The Metal Fighting Ship in the Royal Navy 1860-1970
New York: ARCO Publishing Company, 1971. Presumed First U.S. edition, first printing. Hardcover. [6], 226 pages. Illustrated (color) endpaper. Illustrations. Appendices: 1, A Summary of British Naval Events From 1860-1967; 2, Some Abstracts of the Strength of the Royal Navy 1860-1970; 3 The Naval Surveyors From 1544. Bibliography. Index. DJ has wear, tears, soiling and chips. E. H. H. Archibald, who was for over 30 years the curator of that enormous oils collection, and oversaw acquisition of nearly a quarter the 4,000 oil paintings in the National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, include more portraits than any other English collection except the National Portrait Gallery. Teddy Archibald was born in Belfast in 1927. He became a keen sailor, and later a risk-taking athlete whose exploits included surviving the Cresta Run practically untutored on both the luge and in a dangerously impromptu bobsleigh crew: they crashed. An early idea of joining the Navy led him to an English prep school before, rather unusually for his background, he went to Stowe, then recently established and under the charismatic headmastership of J.F. Roxburgh. He went o Trinity College, Cambridge, in 1945 to read History. His main publishing successes were his two specially illustrated books on The Wooden Fighting Ship in the Royal Navy (1968) and The Metal Fighting Ship (1970) which sold modestly as he refused to allow a cheap edition. Thus this work has become increasingly rare and has always been prized. More