Yes, it was common to use sawdust to absorb blood after a battle.
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11-17 knots
During the early 1800s, American ships and sailors faced being thrown overboard, having to walk the plank, and suffering lack of food or fresh water.
not that I'm a profesional but I'd have to say about as big as a small puppy
90 tons
Shallow water.
Sloops Frigates Schooners Bomb ketches Corvettes Man-of-War
The dangerous South American headland around which whaling ships of the 1800s dreaded sailing Is known as Cape Horn. It is the place where the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans meet and is often extremely turbulent.
He had nine ships sink in harsh weather and violent people who had many diseases and had a lack of food and water. They ate sawdust from the wood because they ran out of food.
Manufactured goods were one of the major exports of Great Britain in the 1800s. They made machines such as steam engines, ships, and locomotives. They built a lot of the equipment and materials that other countries used to build their railroads.
The British did board the colonist ships, because they were the colonists. The acts of impressment, when British naval soldiers would commandeer American merchant ships in order to force the sailors to fight under the British Crown against Napoleon did not occur until the early 1800s.
In the 1800's people traveled by horseback. They also traveled by horse and carriage or stagecoach. The late 1800's brought about travel by railroad and then automobiles.