[ Dartmouth and castle] (1844)
J. HarwoodRepository | Library | Shelf |
---|---|---|
Devon | West Country Studies | S SC0524 |
SC0524
CD 10 DVD 2
Publication Details
The route book of Devon: a guide for the stranger and tourist. Exeter: Besley, 1846. p. 223.
Dartmouth, with its deep and capacious harbour, where 500 sail of large ships can ride in safety, and is entered without any risk or difficulty, there being no bar or rocks to intercept the passage, and so completely land-locked, that few winds can affect it; has, from very early times been a place of trade and maritime importance.[Text may be taken from a different source or edition than that listed as the source by Somers Cocks.]
Dartmouth, with its deep and capacious harbour, where 500 sail of large ships can ride in safety, and is entered without any risk or difficulty, there being no bar or rocks to intercept the passage, and so completely land-locked, that few winds can affect it; has, from very early times been a place of trade and maritime importance.[Text may be taken from a different source or edition than that listed as the source by Somers Cocks.]
Steel l.engr vign
90x150mm
Exterior
1844