For this play on words, you have answered your own question. "WHO" is the name of the captain. It is similar to the Abbott & Costello skit "Who's on first".
When Titanic sank, Captain Smith went down with the ship.
No. When Titanic sank, Captain Smith went down with the ship.
It is the name of a ship which is under the captain ship of Jack Sparrow
it is wasd
Captain Scott became a British Royal Navy Cadet at age 13 aboard his first ship, the HMS Britannia.The first ship he captained to Antarctica was the Discovery.
Sir John Hawkins had the dubious honor of being the first British captain to dock a slave ship in the English colonies. The year was 1619 and the place was Jamestown, VA.
Impossible to say
First Mate
The first ship to circumnavigate NZ was Captain Cook
A privateer was a hired ship to stop the British ship off the coast. They are like pirates because they stop and board the ship illegally. Ben Franklin hired an Irish captain to sail his privateer ship during the revolution. The captain was to stop British ships and free American sailors that had been captured by the British. He was also suppose take British sailors for ransom, but not take any goods or booty. Instead he did take booty and didn't ransom the sailors until Franklin found out. He fired the captain and pulled his support of the ship.
Captain Thomas Truxton was the first captain of the USS Constellation. The ship was the best the US had at the time in 1799.
The first slve ship to come to America was the SS Jesus. Captain was Sir John Hawkins
The captain is on the bridge, up the stairs when you first enter the ship.
Captain Cook was born on October 27, 1728 in England. Captain Cook was a British explorer. He travelled around the world 3 times on his ship. He spent 8 years charting the ocean and was also the first person who sailed the Antarctic Circle. He was a great captain, He was murdered in Hawaii 1779!
Captain James Cook.
The orbiter was named after the British HMS Endeavour, the ship which took Captain James Cook on his first voyage of discovery (1768-1771).