H M Dockyard (Sydney) - definitie. Wat is H M Dockyard (Sydney)
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Wat (wie) is H M Dockyard (Sydney) - definitie

AMERICAN JOURNALIST
Sydney H. Schanberg; Schanberg; Sydney Hillel Schanberg

Royal Navy Dockyard         
  • 1933 HMS Norfolk Summer cruise map
  • Covered slip no. 1, Devonport: the only complete surviving eighteenth-century slip on a Royal Dockyard.
  • View from the Commissioner's house in Bermuda: Ordnance Yard (in the [[Keep]]), Victualling Yard, Dockyard, Casemates Barracks and Upper Ordnance Yard.
  • Part of [[Nelson's Dockyard]] in Antigua
  • Dockyard Commissioner's House in Bermuda (1823–31)
  • 18th-century storehouse, 19th-century dry dock and 20th-century warship preserved at Chatham
  • Commissioner's House, Chatham (1703: the oldest intact building in any Royal Dockyard).<ref>[http://list.historicengland.org.uk/resultsingle.aspx?uid=1268201 Listing text] Part of the 17th-century Officer's Terrace survives in Devonport, but it was mostly destroyed in [[the Blitz]]</ref>
  • HMS ''Queen Elizabeth'' and ''Prince of Wales'' under construction at Rosyth, 2013.
  • Dockyard building of 1807, Mumbai
  • The floating dry dock ''Bermuda'', sheerlegs, Storehouse, and Casemates Barracks at HM Dockyard Bermuda
  • Naval Storehouse, c.1890, Garden Island, NSW, Australia
  • Former Royal Dockyard, Gibraltar
  • Portsmouth: surviving  dry-docks at No. 1 Basin (one of which dates from 1698).
  • HMS Westminster undergoing refit in a covered dry-dock at Devonport, 2009.
  • HMS ''York'']] in [[Admiralty Floating Dock]] No. 1 at HMD Bermuda in 1934
  • A lively depiction of Deptford Dockyard in the mid-eighteenth century (John Cleveley the Elder, 1755).
  • Naval Storehouses (c.1820) at Haulbowline (now Republic of Ireland)
  • Careening wharf and storehouses built by the Royal Navy in the 1760s, Illa Pinto, Port Mahon, Menorca.
  • The Principal Officers of a Dockyard were customarily housed in a terrace of houses, as seen here at Sheerness
  • Royal Navy Dockyard, Pembroke, 1860
  • coaling]] wharf at Devonport
  • HMD Bermuda circa 1899, showing the new ''South Yard'' under construction (left) and the old fortified ''North Yard'' (right)
  • Former mast house and sail loft of 1815 at Simon's Town; now the [[South African Naval Museum]]
  • Canada: former Naval Storehouse (c.1815), Kingston, Ontario
  • Shipbuilding slips at Chatham
  • Woolwich Dockyard, pictured in 1790. Ships under repair and construction are prominently seen on the yard's two docks and three slips; shipbuilding timber is stacked in every available open space across the site.
SERIES OF GOVERNMENT DOCKYARDS OPERATED BY THE ROYAL NAVY
Royal Naval Dockyards; Royal Navy Dockyards; Royal Dockyard; HM Dockyard; Royal dockyard; His Majesty's Dockyard; Her Majesty's Dockyard; H.M. Dockyard; Dover Dockyard; Royal Naval Dockyard; Royal Dockyards
Royal Navy Dockyards (more usually termed Royal Dockyards) were state-owned harbour facilities where ships of the Royal Navy were built, based, repaired and refitted. Until the mid-19th century the Royal Dockyards were the largest industrial complexes in Britain.
Deptford Dockyard         
  • A [[sheer hulk]] pictured off Deptford Dockyard in 1789, fitting masts to a frigate.
  • The Deptford area on a map owned in 1623 by [[John Evelyn]], a resident of the area. Evelyn's house, [[Sayes Court]], is at the bottom left. Above it is marked "The K's Ship Yard", the location of the expanding Deptford Dockyard.
  • Fisher Harding built 39 ships during his time in office.
  • The surviving former Dockyard Office building, with the Master Shipwright's House beyond it.
  • 6}}, a [[third rate]] of the [[1745 Establishment]]
  • 6}} from the Great Dock in 1755, depicted by John Cleveley the Elder. In the foreground a [[first rate]] warship rides at anchor, while another warship nears completion on the slipway in the centre background.
  • Deptford Dockyard, 1854. Key: a) Yard gate; b) Spinning house; c) Shop; d) Smiths' shop; e) Sawpits; f) Pitch house; g) Rigging and sail house; h) Store houses; i) Ropery; k) Plank shed; l) Docks; m) Building slips; n) Basin.
  • 6}}, being launched onto the Thames at Deptford in 1747, depicted by [[John Cleveley the Elder]]. Also shown are the Master Shipwright's House (left) and Great Storehouse.
  • The clock and cupola from the old Storehouse (1720, demolished 1984) now stand in Thamesmead.
FORMER NAVAL DOCKYARD AND BASE AT DEPTFORD ON THE RIVER THAMES
The Kings Yard, Deptford; The King's Yard, Deptford; Deptford dockyard; Deptford Royal Dockyard; Master Shipwright, Deptford Dockyard; Deptford Dock; Deptford Station (Royal Navy); Deptford Station (Royal navy); Resident Commissioner, Deptford Dockyard
Deptford Dockyard was an important naval dockyard and base at Deptford on the River Thames, operated by the Royal Navy from the sixteenth to the nineteenth centuries. It built and maintained warships for 350 years, and many significant events and ships have been associated with it.
Sydney Pardon         
ENGLISH CRICKET JOURNALIST (1855-1925)
Sydney Herbert Pardon; Pardon, Sydney H.; Pardon, Sydney
Sydney Herbert Pardon (23 September 1855 – 20 November 1925) was a sports journalist who was the editor of Wisden Cricketers' Almanack for 35 editions, from 1891 until his death. His father was the journalist George Frederick Pardon.

Wikipedia

Sydney Schanberg

Sydney Hillel Schanberg (January 17, 1934 – July 9, 2016) was an American journalist who was best known for his coverage of the war in Cambodia. He was the recipient of a Pulitzer Prize, two George Polk awards, two Overseas Press Club awards, and the Sigma Delta Chi prize for distinguished journalism. Schanberg was portrayed by Sam Waterston in the 1984 film The Killing Fields based on the experiences of Schanberg and the Cambodian journalist Dith Pran in Cambodia.