Life on board a troop-ship: heaving the log, 1873. Creator: Unknown.
Sujet

Life on board a troop-ship: heaving the log, 1873. Creator: Unknown.

Légende

Life on board a troop-ship: heaving the log, 1873. Measuring the speed of the ship. 'The experiences of soldiering in the British Army differ from those of every foreign military service. Though enlisted in her Majesty's land service, it is the lot of almost every private or non-commissioned officer in a regiment of the Line or in the Royal Artillery to pass many weeks or months in long sea voyages, either to and from India, or between this country and the seat of a distant war...During the first days of the voyage, however, especially with troops who have not been at sea on any former occasion, the soldier finds himself rather puzzled by the novel conditions of his daily life, which cannot pursue exactly the same routine as in the barrack-yard on shore. The officers, indeed, knowing that idleness would do their men no good, will set and keep them to such employments as they are fit to share in the work of the ship...three or four of them may be seen holding the reel or winding up the line when the log is hourly cast into the water by one of the ship's warrant officers. Our Illustrations of these incidents are from sketches by Lieutenant W. O. Carlile, R.A.'. From "Illustrated London News", 1873.

Crédit

Photo12/Heritage Images/The Print Collector

Notre référence

HRM25A12_487

Model release

NA

Property release

NA

Licence

Droits gérés

Format disponible

24,0Mo (2,4Mo) / 28,2cm x 21,3cm / 3332 x 2514 (300dpi)

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