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DISCOVER MARITIME BRITAIN
The
sea breeze flapping across heavy canvas sails, wind
whistling through salty rigging, and the gentle creak
of tarred wood as a proud sailing ship cuts through
a swell… maritime heritage isn’t just something
to visit. It’s something to hear, feel and smell
too.
As
the home base of the Royal Navy for more than 1,000
years, Britain is the finest place to experience that
complete taste of swashbuckling history, romantic gallantry
and seafaring prowess.
The
new Russell Crowe film Master and Commander –
The Far Side of the World, is set on the high seas during
the Napoleonic Wars. Based on the Patrick O’Brian
novels, the film follows the adventures of Captain Jack
Aubrey whose vessel is attacked by an enemy warship.
A man on a mission, he sets sail on a high stakes chase
across two oceans to intercept and capture his foe.
If
the dashing naval heroes of Master and Commander whet
your appetite, Britain’s nautical attractions
are a must. Crowe’s Captain Jack Aubrey is the
latest in a long line of British heroes of the sea,
both fictional and real; for this is the homeland of
Admiral Nelson, Sir Francis Drake, Captain Cook and
Sir Walter Raleigh. So it’s hardly surprising
that Britain is one big treasure island where the nautical
gold isn’t buried or hidden, it’s simply
scattered all around the beautiful coastline.
Nowhere
else in the world can visitors get so close to real
sea-going adventurers. You can stand on the green at
Plymouth Hoe where Sir Francis Drake played bowls as
the Armada approached and retrace the steps of the Pilgrim
Fathers as they boarded the Mayflower; stroll round
the atmospheric Belfast docks where the Titanic was
built; and even stand astride the Greenwich Meridian
Line – centre of all timekeeping and map-reckoning.
In
fact Greenwich is a wonderful place to launch any nautical
tour of Britain. At this World Heritage Site on the
banks of the Thames in London, the sense of maritime
history is so strong you almost expect to see Captain
Aubrey sailing past at the helm of HMS Surprise.
There’s
nothing fictional about the world’s only surviving
three-masted tea clipper, the Cutty Sark (www.cuttysark.org.uk).
At Greenwich you can step aboard and imagine the bustle
of a Victorian trading ship. Explore the magnificent
Old Royal Naval College (www.greenwichfoundation.org.uk)
and National Maritime Museum, (www.nmm.ac.uk). This
is where boatbuilders found original 1757 drawings to
create the stunning replica of HMS Rose which doubles
as HMS Surprise in Master and Commander.
And
as the Thames winds through London, its banks are a
sequence of landmarks of maritime legacy. The new Museum
in Docklands (www.museumindocklands.org.uk) charts the
fascinating history of London’s river port. Head
west to the second world war cruiser HMS Belfast (www.iwm.org.uk).
Discover about life on board by touring gun turrets,
cabins and even the engine room.
Further
upstream, between London Bridge and Shakespeare’s
Globe Theatre is The Golden Hinde (www.goldenhinde.co.uk,
a full-scale reconstruction of Francis Drake’s
famous galleon.
Down on the south coast in Hampshire, a couple of hours
from London, is one of the Royal Navy’s biggest
and busiest ports. The Portsmouth Historic Dockyard
(www.historicdockyard.co.uk) is home to three most important
warships - Henry VIII's lavish galleon Mary Rose, Lord
Nelson's HMS Victory and the world's first iron battleship,
the mighty HMS Warrior of 1860.
A
modern museum called Action Stations (www.flagship.org.uk)
gives an insight into today’s Royal Navy, while
The Royal Navy Museum offers a spectacular slice of
seafaring history.
Head west to Cornwall, a county long associated with
smuggling, fishing and shipwrecks. The National Maritime
Museum Cornwall (www.nmmc.co.uk) recently opened in
an extraordinary modern building on Falmouth’s
huge natural harbour, where Nelson’s fleet once
gathered before sailing for Trafalgar.
Even
further south, maritime treasure hunters will discover
a hoard of seafaring gold in the Channel Islands. The
more energetic can head for the sea, step back in time
and dive amongst the numerous wrecks surrounding the
islands. Explore the Maritime Museum in St. Helier,
Jersey (www.jerseyheritagetrust.org) and learn about
the islanders’ relationship with the sea over
the past 8,000 years.
120
miles west of London is a city with a merchant naval
heritage – Bristol. Here you can board the SS
Great Britain (www.ss-great-britain.com), which 160
years ago was the world’s first ocean liner and
carried 15,000 emigrants to Australia. Alongside her
is The Matthew, a replica of the 15th-century vessel
in which John Cabot crossed the Atlantic to claim Newfoundland.
Head
north into Wales to find a coastline dotted with old
smugglers’ caves and fishermen’s pubs. Seafaring
highlights include Swansea’s maritime quarter
(www.swansea.gov.uk), Cardiff’s stylishly renovated
docklands (www.cardiff.gov.uk) and a string of dramatic
medieval castles commanding strategic waterways, like
those at Pembroke, Harlech, Beaumaris and Conway.
On the other side of Britain, England’s eastern
counties boast another long and varied coastline.
A
few miles inland is the picturesque town of Boston,
from where the Pilgrim Fathers attempted to flee in
1607 (www.bostonuk.com). Make an appointment to visit
the Guildhall courtroom and cells where the ringleaders
were tried and imprisoned before they fled to the New
World via Holland.
In
Norfolk visit Great Yarmouth, to see where Nelson grew
up and got his first taste for the sea. The town is
now home to the Norfolk Nelson Museum (www.nelson-museum.co.uk)
Further
north, the city of Hull has a long seafaring tradition.
The original HMS Rose was built here in 1757. But Hull
is a modern vibrant centre too (www.hullcc.gov.uk/visithull)
with attractions including a Maritime Museum, a North
Sea trawler converted to a floating museum and a renovated
lightship.
Further
up the coast discover Captain Cook Country. The town
of Whitby has been associated with the famous seafarer
for over two hundred years. Here you can visit the harbourside
Captain Cook Memorial Museum (www.cookmuseumwhitby.co.uk).
Still further north, find out more at Middlesbrough’s
Captain Cook Birthplace Museum (http://www.captaincook.org.uk/home.htm).
On
the other side of the Pennines is the world-famous port
of Liverpool. Visit Merseyside Maritime in a former
bonded warehouse, part of the historic Albert Dock on
the banks of the Mersey (www.merseysidemaritimemuseum.org.uk)
or cross to Birkenhead to see the UK’s largest
collection of 20th century warships (www.warships.freeserve.co.uk).
Conclude
your tour north of the border. Scotland has a strong
naval history of its own, such as Clydeside’s
proud shipbuilding tradition. The Coastal cities of
Glasgow, Aberdeen and Dundee have fascinating maritime
museums, and Scotland’s capital Edinburgh is now
home to the Royal Yacht Britannia. Visitors can step
on board the ship that was once home to the world's
most famous family (www.royalyachtbritannia.co.uk).
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