Finally getting around to something I've wanted to do for a while, working on the early US Navy. For the moment I'm looking at the "6 Frigates" and the early US Navy.
First, we need to reference Colosseum's Topic as he began the USS Constitution in it's War of 1812 appearance:
http://www.shipbucket.com/forums/viewto ... nstitution
the 1790's was an interesting period as the US was a new country, economically growing, maritime oriented, and militarily non-existent, it was ripe for the taking by any power that wanted it. With the revolution and British occupation fresh in the population's experience, nobody was thrilled with the idea of a standing military, or financially supporting anything beyond a bare-bones government. If Britain and France hadn't been preoccupied with each other...
Maritime trade was flourishing to the point where US shipping was starting to rival Britain, the American merchant fleet found also itself a ripe target in the Mediterranean for the Barbary Pirates and pretty much anyone who wanted to take the ships, cargo, and crews. The merchant interests finally said enough, the US Navy was born, as was the start of bureaucratic American government.
First up:
The 44 Gun Frigates Constitution, President, and United States "As Designed". 1794.
This is a
WIP nearly done; a little more time needed on the rigging and Q/C checks. I'm trying to locate some running rigging references to flesh out a few of the sails.
I've got my USS Wasp in the image for use as a comparison and personal benchmark to better. It's also there to help me with stylistic consistency.
The drawing source material includes the earliest paintings of these ships I could find on-line, the Building draught from Chapelle's "The American Sailing Navy", and the sail plan dated 1803 (the earliest I could find and it compared well to similar US ships from the 1790's).
The ships were designed to to be more heavily timbered and armed than comparable British and French frigates, and outrun anything larger.
As soon as this one is done, I'll modify it to "As Launched" as there are some important changes that reflect lessons learned from the Napoleonic conflict between Britain and France that were incorporated during construction.
CraigH