived
Mutinies within the Royal Navy
1741 - HMS Wager
1782 - HMS Hermione
1783 - HMS Defiance
1789 - HMAV Bounty
1793 - HMS Marie Antoinette
1794 - HMS Shark
1797 - HMS Grampus
1797 - Spithead - 16 ships mutiny
1797 - Nore mutiny
1797 - multiple mutinies aboard ships off S. Africa, Ireland and Spain
1798 - HMS Danae
1805 - HMS Dominica
1814 - HMS Resistance
1854 - HMS Winchester
1931 - Invergordon
1936 - HMS Javelin
Royal Navy ships on blockading duty lost due to weather - North American theater
June 1812-Februrary 1815
14 August 1812 HMS Chub (schooner) -
20 August 1812 HMS Southampton (frigate) - ran aground - Mississippi
20 August 1812 HMS Brazen (sloop) ran aground - Mississippi
20 August 1812 HMS Magnet (sloop) loss of all hands
23 August 1813 HMS Colibri
5 November 1813 HMS Tweed - loss of 70 crewmen
10 November 1813 HMS Atalanta - sank in the Atlantic
13 November 1813 HMS Canso
13 November 1813 HMS La Hogue (ship of the line)
13 November 1813 HMS Manly
13 November 1813 HMS Maidstone (frigate)
13 November 1813 HMS San Domingo
13 November 1813 HMS Crane
24 November 1814 HMS Fantome
25 November 1814 HMS Racer
18 January 1815 HMS Sylph - off New York - loss of 111 crewmembers
I have to say I'm ever so slightly intrigued about your motives for posting the same list on several occasions with months between.
It stands to reason with such a large fleet its only natural for there to be several cases of incompetence and unfortunate incidents through the years. Humans are by no means perfect creatures and therefor there is a chance of imperfections in all things involving humans.
A near spotless track record for the past 100 years you say? Good on them! Long live the RN!
Keep in mind that the US's track record, for instance, is none too clean either, if that may be suitable competition in your eyes?
Here, in the same style as you, US ship losses from non-enemy causes:
Sloop Saratoga. The only survivors were detailed to a captured vessel Crew of 86 less the prize crew drowned. 18 Mar. 1781.
Brig USS Pickering. Approximately 105 lost. Sep. 1800. Last seen 20 Aug. 1800
Frigate USS Insurgent. Approximately 340 drowned. 20 Sep. 1800.
Gun Boat #159. 13 drowned. 11 Sep. 1810.
Gun Boat #2. 40 lost. 5 Oct. 1811.
Schooners USS Hamilton and Scourge. Over 80 drowned. 8 Aug. 1813.
Gun Boat #164. 20 drowned. 16 Sep. 1813.
Schooner USS Alligator. 23 drowned. 30 Jun. 1814.
Gun Boat #146. 9 killed. 23 Aug. 1814.
Sloop-of-War USS Epervier. 132 sailors and 2 Marines died. Last seen on 8 Aug. 1815.
Chartered schooner Quaker. 41 drowned. 6 Mar. 1820.
Schooner USS Lynx. 50 died. Last seen on 11 Jan. 1820.
Schooner USS Wildcat. Approximately 31 died. 28 Oct. 1824.
Schooner USS Ferret. 5 drowned. 4 Feb. 1825.
Steam frigate USS Fulton. 30 killed. 4 Jun. 1829.
Brig USS Hornet. 145 lost. 29 Sep. 1829.
Schooner USS Sylph. 13 lost. July 1831.
Schooner USS Sea Gull. 15 died. Last seen on 8 May 1839.
Sloop USS Concord. 3 died. 2 Oct. 1842.
Schooner USS Grampus. 25+ drowned. Last heard from on 15 Mar. 1843.
Brig USS Somers. 32 drowned. 8 Dec. 1846.
Brig USS Porpoise. 62+ died. Last seen between Formosa and China on 21 Sep. 1854.
Sloop USS Albany. 193 died. Last seen when she departed Aspinwall, Columbia on 29 Sep. 1854.
Aaaand I got bored at that point, but that's all of them to 1854 with a nation with a shorter history, esp. that of it naval-ly.
...Mother of God!! *Rage Comic Face
More limeys drowned aboard the original HMS Victory in 1744 than Americans in half a century...great point moron.
Assassins Creed Rogue sea shanty.
Ian mc gruffudd.good in that role
We've been reading O'Brian. This hits the spot.
Love this...I'm going to work up more sea shanties.
Wish I had the Lyrics to this some of this I cant make out. Great Stuff none the less mate!
Don't Forget Your Old Shipmate ruclips.net/video/wY1fUAPYH3M/видео.html lyrics
Can anything stir the blood like Lord Nelson and the Royal Navy, especially when it's coupled with a rousing sea shanty!
5 people are land loving scunners
Bloody landlubbers and swabs
RIP ol chap. Victory
AYE! Broke the 666 Likes! I was there for this movie, and lived a Life that was grand. Enjoy what you have, now. For tomorrow it'll be gone forever. This is why Your/Our History matters.
Best version yet
Great memorial day song
Funnily enough, it seems that only Napoleonic naval warfare gets the sort of treatment of movies like Master and Commander and Hornblower. By that I mean, something which focuses on the difficulties of command, the complex strategy, and the camaraderie between the men. I think the closest I've ever come across was Danger Close and Прорив, but while both are great, neither of them have anywhere near the same depth of Master and Commander or Hornblower. It's unfortunate, because I think there's more than enough potential for it, but it just doesn't get utilized. Every land or air based war movie I've seen either ignores strategy and command completely, focusing entirely on the small unit, or takes a very callous and inhuman approach to strategy. Think Waterloo. The whole movie is basically a chess game between Wellesley and Bonaparte. I love that sort of thing, but it has limitations. Now, any good commander has to have a degree of the latter, you have to be mathematical with human life if you want to accomplish anything, but you can still consider the human element at the same time. A good officer knows that the men have to be close to their commanding officers if they want to succeed. I'm sure Zhukov, Patton, Montgomery, and any other great military leader you care to name, had to do the same as Aubery did many times. To look one of your own men in the face, knowing that you will have to get him killed to accomplish your mission and save the lives of his comrades. A modern movie about Zhukov at Khalkin Gol would be a great opportunity for exactly that. At the time, he was a low enough officer that he still regularly interacted with his men, but he was also high enough up to be the one making the hardest decisions
Great edit!
