Skip to main content
Become a member
Donate
Shop
Venue hire
Search
Royal Museums Greenwich
Main navigation
Menu
Royal Museums Greenwich
Search
Close
Plan your visit
Back
Plan your visit
Getting here
Eat & drink
Facilities & access
Family visits
Group bookings
School visits
Cutty Sark
Cutty Sark
Open daily 10am - 6pm
Last entry 5.15pm
Adult: £20 | Child: £10
Members go free
Free
National Maritime Museum
National Maritime Museum
Open daily 10am-5pm
Last entry 4.15pm
Free entry
Booking recommended
Free
Queen's House
Queen's House
Open daily 10am - 5pm
Last entry 4.15pm
Free entry
Booking recommended
Royal Observatory
Royal Observatory
Open daily 10am-7.45pm
Last entry 7pm
Adult: £20 | Child: £10
Members go free
What's on
Back
What's on
Planetarium shows
Exhibitions
For families
Member events
Talks and tours
Cutty Sark
Experiences
Cutty Sark Rig Climb
Experience life at sea and climb the rigging of one of London's true icons
Royal Observatory
Family fun
Evening With The Moon
See our nearest neighbour in space as we enjoy an Evening With The Moon!
National Maritime Museum
Family fun
Summer holidays at the National Maritime Museum
Come and play at the National Maritime Museum this summer
Stories
Back
Stories
Art at the Queen's House
Our Ocean, Our Planet
Guide to the night sky
Museum blog
Share your memories of Cutty Sark
Be part of a new display celebrating 70 years of Cutty Sark at Greenwich
Astronomy Photographer of the Year 2024 shortlist
See a selection of the incredible space images shortlisted in Astronomy Photographer of the Year 2024
Putting names to faces in the Challenger Expedition archives
Dr Rebecca Martin investigates the photograph albums from the Challenger Expedition, trying to recover the identities of the people the ship encountered on its global voyage
Collections
Back
Collections
Conservation
Research
Donating items to our collection
Collections Online
Search our online database and explore our objects, paintings, archives and library collections from home
The Prince Philip Maritime Collections Centre
Come behind the scenes at our state-of-the-art conservation studio
Caird Library
Visit the world's largest maritime library and archive collection at the National Maritime Museum
Learn
Back
Learn
School trips and workshops
Self-guided school visits
Online resources and activities
Booking an on-site schools session
Booking a digital schools session
Young people and youth groups
Support us
Back
Support us
Become a member
Donate
Corporate partnerships
Become a patron
Leave a legacy
Commemoration and celebration
Cutty Sark
National Maritime Museum
Queen's House
Royal Observatory
Become a member
Donate
Shop
Venue hire
Search
Beta
Back to All Results
Explore our collection
Objects
Library
Archive
Search our collection
Filters…
Search
Item Category
Select…
Item Category
Item Category
Apply Filter
Type
Select…
Type
Type
documentary artifact: ship plan: deck, lower
documentary artifact: ship plan: lines & profile
Glass plate negative
Lines & Profile
Photographic print
Roll film negative
Sheet film negative
Technical drawing
water transport: fighting vessel: sloop
water transport: fighting vessel: sloop, 12 gun
Apply Filter
Materials
Select…
Materials
Materials
black ink
Cellulose nitrate negative
Gelatine dry plate
Glass
green ink
paper
pencil
photographic reproduction
red ink
Apply Filter
Display Location
Select…
Display Location
Display Location
Not on display
Apply Filter
Creator
Select…
Creator
Creator
Adams, Edgar Tarry
Adams, Francis Norris
Adams, Isabel Mary
Adams, Pauline
F. C. Gould & Son
Hooper, Lieutenant Geoffroy William Winsmore
King, Thomas
Walker
Apply Filter
Places
Select…
Places
Places
Dover
Dover, Kent, England, United Kingdom
Apply Filter
Vessels
Select…
Vessels
Vessels
A7 (1905)
A9 (1905)
A10 (1905)
Amazon (1908)
Aurora (1913)
Biarritz (1915)
Cap Ortegal (1903)
Cleopatra (1915)
Deutschland (1900)
Empress (1887)
Erebus (1916)
Foam (1862)
Jan Breydel (1909)
Jed (1904)
Kennet (1903)
Lady Vita (1882)
Le Nord (1898)
Le Pas de Calais (1898)
Liberty (1907)
Lively (purchased 1779)
Loyal (1913)
Marshal Ney (1915)
Mohawk (1907)
Portland (1887)
Princesse Clementine (1896)
Saint Andrew [St. Andrew] (1908)
Saint Patrick (1906)
Tartar (1907)
Unidentified 3 masted barque under sail
Unidentified 3 masted ship under sail
Vaderland (1900)
Victoria (1865)
Wave (1863)
Zulu (1909)
Apply Filter
People
Select…
People
People
Adams, Edgar Tarry
Adams, Francis Norris
Adams, Isabel Mary
Adams, Pauline
Cadogan, Francis Charles
Godfrey, Owen P.
