 | 1863
...human art of boatbuilding : — " On the banks of the Scottish Clyde the modern voyager from the New World looks with peculiar interest on the growing fabrics of those huge steamers, with ribs of steel, and planks, not of oak, but of iron, which have made the ocean, that proved so... | |
 | sir Daniel Wilson - 1862
...oldest accredited chroniclings. On the banks of the Scottish Clyde, the modern voyager from the New World looks with peculiar interest on the growing fabrics of those huge steamers, with ribs of steel, and planks, not of oak, but iron, which have made the ocean, that proved so impassable... | |
 | Sir Daniel Wilson - 1862 - 521 pages
...oldest accredited chroniclings. On the banks of the Scottish Clyde, the modern voyager from the New World looks with peculiar interest on the growing fabrics of those huge steamers, with ribs of steel, and planks, not of oak, but iron, which have made the ocean, that proved so impassable... | |
 | 1863
...localities in the kingdom:— ' On the banks of the Scottish Clyde, the modern voyager from the New World looks with peculiar interest on the growing fabrics of those huge steamers, with ribs of steel, and planks, not of oak but of iron, which have made the ocean, that proved so impassable... | |
 | 1863
...thriving localities of the kingdom: " On the banks of the Scottish Clyde, the modern voyager from the New World looks with peculiar interest on the growing fabrics of those huge steamers, with ribs of steel, and planks not of oak but of iron, which have made the ocean, that proved so impassable... | |
 | 1863
...human art of boatbuilding : — " On the banks of the Scottish Clyde the inoJcrn voyager from the New World looks with peculiar interest on the growing fabrics of those huge steamer's, with ribs of steel, and planks, not of oak, but of iron, which have made the ocean, that... | |
 | 1864
...art: — NO. CXXII. — NS AA ' On the banks of the Scottish Clyde, the modern voyager from the New World looks with peculiar interest on the growing fabrics of those huge steamers with ribs of steel, and planks, not of oak, but of iron, which have made the ocean, that proved so... | |
 | sir Daniel Wilson - 1865
...oldest accredited chroniclings. On the banks of the Scottish Clyde, the modern voyager from the New World looks with peculiar interest on the growing...men of the fifteenth century, the easy highway of commerce and pleasure to us. The roar of the iron forge, the clang of the fore-hammer, the intermittent... | |
 | Sir Daniel Wilson - 1865 - 635 pages
...oldest accredited chroniclings. On the banks of the Scottish Clyde, the modern voyager from the New World looks with peculiar interest on the growing...men of the fifteenth century, the easy highway of commerce and pleasure to us. The roar of the iron forge, the clang of the fore-hammer, the intermittent... | |
 | Smithsonian Institution. Board of Regents - 1876
...logs were converted into canoes with some stone hammers, such as we have figured in connection \vith this chisel. It must have been a laborious process,...glare of the furnaces, and all the novel appliances of iron-ship building, tell of the modern era of steam ; but, meanwhile, underneath these very ship-builders'... | |
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