I love it!
Hornblower, of course, thought I recognised the Bosun, or was it the Coxswain? Great British sea songs, and as an Englishman I'm inspired!
If you mean Matthews, he was only a bosun in the later episodes. In the clips shown here, he's just a regular old sailor
Beautiful and wonderful: Thank you.
....Splendid! We were there!.....
Blas de Lezo, battle of Cartagena de Indias, 1741.
well done
I was at sea all my life and never heard a sailor say folly folly rolly rolly rivol now in some gay bars ? We won’t get into that
I got this recommended to me based on watching a bunch of Master and Commander clips. Are there any others I should check out besides Hornblower and HMS Defiant that are similar to M&C?
The bounty,with Mel gibson and Anthony Quinn. There is an older version,with Marlon Brando.
Also,there is a spanish miniseries called Conquistadores Adventum,which is riveting.
M&C is the most historically accurate film set in this era that I know of, they went to great lengths to get everything right. I recommend the TV series Hornblower for a similar feel, albeit with a smaller budget. Captain Horatio Hornblower (the film with Greg Peck) and HMS Defiant are good, but being made in an earlier time, they took some liberties with accuracy - which isn't to say don't watch them, it's just something to be aware of.
Pirates...
Aargh be a fine song Jim lad now sit on me knee and we talk about the first thing that pops up aargh lim lad there be a treat fer ee at the end of me stump. Ah Harr
folly rolly rolly rolly eye ooooh
I AM NOT THE ONLY ONE
HOLD FAST
It's so impressive how the British Empire sustained for so long. Their navy was dominate throughout the 18th and 19th centuries. Their military record is very impressive.
Compared to France who is known to surrender and lose to wars. And Spain who was a very dominate and powerful empire which it was a very impressive power it fell.
Dont Forget that in the early 1800s, French, Spain and USA was the Enemies of the Royal Navy. So the had no Friends, just Enemies on the Ocean. And still stand against those 3 Worldpowers.
France is known to surrender? They have the best military record in the world probably, and had to surrender to Blitzkrieg to safe their country, they put in their part since. Not taking away anything from the British navy because their history is immaculate. But please don't try to pass of the French because a necessary surrender by Vichy in WWII, have you forgotten Napoleon and WW1? Like Spain, which also was a impressive power, Britain too fell. I'm just going out on a limb here and say I'm talking to two biased Brits here.
Maurice The Guitar Hero France is actually known for winning wars. their victory:loss ratio is the best in the world on land
What record?
British Naval distasters and Blunders - caused by everything from poor sailing, navigation to outright incompetence.
