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Richard Hough

Autor von Captain James Cook

92+ Werke 2,616 Mitglieder 40 Rezensionen Lieblingsautor von 2 Lesern

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Werke von Richard Hough

Captain James Cook (1994) 369 Exemplare
The Great War at Sea 1914 - 1918, (1983) 120 Exemplare
The Fleet that had to Die (1958) 91 Exemplare
The Potemkin Mutiny (1960) 63 Exemplare
Victoria and Albert (1996) 38 Exemplare
Admirals in Collision (1959) 37 Exemplare
The Children Who Stayed Behind (1964) 36 Exemplare
Racing Cars (1966) 34 Exemplare
The Great Admirals (1977) 31 Exemplare
Flight to Victory (1985) 24 Exemplare
The Perilous Descent (1952) 23 Exemplare
The blind Horn's hate (1971) 23 Exemplare
The Long Pursuit (1969) 22 Exemplare
Speed Six! (1956) 22 Exemplare
Buller's Guns (1981) 22 Exemplare
B Flight (1970) 21 Exemplare
You Can Save the Planet (2007) 21 Exemplare
A history of fighting ships (1975) 19 Exemplare
Razor Eyes (1981) 19 Exemplare
Buller's Dreadnought (1982) 17 Exemplare
Motor Car Lover's Companion (1965) 15 Exemplare
Wings Against the Sky (1979) 15 Exemplare
The fight of the few (1980) 13 Exemplare
Fighting ships (1969) 12 Exemplare
Nelson: A Biography (1980) 12 Exemplare
Target Island (1957) 11 Exemplare
Buller's Victory (1984) 11 Exemplare
Buzzbugs (1977) 11 Exemplare
Murder of Captain James Cook (1979) 10 Exemplare
Great auto races (1961) 8 Exemplare
Wings of victory (1980) 8 Exemplare
One boy's war (1975) 8 Exemplare
Nuvolari and the Alfa Romeo (1968) 6 Exemplare
Four wheel drift (1971) 6 Exemplare
Fast Circuit (1962) 5 Exemplare
BRITISH GRAND PRIX: A HISTORY (1958) 4 Exemplare
Airfield Man (1974) 4 Exemplare
The Battle of Jutland (1964) 4 Exemplare
The Battle of Midway (1970) 4 Exemplare
Rover Memories (1966) 4 Exemplare
Great motor races (1960) 3 Exemplare
The fighter (1963) 2 Exemplare
Tricycle Tim 1 Exemplar
Nicks grote race (1979) 1 Exemplar
Wine Democracy (2022) 1 Exemplar

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FawknerMotoring | Jul 17, 2021 |
It took a very big scandal to produce this very small book.

In 1893, Vice Admiral George Tryon commanded the British fleet in the Mediterranean. That summer, during a series of maneuvers, he issued an order to the fleet which resulted in his flagship, the Victoria, being hit and sunk by the Camperdown, the flagship of his second-in-command. In addition to destroying a new, expensive ship, the collision cost the lives of about 350 of her crew.

Why? That was the issue that consumed the Royal Navy that summer. Why had Tryon issued an order that almost inevitably led to the collision of his two biggest ships -- which, indeed, potentially would have led to every other pair of ships in the two parallel lines of ships colliding.

No one knows the answer, because Tryon was one of those who died in the wreck. The inquiry and trial of the ship's captain couldn't figure out much, either; all it could do was honorably acquit Captain Bourke and cast a very jaundiced eye on Admiral Markham, the second-in-command who had allowed the Camperdown to sail on her collision course.

This book sets out the bare facts fairly well, but I couldn't help but wish it had told us more. For instance, a plan and detailed description of Victoria would have been nice. Instead, we get descriptions of her big guns -- but nothing about her secondary armaments, the construction of her watertight compartments, her seakeeping characteristics. We get descriptions of Admirals Tryon and Markham (the former much more favorable than the latter -- given that his subordinates seem frankly to have feared Tryon, I wonder if the description isn't overly flattering), but little about what it meant to lead a late nineteenth century fleet, or what the role of the Royal Navy was in the Mediterranean. Author Hough admits that he is left with a puzzle he can't solve. I'm sure he's right, but I wish he'd given me a few more pieces than this thin little 144-page un-indexed volume allows.

[Correction 8/3/2020: changed "un-indeed" in the last sentence to "un-indexed."]
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waltzmn | 3 weitere Rezensionen | Aug 2, 2020 |
The title of Richard Hough's book promises more than it delivers, for instead of providing a comprehensive coverage of the naval campaigns of the First World War he offers a study focused on the arms race involving dreadnought construction and the stalemated confrontation between the British Grand Fleet and the German High Seas Fleet between the start of the war and the battle of Jutland. While Hough's focus is understandable, it comes at slighting the myriad other aspects of the naval war: of the sixteen chapters, only five do not address either one of these two relatively narrow aspects of the war at sea. Yet Hough is an able writer who provides a gripping account of such events as the pursuit of Germany's Pacific Squadron or the battle of Jutland. Readers seeking an entertaining account of the naval war will not be disappointed by this book, though those desiring a more comprehensive analysis would be better served turning to Paul Halpern's superb [b:A Naval History of World War I|16720656|A Naval History of World War I|Paul G. Halpern|https://images.gr-assets.com/books/1386587161s/16720656.jpg|1607472].… (mehr)
 
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MacDad | 2 weitere Rezensionen | Mar 27, 2020 |

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