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Admiral's barge men made out you was practically Sam Hood's own sons.
Port admiral's barge had come alongside, a civilian and an officer: one gent was with the captain yet.
David Charles sat in the bow of California's whaleboat, a craft much smaller than his own admiral's barge.
After being imprisoned in Greece, he escaped in the German admiral's barge.
Besides that, word would have come across with the Admiral's barge that these two passengers were much cosseted by Lord Hood.
Although some boats were general purpose in nature, boats such as the Captain's gig and the Admiral's barge were for the exclusive use of officers.
A bomb missed the Southampton by the breadth of the Admiral's Barge, and another showered the Edinburgh with shrapnel.
At ten o'clock the group was loaded into the captain's gig and the admiral's barge for the ride out to the great ship, which was visible from the quay.
As he ran to the wardroom he rapidly reviewed possible reasons for the summons, and guessed that perhaps Carmody had told the captain about the admiral's barge.
Suffren lowered her admiral's barge, her only intact boat, and rescued 75 men before she had to escort the badly-damaged Gaulois away from the Dardanelles.
In the Royal Navy in the days of sail, the coxswain was a petty officer or chief petty officer who commanded a captain's or admiral's barge.
A neo-Gothic style gate lodge was also added to the grounds, as was a covered Admiral's Walk leading down to the berth for the Admiral's barge below.
The U.S. Navy provided access to naval facilities with costs amounting to as much as $24,000 a day being incurred when an admiral's barge and jet fighters were commandered.
Armoured target boats were also built for the RAF, proving very successful and cost-effective, together with tenders for Imperial Airways flying boats, and admiral's barges.
Some of the men from the Admiral's barge took hold of their sea-chests, carting them through a low door on the quay side Pender, following, made sure that he had one end of the strongbox.
When they got to the shore, they saw the huge flotilla of troopships setting off for the south of France (Operation Dragoon), and a small bright blue admiral's barge dodging around them.
Deutschland and her sisters carried a number of smaller vessels, including two picket boats, one admiral's barge, two launches, one pinnace, two cutters, two yawls, and two dinghies.
Mr. Pilkington's popular 19-volume "Small Boat" series started in 1956 when he published "Thames Waters," an account of traveling the Thames in his cabin cruiser, a former admiral's barge called the Commodore.
She was standing in with the signal for dispatches flying, Haslar on her larboard bow, Southsea Castle on her starboard beam, when the Admiral's barge, double-banked and pulling hard, came out to meet her.
The marine saluted rigidly again, went through all the forms of leaving the quarterdeck with the jerkiness of an animated doll, and climbed down the chain ladder outboard to a sleek admiral's barge with a white-fringed canopy.
In the first statement, Marlin Fitzwater, the President's press secretary, who was also stranded on the Belknap, said the President "enjoyed the sea experience" as he was bounced about on the cabin cruiser, known as the admiral's barge.