1694 HMS Sussex - 1 March 1694 off Gibraltar. 498 lost.
1702 HMS Northumberland - 27 November 1703. 220 lost
1703 Channel Storm - In November 1703 - Storm claims 1500 seamen.
1703 HMS Restoration - All 387 men were lost in the sinking.
1703 HMS Stirling Castle - 27 November 1703, all 206 men.
1703 HMS Northumberland and HMS Restoration wrecked with large losses.
1707 The Scilly naval disaster of 1707 - On 22 October 1707 over 2,000 lost
1744 HMS Victory - 4 October 1744-1,150 men lost
1749 HMS Namur - 14 April 1749 520 of her crew were drowned
1755 Doddington - On 17 July 1755 Of 270 crew and passengers, 23 survived.
1760 HMS Ramillies - 15 February 1760. Of the crew of 850 aboard, 20 seamen survived.
1761 Auguste - 15 November 1761 Of the 121 aboard, seven survived.
1780 HMS Ontario - 31 October 1780 About 130 men died with the ship
1782 HMS Royal George - 29 August 1782 More than 800 people lost
1782 HMS Glorieux - On 16-17 September 1782 all hands lost
1782 HMS Centaur - September 1782 Some 400 of her crew were lost.
1786 Halsewell - 6 January 1786 Of her 240 crew and passengers, 74 survived.
1793 Pelican - 20 March 1793 Of 134 people aboard, 102 were lost.
1794 HMS Ardent - April 1794 No trace was ever found of her 500 crew.
1796 HMS Amphion - 22 September 1796 explosion killing 300 of the 312 aboard.
1797 HMS Tribune - 16 November 1797 12 of the 244 aboard survived.
1797 HMS Vipere - A British brig-sloop, capsized in the Shannon Estuary
1799 Lutine - Sank off Vlieland in heavy weather. 269 people were lost.
1801 HMS Invincible - 16 March 1801 Over 400 crew were lost; 196 saved.
1804 HMS York - 26 December 1803 491 men lost
1805 Earl of Abergavenny - 5 February 1805. Of the 402 people aboard 263 were lost
1806 HMS Athenienne - 20 October 1806, 347 people died
1807 HMS Blenheim and HMS Java - 280 men were lost from Java and 590 from Blenheim.
1807 HMS Anson - 29 December 1807. Estimates vary from 60 to 190 lost
1809-12 - 40,000 sailors in the West Indies die from yellow fever
1810 HMS Minotaur - heavy loss of life in December 1810.
1810 Elizabeth - 28 December 1810 as high as 400, including at least eight women
1811 HMS St George - 24 December 1811. Seven of her 738 crew were saved.
1811 HMS Defence - 24 December 1811 14 of her crew of 597 men and boys lost
1815 Arniston - On 30 May 1815, 372 people were lost; 6 survived.
1825 British East India Company - 1 March 1825, 81 were lost.
1833 Lady of the Lake - loss of up to 265 passengers and crew.
1833 Amphitrite - 25 August 1833 with 108 women convicts and 12 children
1835 Neva - 224 people lost
1841 President - On 11 March 1841 136 people lost
1842 Waterloo - 28 August 1842 189 of the 302 lost
1847 HMS Avenger - 17 December 1847 Eight of her 250 crew survived.
1850 RMS Royal Adelaide - 30 March 1850: 250 men lost
1850 Edmond - 19 November 1850. About 98 people were lost
1853 Annie Jane - on 28 September 1853. Of the 450 aboard 348 were lost
1853 Madagascar - loss of about 110 passengers and about 50 crew.
1854 City of Glasgow - January 1854 loss of 480 passengers and crew aboard.
1854 RMS Tayleur - 21 January 1854 652 people aboard 380 were lost
1854 HMS Prince - 14 November 1854 six of her 150 crew were saved.
1857 Dunbar - wrecked in Australia, killing 121 people.
1859 Royal Charter - 26 October 1859 loss of 459
1863 Anglo Saxon - 27 April 1863 ran aground killing 237 people.
1863 HMS Orpheus - 7 February 1863 Orpheus sank killing 189
1865 Comet - 13 April 1865 loss of 81
1866 London - 10 January 1866, loss of 220
1867 RMS Rhone - 29 October 1867 loss of about 123 people.
1870 HMS Captain - 7 September 1870, loss of 480 men
1870 City of Boston - loss of 191
1873 RMS Atlantic - 1 April 1873, loss of 535
1873 Northfleet - 22 January 1873 loss of 293
1874 Cospatrick - 17 November 1874 Three of 472 people aboard survived.
1875 Gothenburg - loss of 112
1876 HMS Thunderer - On 14 July 1876, explosion kills 45
1878 SS Princess Alice - 3 September 1878 loss of 600
1878 HMS Eurydice - 24 March 1878 loss of 376 men
1880 HMS Juno - 31 January 1880 loss of 281 men
1881 HMS Doterel - 26 April 1881 loss of 155 men
1883 Daphne - 3 July 1883 loss of124-195
1887 Kapunda - 20 January 1887 Of the 314 aboard 299 were lost.
1890 RMS Quetta - 28 February 1890. Of 292 people aboard, 134 were lost.
1891 Utopia - Collided 17 March 1891 loss of 564
1892 Bokhara - 10 October 1892, loss of 125 people.
1893 HMS Victoria - rammed by HMS Camperdown and sunk on 22 June 1893. Loss of 358 men
1893 Naronic - 11 February 1893 loss of all 74 people aboard.
1895 Catterthun - 7 August 1895, 55 people were lost
1898 Mohegan - 14 October 1898, killing 106 people
1899 Stella - 30 March 1899, 78 of the 190 passengers and crew aboard were lost
1901 HMS Cobra - 18 September 1901. 67 men were lost;
1902 Camorta - 6 May 1902 with the loss of all 655 passengers and 82 crew
1905 Hilda - A steamship on a cross-Channel run that sank in 1905 killing 125 people.
1914 HMS Bulwark - 26 November 1914 out of her complement of 750, 14 survived
Mutinies within the Royal Navy
1741 - HMS Wager
1782 - HMS Hermione
1783 - HMS Defiance
1789 - HMAV Bounty
1793 - HMS Marie Antoinette
1794 - HMS Shark
1797 - HMS Grampus
1797 - Spithead - 16 ships mutiny
1797 - Nore mutiny
1797 - multiple mutinies aboard ships off S. Africa, Ireland and Spain
1798 - HMS Danae
1805 - HMS Dominica
1814 - HMS Resistance
1854 - HMS Winchester
1931 - Invergordon
1936 - HMS Javelin
Royal Navy ships on blockading duty lost due to weather - North American theater
June 1812-Februrary 1815
14 August 1812 HMS Chub (schooner) -
20 August 1812 HMS Southampton (frigate) - ran aground - Mississippi
20 August 1812 HMS Brazen (sloop) ran aground - Mississippi
20 August 1812 HMS Magnet (sloop) loss of all hands
23 August 1813 HMS Colibri
5 November 1813 HMS Tweed - loss of 70 crewmen
10 November 1813 HMS Atalanta - sank in the Atlantic
13 November 1813 HMS Canso
13 November 1813 HMS La Hogue (ship of the line)
13 November 1813 HMS Manly
13 November 1813 HMS Maidstone (frigate)
13 November 1813 HMS San Domingo
13 November 1813 HMS Crane
24 November 1814 HMS Fantome
25 November 1814 HMS Racer
18 January 1815 HMS Sylph - off New York - loss of 111 crewmembers
Dude, WWII isn't the only war France fought smh... Learn your goddamn history, France has one of the best military history in all of Europe. Even sometimes better than the English.
it just reminds me of AC ROGUE
How can they say we don't have any culture?
How is the Hornblower Series ? Are there good Ship to Ship Battles ? I only know the old Movie with Gregory Peck
its gold
Will be new parts of Horatio Hornblower or Jack Aubrey?
I currently don't have any vid software available to make more vids, but I will do more one day! Thanks for asking!
@@Teverell: You're welcome. It will be nice. For example, a video about wars of Sailing ships with Boccherini, Corelli, Mozart or Vivaldi music. But in first it was a question for others if they did know if studios could make new movies with HH or JA. These unfilmed books are still a lot. But the Pirates of the Caribbean saturated demand.
@@stilgardragonclaw Ah!! I know Russell Crowe wants to make a sequel to Master & Commander, but Peter Weir famously doesn't make sequels. I've no idea whether there are any plans to make any more Hornblower - or even to film any of the myriad other series set in the Royal Navy of the Napoleonic era - there are a lot of other book series that could be made into films or TV shows. Pirates of the Caribbean had the backing of Disney which is a huge company... and plays fast and loose with actual historical accuracy, though they did get some surprising things right!
