释义 |
- See also
A number of sailing ships have been named Blenheim: - Blenheim (1704), a 260-ton merchant ship built in Deptford in 1704 for the East India Company. The ship was attacked by the French ship Duguay-Trouin and blown up in 1714.
- {{ship||Blenheim|1790 ship}}, of 369 tons (bm). She was last listed in 1837.
- Blenheim was launched in 1804 but the Royal Navy purchased her almost immediately. She served as {{HMS|Cormorant|1804|6}} until the Navy sold her in 1817. She became the West Indiaman Blenheim, and disappeared, presumed foundered, in 1821.
- {{ship||Blenheim|1834 ship}}, a 357-ton merchant ship built in Jarrow in 1834. The ship was used to transport convicts to Port Jackson in 1834 and 1839 and Hobart Town in 1837.
- {{ship||Blenheim|1845 ship}}, an 808-ton merchant ship built by the Middle Dock Co. in West Holborn, South Shields, that transported convicts to Hobart Town in 1849 and 1850. She foundered in 1859.
- {{ship||Blenheim|1848 ship}}, of {{GRT|1848}}, was a sailing ship built by T.& W. Smith at St Peter's Yard, Shields. In 1867 a cyclone dismasted her as she sailed from Madras to Calcutta. It was not cost-effective to repair her so her owners sold her to the Indian government, which used her as a coal hulk in the Nicobar Islands.
See also{{shipindex}}{{italic title}} 1 : Ship names |