The British Navy Triumphant! Being Copies of the London Gazettes Extraordinary; Containing the Accounts of the Glorious Victories Obtained ... Over the French Fleet, by Admiral Lord Howe, on the First of June, 1794; the Spanish Fleet, by Admiral Sir J. Jervis, Near Cape St. Vincent, February 14, 1797; the Dutch Fleet, by Admiral A. Duncan, Near Camperdown ... Oct. 11, 1797; and ... the French Fleet, by Rear-Admiral Sir H. Nelson, Near the Mouth of the Nile, Aug. 1 and 2, 1798


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Horatio, Viscount Nelson


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Readers' Guide


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British Critic


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Champions of the Fleet


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Admiral Collingwood: Nelson's Own Hero


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Admiral Lord Collingwood, the eldest son of a Newcastle merchant, went to sea in 1761 at the age of thirteen. In his nearly fifty years in the Navy he rose to become a fine seaman, a master of gunnery, a battle commander the equal of his friend – and rival in love – Nelson. He was also an accomplished writer and wit, a doting father, inveterate gossip and consummate diplomat and strategist. Collingwood's service took him to Boston, where he lived and fought during the American War of Independence; to Antigua, where he and Nelson both fell in love with Mary Moutray; to Corsica; Sicily; and Menorca, where he began as a young midshipman and ended his career as the effective viceroy of the Mediterranean. ADMIRAL COLLINGWOOD is an intimate portrait of a forgotten British naval hero and a thrilling portrait of the glory years of the age of sail.