British Naval distasters and Blunders - caused by everything from poor sailing, navigation to outright incompetence.
1694 HMS Sussex - 1 March 1694 off Gibraltar. 498 lost.
1702 HMS Northumberland - 27 November 1703. 220 lost
1703 Channel Storm - In November 1703 - Storm claims 1500 seamen.
1703 HMS Restoration - All 387 men were lost in the sinking.
1703 HMS Stirling Castle - 27 November 1703, all 206 men.
1703 HMS Northumberland and HMS Restoration wrecked with large losses.
1707 The Scilly naval disaster of 1707 - On 22 October 1707 over 2,000 lost
1744 HMS Victory - 4 October 1744-1,150 men lost
1749 HMS Namur - 14 April 1749 520 of her crew were drowned
1755 Doddington - On 17 July 1755 Of 270 crew and passengers, 23 survived.
1760 HMS Ramillies - 15 February 1760. Of the crew of 850 aboard, 20 seamen survived.
1761 Auguste - 15 November 1761 Of the 121 aboard, seven survived.
1780 HMS Ontario - 31 October 1780 About 130 men died with the ship
1782 HMS Royal George - 29 August 1782 More than 800 people lost
1782 HMS Glorieux - On 16-17 September 1782 all hands lost
1782 HMS Centaur - September 1782 Some 400 of her crew were lost.
1786 Halsewell - 6 January 1786 Of her 240 crew and passengers, 74 survived.
1793 Pelican - 20 March 1793 Of 134 people aboard, 102 were lost.
1794 HMS Ardent - April 1794 No trace was ever found of her 500 crew.
1796 HMS Amphion - 22 September 1796 explosion killing 300 of the 312 aboard.
1797 HMS Tribune - 16 November 1797 12 of the 244 aboard survived.
1797 HMS Vipere - A British brig-sloop, capsized in the Shannon Estuary
1799 Lutine - Sank off Vlieland in heavy weather. 269 people were lost.
1801 HMS Invincible - 16 March 1801 Over 400 crew were lost; 196 saved.
1804 HMS York - 26 December 1803 491 men lost
1805 Earl of Abergavenny - 5 February 1805. Of the 402 people aboard 263 were lost
1806 HMS Athenienne - 20 October 1806, 347 people died
1807 HMS Blenheim and HMS Java - 280 men were lost from Java and 590 from Blenheim.
1807 HMS Anson - 29 December 1807. Estimates vary from 60 to 190 lost
1810 HMS Minotaur - heavy loss of life in December 1810.
1810 Elizabeth - 28 December 1810 as high as 400, including at least eight women
1811 HMS St George - 24 December 1811. Seven of her 738 crew were saved.
1811 HMS Defence - 24 December 1811 14 of her crew of 597 men and boys lost
1815 Arniston - On 30 May 1815, 372 people were lost; 6 survived.
1825 British East India Company - 1 March 1825, 81 were lost.
1833 Lady of the Lake - loss of up to 265 passengers and crew.
1833 Amphitrite - 25 August 1833 with 108 women convicts and 12 children
1835 Neva - 224 people lost
1841 President - On 11 March 1841 136 people lost
1842 Waterloo - 28 August 1842 189 of the 302 lost
1847 HMS Avenger - 17 December 1847 Eight of her 250 crew survived.
1850 RMS Royal Adelaide - 30 March 1850: 250 men lost
1850 Edmond - 19 November 1850. About 98 people were lost
1853 Annie Jane - on 28 September 1853. Of the 450 aboard 348 were lost
1853 Madagascar - loss of about 110 passengers and about 50 crew.
1854 City of Glasgow - January 1854 loss of 480 passengers and crew aboard.
1854 RMS Tayleur - 21 January 1854 652 people aboard 380 were lost
1854 HMS Prince - 14 November 1854 six of her 150 crew were saved.
1857 Dunbar - wrecked in Australia, killing 121 people.
1859 Royal Charter - 26 October 1859 loss of 459
1863 Anglo Saxon - 27 April 1863 ran aground killing 237 people.
1863 HMS Orpheus - 7 February 1863 Orpheus sank killing 189
1865 Comet - 13 April 1865 loss of 81
1866 London - 10 January 1866, loss of 220
1867 RMS Rhone - 29 October 1867 loss of about 123 people.
1870 HMS Captain - 7 September 1870, loss of 480 men
1870 City of Boston - loss of 191
1873 RMS Atlantic - 1 April 1873, loss of 535
1873 Northfleet - 22 January 1873 loss of 293
1874 Cospatrick - 17 November 1874 Three of 472 people aboard survived.
1875 Gothenburg - loss of 112
1876 HMS Thunderer - On 14 July 1876, explosion kills 45
1878 SS Princess Alice - 3 September 1878 loss of 600
1878 HMS Eurydice - 24 March 1878 loss of 376 men
1880 HMS Juno - 31 January 1880 loss of 281 men
1881 HMS Doterel - 26 April 1881 loss of 155 men
1883 Daphne - 3 July 1883 loss of124-195
1887 Kapunda - 20 January 1887 Of the 314 aboard 299 were lost.
1890 RMS Quetta - 28 February 1890. Of 292 people aboard, 134 were lost.
1891 Utopia - Collided 17 March 1891 loss of 564
1892 Bokhara - 10 October 1892, loss of 125 people.
1893 HMS Victoria - rammed by HMS Camperdown and sunk on 22 June 1893. Loss of 358 men
1893 Naronic - 11 February 1893 loss of all 74 people aboard.
1895 Catterthun - 7 August 1895, 55 people were lost
1898 Mohegan - 14 October 1898, killing 106 people
1899 Stella - 30 March 1899, 78 of the 190 passengers and crew aboard were lost
1901 HMS Cobra - 18 September 1901. 67 men were lost;
1902 Camorta - 6 May 1902 with the loss of all 655 passengers and 82 crew
1905 Hilda - A steamship on a cross-Channel run that sank in 1905 killing 125 people.
1914 HMS Bulwark - 26 November 1914 out of her complement of 750, 14 survived
Mutinies within the Royal Navy
1741 - HMS Wager
1782 - HMS Hermione
1783 - HMS Defiance
1789 - HMAV Bounty
1793 - HMS Marie Antoinette
1794 - HMS Shark
1797 - HMS Grampus
1797 - Spithead - 16 ships mutiny
1797 - Nore mutiny
1797 - multiple mutinies aboard ships off S. Africa, Ireland and Spain
1798 - HMS Danae
1805 - HMS Dominica
