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The 'Minotaur'

The 'Minotaur'.jpg Baseball pitchesThumbnailsSection of First-rate Man-of-WarBaseball pitchesThumbnailsSection of First-rate Man-of-WarBaseball pitchesThumbnailsSection of First-rate Man-of-WarBaseball pitchesThumbnailsSection of First-rate Man-of-WarBaseball pitchesThumbnailsSection of First-rate Man-of-WarBaseball pitchesThumbnailsSection of First-rate Man-of-WarBaseball pitchesThumbnailsSection of First-rate Man-of-War
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Launched in 1863


Among the numerous huge monsters constituting the iron-clad fleet of England, the Minotaur, is one of the most gigantic and formidable; and the sister ships, the Agincourt and Northumberland, all of precisely the same tonnage, power, rig, and equipment, are the largest and most powerful ships in the navy.

The Minotaur was built at Blackwall, by the Thames Ship Building company and the engines were constructed by Messrs. Penn, of Deptford.

She is 6,621 ton's measurement, and propelled by screw engins of 1,350 horsepower, with a speed of 15 knots an hour.
She is 400 feet in length by 59 in width, and carries in all thirty-four of the heaviest guns used afloat. Among these which form her chief batter on the main deck are four 300-pounder Armstrongs.

Author
The Boy's Own Book of Boats
By W.H.G. Kingston
Published in 1828, New Edition in 1867
Available from books.google.com
Dimensions
734*1000
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1245
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