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A replica of the Tudor Warship in which Sir Francis Drake sailed around the world in 1577 |
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Photo © Jose Marin (CC) |
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Adjacent to the Golden Hinde |
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Length 120 feet (37m) |
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Beam 18 feet (2.7m) |
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Launched 1577 |
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Speed 8 knots (15km/h) |
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Crew 80 - 85 |
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Armament 22 Guns |
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You
can view the ship externally for FREE. The ship is open to visitors
daily, 10am to 6pm; opening times may vary depending on events. Entry
costs £6 for adults, £4.50 child/concessions. |
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The Golden Hinde is a replica of the Tudor Warship that Sir Francis Drake
sailed around the world in, in 1577. Drake’s journey around the world
was legendary – and it took 3 years and thousands of miles to be
completed. He had a dream of himself and his crew becoming the first
English sailors to have travelled all the way around the globe. Queen
Elizabeth I actually gave him a charter when he left, that granted him
permission to attack and plunder any ships belonging to England’s
enemies. At the time, England’s enemies were the Spanish, who still
regard Francis Drake as an outlaw pirate to this day. On his return,
Queen Elizabeth visited the original Golden Hinde, and Drake was
knighted on deck. |
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The replica Golden Hinde is in St Mary Overie Dock and open to visitors. |
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Photo © Ruth L (CC) |
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Did You Know? |
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Drake captured many ships during his voyage, the most famous being the Spanish ship Cacafuego.
The treasure stored on this ship was so immense that Drake’s men
emptied the Golden Hinde’s ballast and stored the booty in the bilge
(under the hold) for the remainder of the voyage. |
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Sir Francis Drake, who travelled around the world in the original Golden Hinde in 1577 |
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Source WikiMedia (PD) |
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After
this Queen Elizabeth commissioned the Golden Hinde as Britain’s first
ship open to the public like a museum. People could go and visit the
ship, in celebration of the trip’s success, which incidentally brought
huge monetary profits to the crown. Unfortunately the original ship
became unusable due to rot in the late 1600s. |
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Photo © psd (CC) |
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Although
the Golden Hinde is now a replica, it is fully working, and was
launched in Devon 1973. She too then sailed around the world – for
140,000 miles, which is many more miles than Francis Drake ever did!
Its first port of call was San Francisco, where it re-enacted the
‘claiming of California’ by Drake for Queen Elizabeth I. After that, in
1979 it began to retrace Francis Drake’s route around the world. Since
then she has also sailed around the British Isles and the Caribbean, to
Canada, Washington, Oregon, Texas and the Gulf of Mexico. |
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Did You Know? |
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To this day, the Spanish government still regard Sir Francis Drake as a
pirate. However, Queen Elizabeth I gave Drake a charter granting him
permission to attack and loot ships belonging to England’s enemies. |
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The bow of the ship |
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Photo © psd (CC) |
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She
is now docked in Southwark in London, and receives thousands of
visitor’s every year. Children can dress up as Tudor sailors, and
receive history lessons about Elizabethan Naval History – some of the
greatest naval history in Britain’s long years to setting to sea. |
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Inside Drake's Cabin |
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Photo © The Golden Hinde |
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One of the ships cannons |
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Photo © The Golden Hinde |
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A children's pirate fun day, hosted inside the ship |
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Photo © The Golden Hinde |
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