1814 - HMS Resistance
1854 - HMS Winchester
1931 - Invergordon
1936 - HMS Javelin
Royal Navy ships on blockading duty lost due to weather - North American theater
June 1812-Februrary 1815
14 August 1812 HMS Chub (schooner) -
20 August 1812 HMS Southampton (frigate) - ran aground - Mississippi
20 August 1812 HMS Brazen (sloop) ran aground - Mississippi
20 August 1812 HMS Magnet (sloop) loss of all hands
23 August 1813 HMS Colibri
5 November 1813 HMS Tweed - loss of 70 crewmen
10 November 1813 HMS Atalanta - sank in the Atlantic
13 November 1813 HMS Canso
13 November 1813 HMS La Hogue (ship of the line)
13 November 1813 HMS Manly
13 November 1813 HMS Maidstone (frigate)
13 November 1813 HMS San Domingo
13 November 1813 HMS Crane
24 November 1814 HMS Fantome
25 November 1814 HMS Racer
18 January 1815 HMS Sylph - off New York - loss of 111 crewmembers
+USMarineRifleman0311 damn
+US Marine Rifleman Wow someone is butthurt LOL. There is no navy like the Royal Navy mate.
aaand the point is..?
+Lievcocijo
Nothing, he has a weird obsession with British Military defeats and the US Navy.
It doesn't change that the amount of victories of the Royal Navy is dominant!
Cpl. Gadway USMC daym
@Antigan15th: Stealing from musicians??? I'd say the uploader has nothing to be afraid of if he/she does not believe in ghosts: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Don%27t_Forget_Your_Old_Shipmates because the songs current copyright owner CORPORATION (not musician) apparently believes in *FAIR USE LAW*. Otherwise, this video would quite certainly have been deleted already.
Who from 2023😂
🌊I am if you please 🌊
"We have witnessed the gloom which which that event cast over high and honorable minds. we participated in the vexation and regret, and it is the first time we have ever heard that the striking of the English flag on the high seas to any thing like an equal force should be regarded by Englishmen with complacency and satisfaction." - Times
" We would gladly give up all the laurels of Detroit to have it still to say that no British frigate ever struck to an American. We have sunk our own maritime character, for with a navy that could admit of no competitition, we have suffered ourselves to be beaten in detail, by a power that we should not have allowed to send a vessel to sea." Times
"The news spread a degree of gloom throughout London, which was painful to observe. The invaluable reputation of the Royal Navy was undermined with incalculable consequences. It was a calamity of twenty times its amount that might have been attened with more serious consequences to the worsted party" Times on hearing of the Guerriere's defeat
“It is not merely that an English frigate has been taken, after, what we are free to confess, may be called a brave resistance, but that it has been taken by a new enemy, and enemy unaccustomed to such triumphs, and likely to be rendered insolent and confident by them. …how important this triumph is in giving a tone and character to the war. Never before in the history of the world did an English frigate strike to an American.” - Times 1812
"The truth is that not a single American frigate has struck her flag. They insult and laugh at our want of enterprize and vigor." English paper late 1812
"the consequences of such an embarrasment would be ruinous. It will waste away the strength of the country and what is worse, it will break down the national spirit, so that gallant enterprize and far sighted undertakings will become foreign to our very nature, and the English character will dwindle into effeminacy and decrepitude."
London Times warning of a war with America 1812
"The war with America ought to have been foreseen. Yet such was the total want of foresight, or of ignorance that British merchan shipping was being ravaged and its flag insulted." Morning Chronicle
"The American frigates are said to be equal to line of battle ships. Why then had not we line of battle ships fight them?" London Times
"There is a report that another English frigate has been captured by an American. We shall certainly be very backward in believing a second recurrence of such a national disgrace... Certainly there was a time when it would not have been believed that the American navy could have appeared upon the high seas after a six month's war with England, much less than it could, within that period have been twice victorious." London Times late 1812
"In the name of God what was done with this immense superiority of force...Of what a charm is hereby dissolved. What hopes will be excited in the breasts of our enemies. The land spell of the French is broken and so is our sea spell." London Times having learned of the loss of the HMS Macedonian
"It is not sickening to see that no experience has been sufficient to rouse our Admiralty to take such measures that may protect the British flag from such disgrace."
"We are satisfied that every individual in the country must feel humiliated at this succession of disasters which thus mock and render nugatory our boasted naval superiority." -London Chronicle
"We have suffered ourselves to be beaten in detail" - London Times 1812
Britannia rules the waves.
Nothing beats primary sources. I wonder if part of the reason the fledgling USN thumped the RN in 1812 is because at that time Americans were British. Same language, culture, outlook, religion etc. We out Britished the British.
Britannia rules jack shit...
