The "St Vincent" in Portsmouth Harbour c.1862, George Washington Wilson, circa 1862

The "St Vincent" in Portsmouth Harbour c.1862, George Washington Wilson, circa 1862

The st. Vincent in portsmouth harbour 1883' after an original of c. 1862. Photograph of hms st vincent as seen from the port side, lying at anchor within portsmouth docks. In the background is the harbour. Hms vincent was laid down at plymouth dockyard in 1810 and launched on the 11th march 1815. The ship was used to transport french troops to the baltic during the crimean war, subsequently becoming a training ship from 1862, probably when this photograph was taken, to 1905. This photograph is a carbon copy of the original albumen photograph. Carbon was a process that was less susceptible to fading, unlike an albumen print that is prone to discolouration over time. Provenance: from an album of photographs collected and arranged by albert, prince consort between 1860 and 1861, victoria continued the collection after his death. Object Type: photograph. Date: circa 1862. Dimensions: height: 8.1 cm (3.1 in); width: 7.3 cm (2.8 in). Medium: albumen print. Depicted Place: Portsmouth Harbour. Collection: Royal Collection. The St Vincent in Portsmouth Harbour 1883 after an original c.1862 - RCIN 767410-1529579740
Edit image
Author: Cornelius Jabez Hughes (1819–1884) After George Washington Wilson (1823–1893)Source: https://commons.wikimedia.org/

Loading...

0 downloads
Loading...
photographs in the royal collection of the united kingdomcornelius jabez hughesgeorge washington wilsonhms st vincent (ship, 1815)portsmouth harbouralbumen printroyal collection

MORE LIKE THIS

Creazilla logo
Over 10 million free graphic resources for content creators and designers.
© 2018 - 2025 Creazilla
Our resourcesAll imagesPhotosDigital illustrationsClipartIconsPNG ImagesEmojisSilhouettesTraditional Art3D ModelsVectorsFontsColor namesColor palettesGradientsAudioAnimationVideosTemplates
InformationAbout CreazillaTerms of useTech teamPrivacy policyLicence Information
FeedbackContact Us