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HMS Pembroke (1710): Difference between revisions

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{{Youmay|the [[Man O' War#Legendary ships|legendary ship]]|the 1758 [[HMS Pembroke|ship of the same name]]}}
{{Youmay|the [[Man O' War#Legendary ships|legendary ship]]|the 1758 [[HMS Pembroke|ship of the same name]]}}
[[File:HMSPembrokeACP.png|thumb|250px|HMS ''Pembroke'']]
[[File:HMSPembrokeACP.png|thumb|250px|HMS ''Pembroke'']]
'''HMS ''Pembroke''''' was a [[Royal Navy]] [[Man O' War|legendary ship]] encountered by the [[Piracy|pirate]] [[Alonzo Batilla]] near [[Nassau]], during the [[Golden Age of Piracy|early 18th century]].
'''HMS ''Pembroke''''' was a [[Royal Navy]] [[Man O' War#Legendary ships|legendary ship]] encountered by the [[Piracy|pirate]] [[Alonzo Batilla]] near [[Nassau]], during the [[Golden Age of Piracy|early 18th century]].


HMS ''Pembroke'' and its twin ship, [[HMS Ormonde|HMS ''Ormonde'']], were secretly dispatched to the [[Caribbean]] to protect precious cargo and escort confidential missions to the New World. The [[ships]] operated together and often used one ship as a lure to attract, trap and destroy enemies.
HMS ''Pembroke'' and its twin [[Ships|ship]], [[HMS Ormonde|HMS ''Ormonde'']], were secretly dispatched to the [[Caribbean]] to protect precious cargo and escort confidential missions to the New World. The ships operated together and often used one ship as a lure to attract, trap and destroy enemies.


==Trivia==
==Trivia==

Revision as of 19:16, 3 October 2016


This article is about the legendary ship. You may be looking for the 1758 ship of the same name.
HMS Pembroke

HMS Pembroke was a Royal Navy legendary ship encountered by the pirate Alonzo Batilla near Nassau, during the early 18th century.

HMS Pembroke and its twin ship, HMS Ormonde, were secretly dispatched to the Caribbean to protect precious cargo and escort confidential missions to the New World. The ships operated together and often used one ship as a lure to attract, trap and destroy enemies.

Trivia

  • Historically, HMS Pembroke and HMS Ormonde were broken up in 1726 and 1733, respectively.

Gallery

Reference