"In summary of the whole American war, most of which we had experienced, there had been little if anything to flatter our vanity, or increase self importance. Except a few successes in Canada, at its very commencement...it will be found that our arms have been constantly baffled or repulsed on shore." George Gleig - British soldier 1812-15
"We have witnessed the gloom which which that event cast over high and honorable minds. we participated in the vexation and regret, and it is the first time we have ever heard that the striking of the English flag on the high seas to any thing like an equal force should be regarded by Englishmen with complacency and satisfaction." - Times
" We would gladly give up all the laurels of Detroit to have it still to say that no British frigate ever struck to an American. We have sunk our own maritime character, for with a navy that could admit of no competitition, we have suffered ourselves to be beaten in detail, by a power that we should not have allowed to send a vessel to sea." Times
"The news spread a degree of gloom throughout London, which was painful to observe. The invaluable reputation of the Royal Navy was undermined with incalculable consequences. It was a calamity of twenty times its amount that might have been attened with more serious consequences to the worsted party" Times on hearing of the Guerriere's defeat
“It is not merely that an English frigate has been taken, after, what we are free to confess, may be called a brave resistance, but that it has been taken by a new enemy, and enemy unaccustomed to such triumphs, and likely to be rendered insolent and confident by them. …how important this triumph is in giving a tone and character to the war. Never before in the history of the world did an English frigate strike to an American.” - Times 1812
"The truth is that not a single American frigate has struck her flag. They insult and laugh at our want of enterprize and vigor." English paper late 1812
"the consequences of such an embarrasment would be ruinous. It will waste away the strength of the country and what is worse, it will break down the national spirit, so that gallant enterprize and far sighted undertakings will become foreign to our very nature, and the English character will dwindle into effeminacy and decrepitude."
London Times warning of a war with America 1812
"The war with America ought to have been foreseen. Yet such was the total want of foresight, or of ignorance that British merchan shipping was being ravaged and its flag insulted." Morning Chronicle
"The American frigates are said to be equal to line of battle ships. Why then had not we line of battle ships fight them?" London Times
"There is a report that another English frigate has been captured by an American. We shall certainly be very backward in believing a second recurrence of such a national disgrace... Certainly there was a time when it would not have been believed that the American navy could have appeared upon the high seas after a six month's war with England, much less than it could, within that period have been twice victorious." London Times late 1812
"In the name of God what was done with this immense superiority of force...Of what a charm is hereby dissolved. What hopes will be excited in the breasts of our enemies. The land spell of the French is broken and so is our sea spell." London Times having learned of the loss of the HMS Macedonian
"It is not sickening to see that no experience has been sufficient to rouse our Admiralty to take such measures that may protect the British flag from such disgrace."
"We are satisfied that every individual in the country must feel humiliated at this succession of disasters which thus mock and render nugatory our boasted naval superiority." -London Chronicle
"We have suffered ourselves to be beaten in detail" - London Times 1812
"The government has adopted so drivelling a line of conduct, as to think of waging a war of conciliaton and forbearance." - Times
"British arms cannot withstand Americans' upon the sea, The bully has been disgraced by an infant" - US congressman
"It is a cruel mortification to be beat by these second hand Englishmen upon our own element." - British cabinet member.
"the American privateers are still enabled to range unmolested." London Times 1814
"they have roved with impunity and success to all corners of the earth." Naval Chronicle on American privateers
"The failure of the attempt on Baltimore and Drummond's bloody repulse at Fort Erie became known at the same time, and coming together at a critical moment threw confusion into the Ministry and their agents in the press and the diplomatic service throughout Europe. The Courier of October 25 declared that "peace with America is neither practicable nor desirable till we have wiped away this late disaster. On October 31, the Paris correspondents of the London Times told of the cheers that rose from the crowds at the Palais Royal gardens at each recital of the Plattsburgh defeat, and October 21, Goulburn wrote from Ghent to Bathurst:"The news from America is very far from satisfactory."
"Looking to a continuance of the American war, our financial state is far from satisfactory. The American war will not cost us less than 10 million pounds, in addition to our peace establishment and other expenses." Lord Liverpool Oct 28 1814
"In view of recent events, we expect that their northern limits will be circumscribed and the command of the Mississippi wrested from them." Cochrane Sept 1814
"The British and the indians are natural allies" London Times 1812
We have retired from combat with the Stripes yet bleeding on our backs, and with the recent defeats, at Plattsburgh and Lake Champlain, unavenged. To make peace at such a moment, betrays a deadness to the feelings of honor, and shows a timidity of disposition, inviting further insults."
Concluding entries by the Times Dec 1814
Cpl. Gadway USMC upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/b/b8/British_Empire_1921.png/400px-British_Empire_1921.png
Enjoy. I heard that George Washington used to salute England with a glass of wine, as his hate was for the king but never for his motherland. In this instance, it’s easily understandable to see how the American founding fathers where honouring their English ancestors and following in the footsteps of the Magna Carta barons.
Here you have the American patriot, leaning on a copy of the legendary English document: www.loc.gov/exhibits/magna-carta-muse-and-mentor/images/37771u_enlarge.jpg
Cheers.
Oh boy the British empire...an empire of wastelands...penguins and kangaroos.
