As a Navy Sailor for the past 13 years; we sleep in Berthing Spaces on 3ft x 6ft cots/bunks stacked 3 high. The space between the mat and the roof above your head for the bottom and middle bunk is approx. 30".
in a cabin
Officers sleep in 2 man staterooms, except for the CO and XO, who each have their own stateroom and a shared head (bathroom/shower).
The Chiefs (Senior Enlisted) also have their own berthing space ("Goat Locker"), and other Senior Enlisted (First Class Petty Officers) can also rate their own space.
The rest of the crew sleeps forward of the engineering spaces in regular bunks, which are about 6' long, 18" wide, 18" high, with a bunk pan under the mattress that lifts up to store uniforms, personal items, etc. When onboard crew numbers and riders are increased for certain operations, portable bunks will be brought aboard and stowed in the torpedo room, on the torpedo loading racks. Usually those are reserved for the most junior of personnel; my first deployment I spent 3 months myself sleeping in one.
"Hot Racking" is also common if there are more crew members aboard than there is available bunk space. 1 or 2 Bunks, or Racks as they're also called, are shared between 2 or 3 crewmen; for 1 bunk, 2 sailors are working Port/Starboard watches, which means 12 hours on / 12 hours off watch, where the normal rotation is 6 on / 12 off. This allows for one person to have 12 hour access to the bunk while the other is on watch or otherwise awake and working.
When 3 guys share 2 bunks, 1 guy is always on watch, so that leaves room for 2 bunks for the other 2 who aren't on watch. It makes for creative watchstation planning by the COB (Chief of the Boat, or the Senior Enlisted member aboard).
You can also sleep wherever and whenever you can, as sleep is a rare commodity when at sea underway submerged. I've slept on the deck next to key electronics systems I was responsible for when I was off watch just to have something nice and comfortable to lie on (the rack mattresses aren't that comfortable). 400hz fans also have a way of putting you to sleep if you're susceptible to that particular frequency as a sleep inducer.
They slept downstairs in the ship but they slept on the floor
or small beds you put on poles
TTudor sailors use to sleep on the deck of the ship and when it was raining they'd sleep at the bottom of the ship which is sometimes called the bon of a ship
where do pirates sleep
hammocks
Pirates sleep in the ship's sleeping quarters on hamocks.
The Devil-Ship Pirates was created in 1964.
The duration of The Devil-Ship Pirates is 1.43 hours.
where does a captain sleep on the ship
on a ship!!!!!!!!???????????????
In their cabins.
Depends what ship.
they poop over the ship and on other pirates
Yes, when I was in the Marines, we were on a ship to Iraq and we answered a myaday from a ship near by being attacked by modern day pirates, we scared them off the ship.
pirate ship
pirates
It's the "ship of the line"