Page:Royalnavyhistory01clow.djvu/572

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520
MILITARY HISTORY, 1485-1603.
[1597.

and statements seems to indicate that the naval portion of the fleet was composed and officered as follows: —

Ships. Tons. Guns. Men. Commanders. Military Officers
Mere Honour[1] 800 400 41 Earl of Essex.
Sir Robt. Mansell, Capt
Due Repulse[2] 700 350 50 Lord Thos. Howard, V.-A.
— Middleton, Capt.
Warspite 600 300 29 Sir Walter Ralegh, R.-A.
Sir Arthur Gorges, Capt.
Garland 700 300 45 (?) Henry, Earl of Southampton[3]
Defiance 500 250 46 Sir Amyas Preston, Capt. Lord Mountjoy.
Mary Rose 600 250 39 John Wynter, Capt. Sir Fras. Vere.
St. Matthew 1000 500 48 (?) Sir Geo. Carew[4]
St. Andrew 900 400 50 — Throckmorton, Capt.
Rainbow 500 250 26 Sir Wm. Monson, Capt.
Bonaventure 600 250 47 Sir Wm. Harvey, Capt.
Dreadnought 400 200 41 Sir Wm. Brooke, Capt
Swiftsure 400 200 41 Sir Gelly Meyrick,[5] Capt.
Antelope[6] 350 160 38 Sir Thos. Vavasour, Capt.
Nonpareil[7] 500 250 56 Sir Rich. Leveson, Capt
Foresight 300 160 37 Carew Reynell,[8] Capt.
Tremontana 140 70 21 — Fenner, Capt.
Moon 60 40 9 Edwrd. Mitchelburne, Capt.
Lion 500 250 60 (?)
Hope[9] 600 250 48 (?)

"Some of her Majesty's small pinnaces" also "attended the fleet."[10]

To the whole force was added a Dutch squadron of ten men-of-war under the command of Admiral van Duijvenvoorde.

The fleet sailed on July 9th, 1597, from Plymouth, but it met

  1. Essex afterwards shifted his flag to the Due Repulse.
  2. Howard afterwards shifted his flag to the Lion, which went out with stores after the main fleet had sailed.
  3. Henry Wriothesley, third Earl of Southampton, seems to have gone as a military volunteer, although in Monson's and Gorges's lists he appears as commanding the Garland. He was attacked and imprisoned for complicity with Essex, but re-created Earl in 1603, and made a K.G. He died in 1624.
  4. In Gorges's and Monson's lists, Carew figures as commanding the St. Matthew. He may have held naval as well as military command.
  5. Son of Rowland Meyrick, Bp. of Bangor, 1559-63; had been knighted for services at Cadiz. He was executed in 1600 for complicity with Essex.
  6. Sir John Gilbert, who did not sail, seems to have been originally appointed to the Antelope.
  7. Sir Thos. Vavasour seems to have been originally appointed to the Nonpareil.
  8. Fifth son of Rich. Reynell, of East Ogwell, was knighted in 1599 for services in Ireland, and died in 1624.
  9. Sir Rich. Leveson seems to have been originally appointed to the Hope.
  10. Account of Gorges.