Песня без музыки
American naval victories over the Royal Navy
13 Aug 1812 capture of the Alert
19 Aug 1812 capture of the Guerriere
18 Oct 1812 capture of the Frolic
25 Oct 1812 capture of the Macedonian
29 Dec 1812 capture of the Java
24 Feb 1813 sinking of the Peacock
5 Aug 1813 capture of the Dominica
5 Sept 1813 capture of the Boxer
28 Apr 1814 capture of the Epervier
28 Jun 1814 sinking of the Reindeer
11 October 1814 - Neufchatel defeats 111 man boarding party from the HMS Endymion
1 Sept 1814 sinking of the Avon
20 Feb 1815 capture of the Levant
20 Feb 1815 capture of the Cyane
23 Mar 1815 capture of the Penguin
11 Dec 1812 capture of the Rachel
25 Mar 1813 privateer Nereyda captured
28 Mar 1813 whaler Barclay
29-Apr - 15 Sep 1813 armed whaler Montezuma
Georgiana captured
Policy captured
Atlantic captured
armed whaler Greenwich captured
Catherine captured
whaler Rose
whaler Hector
armed privateer Seringapatam
Charlton
New Zealander
whaler Sir Andrew Hammond
Lake vessels captured from the British:
HMS Detroit
HMS Queen Charlotte
HMS Hunter
HMS Lady Prevost
HMS Little Belt
- six smaller vessels also taken after the Battle of Lake Erie
HMS Chubb
HMS Linnet
HMS Confiance
HMS Finch
- 12 additional gun boats taken at Battle of Lake Champlain
HMS Caledonia
HMS Hamilton
HMS Broke
HMS Pictou
HMS Ballahou
packet Swallow
HMS Landrail
HMS Hamilton
recapture of the Wasp
Defeat of the 44 gun frigate HMS Ulysses
HMS Whiting
HMS Lord Nelson
HMS Magnet - burned to prevent capture aug 1814
HMS Hermes (Sept 1814) destroyed at Ft Bowyar
American victories over the British in 1812-14
16 July 1812 Battle of River Canard
19 July 1812 1st Sackets
21 Sept 1812 Raid on Gananoque
Oct 1812 1st Ogdensburg
23 October 1812 St Regis attacked by American Militia
January 1813 Dilligence (transport ship) captured in Machias, Maine
7 Feb 1813 Raid on Elizabethtown
27 Apr 1813 1st burning of York
31 July 1813 2nd burning of York
28-29 May 1813 2nd Sackets
May 29 1813 Big Sandy Creek
April 29, 1813 - Cockburn is repelled at Elkton, MA
June 1 1813 US repulse of Royal Marine raid north of Sackets
9 June 1813 US forces burn Ft Erie
6-11 Sept 1814 Plattsburgh
28 Nov 1812 Frenchman's Creek
25-27 May 1813 Capture of Ft George
14-16 May 1814 Raid on Port Dover
3 July 1814 Capture of Fort Erie
5 July 1814 Chippewa
Aug-Sept 1814 Siege of Fort Erie
August 1814 Battle of Scajaquada
5-15 Sept 1812 Siege of Ft Harrison
5-12 Sept 1812 Siege of Ft Wayne
February 7, 1813 Forsyth attacks Brockville
17-18 Dec 1812 Mississinewa
28 Apr-9May 1813 Siege of Ft Meigs
21-27 July 1813 - Second Siege of Ft Meigs
2 Aug 1813 Ft Stephenson
10 Sept 1813 Victory on Lake Erie
23 September 1813 Capture of the HMS Highflyer
28 September 1813 "Burlington Races"
5 Oct 1813 Thames
4 March 1814 Longwoods
29 April 1813 Elk's Landing
6 Nov 1814 Malcom's Mills
22 June 1813 Craney Island
10 August 1813 St Michaels
12 Sept 1814 North Point
13 Sept 1814 Hampstead Hill
31 Aug 1814 Caulk's Field
12-15 Sept 1814 Baltimore
1814 Battle of Rock Harbor - HMS Newcastle party thrown back
2 Aug 1814 Battle of Scajaquada Creek Bridge
November 1814 Battle of Dover
November 1814 Battle of Savareen Mills
6 Dec 1814 Farnham church
7-9 Nov 1814 Pensacola
14-16 Sept 1814 1st Ft Bowyer
13 Dec 1814 - Jackson's probe
8 Jan 1815 New Orleans
9-18 Jan 1815 Ft St Phillip
February 7, 1815 - Battle of the Ice Mound
13 Aug 1812 capture of the Alert
19 Aug 1812 capture of the Guerriere
18 Oct 1812 capture of the Frolic
25 Oct 1812 capture of the Macedonian
29 Dec 1812 capture of the Java
24 Feb 1813 sinking of the Peacock
5 Aug 1813 capture of the Dominica
5 Sept 1813 capture of the Boxer
28 Apr 1814 capture of the Epervier
28 Jun 1814 sinking of the Reindeer
11 October 1814 - Neufchatel defeats 111 man boarding party from the HMS Endymion
1 Sept 1814 sinking of the Avon
20 Feb 1815 capture of the Levant
20 Feb 1815 capture of the Cyane
23 Mar 1815 capture of the Penguin
11 Dec 1812 capture of the Rachel
25 Mar 1813 privateer Nereyda captured
28 Mar 1813 whaler Barclay
29-Apr - 15 Sep 1813 armed whaler Montezuma
Georgiana captured
Policy captured
Atlantic captured
armed whaler Greenwich captured
Catherine captured
whaler Rose
whaler Hector
armed privateer Seringapatam
Charlton
New Zealander
whaler Sir Andrew Hammond
Lake vessels captured from the British:
HMS Detroit
HMS Queen Charlotte
HMS Hunter
HMS Lady Prevost
HMS Little Belt
- six smaller vessels also taken after the Battle of Lake Erie
HMS Chubb
HMS Linnet
HMS Confiance
HMS Finch
- 12 additional gun boats taken at Battle of Lake Champlain
HMS Caledonia
HMS Hamilton
HMS Broke
HMS Pictou
HMS Ballahou
packet Swallow
HMS Landrail
HMS Hamilton
recapture of the Wasp
Defeat of the 44 gun frigate HMS Ulysses
HMS Whiting
HMS Lord Nelson
HMS Magnet - burned to prevent capture aug 1814
HMS Hermes (Sept 1814) destroyed at Ft Bowyar
October 8-11 1813 US raids - Twenty Mile Creek
November 26 1813 repeat US raid Twenty Mile Creek
September 20 1814 US raids settlements in the Western District
September 11 1814 Vermont militia kills or captures British rearguard
September 6 1814 US raid (50 men) captures British battery, repells 300 regulars
July 31-August 1 1813 US re-raids York, burns barracks
August 28 1813 British ships detect US raiding party at York, British flee to Burlington
October 27 1813 US raid on Frelighsburg
October 12 1813 US raid in Missisiquoi Bay
October 20 1812 US raid on Odelltown
September 20 1813 US skirmishes at Odelltown
August 10 1814 officer captured in Odelltown during skirmish
October 11-13 1813 US raids in Philippsburg, Mississiquoi bay area
January 22 1814 US raids Philippsburg
