HMS Taku (1898) dressed overall for Christmas
A starboard side view, just aft of the broadside, of the captured two-funnelled destroyer HMS Taku (1898) at anchor in Hong Kong. The ship has the rigging from the bow to the top of the foremast and the mainbrace from deck to the main mast top decorated with strips of material[?] celebrating Christmas Day. The funnel tops are covered with foliage. Suspended between the two funnels is the ship's name 'TAKU' spelt out. Crew can be seen on the quarterdeck near the machine gun platform and standing between the main mast and the funnel.
HMS Taku was originally named Hai Lung and built for the Chinese Navy by the Germans, launched at Elbing in 1898. Captured by the Royal Navy during the Boxer Rebellion and renamed Taku after the Taku Forts in northeastern China.
The original negative envelope was labelled: 'Taku taken from Chinese Xmas Day 1900'.
HMS Taku was originally named Hai Lung and built for the Chinese Navy by the Germans, launched at Elbing in 1898. Captured by the Royal Navy during the Boxer Rebellion and renamed Taku after the Taku Forts in northeastern China.
The original negative envelope was labelled: 'Taku taken from Chinese Xmas Day 1900'.
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Object Details
ID: | N64440 |
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Type: | Glass plate negative |
Display location: | Not on display |
Creator: | Jones, Kenneth Hurlstone |
Vessels: | Taku (1898) |
Date made: | 25 December 1900 |
Credit: | National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, London |
Measurements: | Overall: 82 mm x 102 mm |