Loder-Symonds, Frederick Parland
Loder-Symonds, Marion Therese
Savory, Charles H.
Syfret, Edward N.
Wallace, Richard R.
Apply Filter
Century
Select…
Century
Century
1st
2nd
3rd
4th
5th
6th
7th
8th
9th
10th
11th
12th
13th
14th
15th
16th
17th
18th
19th
20th
Apply Filter
Date Range
Select…
Date Range
Date From
Select...
8
1769
1779
1865
1898
1899
1900
1901
1903
1904
1905
1906
1908
1915
1916
1917
1919
Date To
Select...
1779
1789
1885
1898
1899
1901
1904
1905
1906
1913
1914
1915
1916
1917
1922
Apply Filter
Show only:
With images
Applied Filters
Dover
Clear all
showing 72 objects results
Sort by
Relevance
Object title/name
Object title/name (desc)
Finding reference
Finding reference (desc)
The hospital ship Saint Patrick [St. Patrick] (1906) underway in Dover harbour. (Roll film negative)
The torpedo boat destroyer HMS Mohawk (1907) under way at Dover. (Roll film negative)
The hospital ship Saint Andrew [St. Andrew] (1908) under way at Dover. (Roll film negative)
The monitor Marshal Ney (1915) moored at Dover as a guardship. (Roll film negative)
A port quarter view of the monitor HMS Marshal Ney (1915) at Dover. (Roll film negative)
A distant view of the hospital ship Jan Breydel (1909) entering Dover. (Roll film negative)
A view from the deck of HMS Zulu (1909) with HMS Tartar (1907) alongside in Granville Dock, Dover (Photographic print)
Lively (purchased 1779) (Technical drawing)
Lively (purchased 1779) (Technical drawing)
A view of Dover castle from the light cruiser HMS Aurora (1913) (Roll film negative)
A rough sea with waves breaking on the beach, west of the Admiralty Pier at Dover, Kent. (Glass plate negative)
An unidentified Coastal Motor Boat (CMB) under way at speed off Dover. (Roll film negative)
The hospital ship No. 10 [ex-Liberty] (1907) entering Dover harbour. (Roll film negative)
Waves breaking on the beach at Dover, Kent. (Glass plate negative)
A distant starboard quarter view of the German passenger/cargo liner Cap Ortegal (1903) bound out at Dover, Kent. (Glass plate negative)
A rough sea with waves breaking on the beach, west of the Admiralty Pier at Dover, Kent. (Glass plate negative)
On board the German passenger liner Deutschland (1900) alongside the Prince of Wales Pier in Dover Harbour showing the aft end of the promenade deck and boat deck. (Glass plate negative)
On board the German passenger liner Deutschland (1900) alongside the Prince of Wales Pier in Dover Harbour showing the port side of the promenade deck amidships. (Glass plate negative)
A very distant starboard near broadside view, taken from only just abaft the beam, of the German passenger liner Deutschland (1900) off Dover, bound out for New York. (Glass plate negative)
Steerage passengers on the forward well deck of the German passenger liner Deutschland (1900) alongside the Prince of Wales Pier in Dover Harbour, awaiting disembarkation. (Glass plate negative)
A port quarter view of the German passenger/cargo liner Cap Ortegal (1903) alongside the Prince of Wales Pier in Dover harbour. (Glass plate negative)
A port bow view of the French cross channel paddle ferry Le Nord (1898) arriving alongside Admiralty Pier, Dover, from Calais. (Glass plate negative)
On board the German passenger liner Deutschland (1900) alongside the Prince of Wales Pier in Dover Harbour showing the starboard boat deck and the funnels. (Glass plate negative)
A starboard bow view of the cross channel paddle ferry Foam (1862) alongside the quay in the Tidal Harbour at Dover, Kent. (Glass plate negative)
First
Prev
Current page
1
Page
2
Page
3
Next
Last
Loading filters
Royal Museums Greenwich
Close
Search
Want to search our collection? Search here.
Back To Top