March 22 1814 US captures and occupies Philippsburg
October 23 1812 US attacks captures St Regis and 28 guns (artillery)
June 26 1813 US repulse of British attack at Pagan Creek
July 2 1813 repeat British attack at Pagan creek repulsed
March 18 1813 US capture of RN seamen
June 10 1813 US repulse of British landing on island on the York river
June 22 1813 US repulses landing at Wise Creek
July 31 1812 US privateer captures Royal Bounty off Newfoundland
September 23 1813 British withdraw from Fort Malden- subsequent US recapture
September 29, 1813 recapture of Fort Shelby
December 20 1813 US raid at Arnolds Mill
July 26 1814 US destroys Burch's Mills
May 14-16 1814 US raids at Charlotteville
July 25 1814 US raids Charlotteville
20 July 1814 burning of Ft St Joseph
July 7th 1813 US victory at Butler's Farm (Niagara)
July 29 1813 US burns the King George Inn at Burlington
October 19 1814 US burns Cook's Mills, destroys 200 bushels of wheat
October 6 1813 US captures 6 British schooners in troop convoy - False Ducks
August 20-September 6 1814 skirmishes around Fort Erie
October 9 1812 US destroys MP brig Detroit, captures PM brig Caledonia
December 10 1813 - burning of Newark
July 1814, British withdraw from Ft St Joseph, US moves in and burns it, captures schooner
November 7 1813 British failure to stop US flotilla at Fort Wellington
March 4 1814 US repulse of British attack at De French River
October 21 1812 US raid on Gray's Mills
November 10 1813 US wins skirmish at Hoople's Creek
November 10 1812 Burlington Races
August 10-31 1814 Burlington is blockaded
May 10 1813 US party overcomes guards, burns supply building - Lake Ontario
US schooner Lady of the Lakes captures Lady Murray June 16 1813
US boats capture HM gunboat Blacksnake June 19 1813
May 14-15 1814 US raids Long Point
November 6 1814 US raids Malcom's Mills
October 7 1813 US burns Moraviantown
June 27 1814 US burns newly finished schooner at New Castle
December 10 1813 US burns Newark and St David
May 28 1813 The British evacuates all posts on the Niagara river
November 1814 Battle of Dover
November 1814 Battle of Savareen Mills - Americans kill/wound/capture 450 British
August 14 1814 US squadron destroys blockhouse and HM schoon Nancy on the Nottawasaga
April 5 1814 US raid on Oxford
May 14-15 1814 US raids at Patterson's Creek
May 14-15 1814 US raids and burns Dover and Port Ryerse
February 1814 US raid on Port Talbot - burned and never rebuilt
May 19 1814 US raid on Port Talbot
July 20 1814 US raid on Port Talbot
August 16 1814 US raid on Port Talbot
September 20 1814 US raid on Port Talbot
May 26 1813 US seizes British post at Queenston
December 11 1813 US burns parts of Queenston
July 7 1814 US occupies Queenston
July 18 1814 2 US gunboats capture 15 British supply boats and rebel counterattack Rockport
July 5 1812 US bombs Windsor
July 12 1812 US invades burns Sandwich
September 29 1813 US occupies Sandwich, British flee a second time
July 21 1814 US burns NW Co Trading Post, captured merchantman Sault Ste Marie
July 18 1814 US burns St David
July 22 1814 US repulses counterattack at St David
July 27 1812 US schoon Julia drives of PM schoons Moira and Gloucester
July 31 1812 3 US gigs capture British vessel of the PM RC St Lawrence
November 17 1814 US captures 2 gunboats St Lawrence
September 14 1813 US raids Sugar Loaf
It always amazes me how stupid the average brit is. In the period from June 1812 to Dec 1814....Napoleon never faced the British. The Peninsular campaign was a sideshow to the battles in central and eastern Europe where the Prussians, Russians and Austrians destroyed some of Napoleon's largest armies. The British werent present for either. They werent even there when he was cornered in Paris.
The US was on the offensive till the last days of the War of 1812. The Niagara campaign of 1814 severly mauled the BA in upper Canada. The British even lost the field at Lundys Lane along with all of their artillery.
"US failed to take Canada (their main goal"
By 1814, Britain wanted American territory via a policy of uti possedetis. Care to know why they didnt achieve that?
Occupied? lol thats funny. All the British did was enact a blockade of France while the eastern European powers wiped the landscape with Napoleon. By 1814 the British did send close to 50,000 troops to Canada, comparable to that of the Battle of Talavera all for naught. Most of the retreating done in 1813-14 was by the British. In 1813 retreating from the L. Erie region only to be run down by frontier cavalry at Thames....retreating with 15,000 men back into Canada following defeat on L. Champlain. And retreating with the remnants of the army annihilated at New Orleans.
The Amis declared war on Britain because their sailors were being impressed into British service, disregarding the nations sovereignty (which was acknowledged after the Revolutionary War). And ya know, the war ended in a draw, that means neither side won. Both had astounding victories and losses. The Brits were occupied with Napoleon in Europe (wars that have determined the course of history) and America took advantage of the distraction to reaffirm its sovereignty. The Brits were in a tough place and America was smart and took the opportunity.
I'm not trying to degrade either side, but instead tell both of you that we are now some of the best allies in the world and because of our combined efforts, we have been able to bring the world into a new age, one where we have to time and safety to bicker about history. What is done is done. Learn from the past and with that knowledge look to the future.
Video is a waste of time. Just someone singing ...