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Hope was a galleon of the English navy, built in 1559. She was rebuilt in 1583 "into the form of a galleass ", and then again rebuilt from 1603 to 1604 when she was renamed Assurance . [ Note 1 ]
Sixteen ships of the Royal Navy have borne the name HMS Hope: English ship Hope (1559) was a 48-gun galleon launched in 1559. She was rebuilt with 38-guns and renamed Assurance in 1604 and was broken up in 1645. English ship Hope (1626) was a ship, formerly the French privateer Esperance. She was captured in 1626 and released in 1630.
Hope (1802 ship) was a small ship launched in 1802. She wrecked at Port Stephens, New South Wales, Australia in 1817. Hope (1802 Peterhead ship) was launched at Peterhead in 1802. She was a whaler in the British northern whale fishery for her entire career. She was lost in July 1830. Hope (1804 ship) was launched at Calcutta.
SS Hope was a hospital ship operated by Project HOPE. [1] This vessel was originally a US Navy hospital ship, USS Consolation (AH-15). Consolation was donated to Project Hope in 1958, and under its new name served from 1960 until 1974, when she was retired. Hope was not replaced, and the emphasis of Project HOPE switched entirely to land-based ...
She moved to the English Channel under Captain Thomas Lovell who took command on 14 May 1678 for service in the English Channel. [29] On 19 May 1680 she was under Captain Stephen Akerman and sailed for Newfoundland, then later was in the Soundings and finally with the Herring convoy in 1682/83.24 May 1688 saw Captain Randall M'Donald in Command ...
Hope reached Malacca on 18 February. [1] On 28 February, the British ships of the line HMS Sceptre and Albion joined the Fleet in the Strait and conducted them safely to St Helena. [4] Hope reached St Helena on 9 June. [1] HMS Plantagenet escorted the convoy from St Helena to England. Hope arrived at the Downs on 8 August. [1]
HMS Hope was a 70-gun third rate ship of the line of the English Royal Navy, built by William Castle launched at Deptford Dockyard in 1678. [1] She fought in the Battle of Beachy Head (1690) and the Battle of Barfleur. [2] Hope was captured in 1695. [1]
Sailing out of Newport, Rhode Island Hope was involved in bringing Africans to the United States to be sold as slaves as part of the Middle Passage. [2] Hope was under the command of Captain Nathaniel Mumford, [2] when she sailed from Newport, Rhode Island, on 12 November 1764, bound for Senegambia and the offshore Atlantic islands.