James P. McGuane
Heart of Oak
A Sailor's Life in Nelson's Navy
From tar-ladles and snuff-boxes to sailmaker's fids and carronades: a gorgeous photographic essay onthe nautical worlds of Jack Aubrey.
The extraordinary photography in this book was inspired by the author's
reading of Patrick O'Brian's Aubrey/Maturin novels. In small museums along the
English coast, and in private collections, James McGuane has recorded
artifacts recovered from shipwrecks and preserved by modern conservation
techniques. Taken together, these unique treasures provide a window onto the
everyday life of sailors and officers in the Royal Navy of the Napoleonic era.
Thanks to advances in marine archaeology, it is often possible to establish
the exact identity of a wrecked warship, along with the date and circumstances
of its sinking. We are thus provided with a moment frozen in time: tools,
clothing, utensils, weapons, and fragments of the ship itself startlingly
intact. These photographs bring home to the readeras words alone
cannotwhat a sailor's life in that time was really like.
Also photographed here is Admiral Horatio Nelson's flagship HMS
Victory, proudly preserved at Portsmouth. Victory survived the great fleet
action at Trafalgar, where Nelson himself died, and it is still a commissioned
ship in the Royal Navy.
James P. McGuane lives in New York City.
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