The steamboat agents inform her that they do not issue return tickets on West African steamers. |
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The dim sum was contained in small bamboo food steamers, tiny but delightful, so that you could order varied dishes. |
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By the time they got to the dining room, the dumplings were claggy and stuck to the steamers and the molluscs were all gone. |
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The seamen who steer the ship, lookouts, the firemen in steamers, and greasers in the engine room would also be allocated two watches. |
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Most of launches, steamers and other vessels lack mechanical steering and still have manual steering systems that are a century old. |
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The final wreck in our trilogy of paddle steamers has only recently been discovered. |
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Piers were built to serve sailing vessels and steamers from across the bay. |
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In commercial terms however paddle steamers were never to catch on for ocean going cargo carrying. |
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Most of the damage was to the older ships, from galleys to galleons and frigates to pre-dreadnaught steamers. |
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Sailing ships, and later steamers, played a vital part in South Australia's History. |
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I have included a rare picture, for this series, of one of the steamers just coming to land at Stock on the lakeside. |
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In the middle the open water of the fairway is crowded with pinnaces, jolly-boats, cutters, and pleasure steamers. |
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These diesels solved the traction problem quickly and soon the little saddle tank steamers found their way to the scrap lines. |
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When sailing ships were replaced by steamers and liners, the heavy ropes were no longer in high demand. |
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In 1909, another leg was added to the jetty, to facilitate a railway line for the loading of timber onto steamers and tall sailing ships. |
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The first paddle steamers typically used oil-fired boilers, which provided heat to boil water, which generated steam to power the boat. |
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A few coastal companies began with sailing ships, while others did so with steamers. |
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Until the 1880s the company stuck with sailing ships, but then moved slowly into steamers. |
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Visitors flocked in steamers from Glasgow's Broomielaw to promenade under waving palms. |
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Before that time steamers often had to stand off in busy times until it was their turn to be unloaded. |
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Likewise, imported goods could also be unloaded at Port Elliott and then moved inland via the rail link and the river paddle steamers. |
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Appropriately, he spends most of his days on tramp steamers, skiffs and barges. |
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The classics continue all the throughout the menu, with sharable snacks like steamers cooked in beer broth. |
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At a distance they look kind of like wetsuits, steamers, but what do they look and feel like up close? |
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It might also have the effect of keeping the passage clearer by the more frequent stirring and movement of powerful steamers towing flotillas of keels and lighters. |
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The riverfront was quiet today, no steamers waiting to be unloaded. |
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Figureheads were used to add a decorative flourish and prestige to ships and steamers in an age when the vessels were the quickest and most comfortable mode of transport. |
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Try simple but sturdy wood or craft-paper boxes, picnic baskets, bamboo steamers, lunch boxes, Japanese bento boxes, or even plastic wastepaper baskets. |
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Eventually, steamers displaced dahabeahs, opening up an Egyptian adventure to greater numbers on Thomas Cook's tours, and trains nearly finished them off. |
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Take all the measures in your power to discharge from the ice the British steamers whose return to England is essential on account of the shortness of transports. |
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From ancient biremes to gigantic aircraft carriers, from mighty steamers to futuristic submarines, this book is filled with the wonders of seafaring vessels past and present. |
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With the steamers serving alcohol at the well-stocked bar and the paddles churning through the murky waters, many travellers were happy to stay on board. |
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If the campaign is successful, the aim is to turn the ship into a working museum piece, an example of paddle steamers and a reminder of the heroism of the men of Dunkirk. |
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After more abortive attempts, the Admiralty decided, in 1845, to send Sir John Franklin with two steamers, HMS Erebus and HMS Terror, to resolve the problem. |
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Within easy striking distance of the west end of the island are two wrecked steamers, the 1904 Michel Say and the Ville De Grasse of 1870, with its paddle wheel still intact. |
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At first only available to the rich, the development of both railways and excursion steamers made such holidays more generally available. |
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This fuel consumption was a saving from between 23 and 14 long tons a day, compared to other contemporary steamers. |
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So successful were the steamers using the Suez Canal that, in 1871, 45 were built in Clyde shipyards alone for Far Eastern trade. |
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Departing steamers would face south on Davis Wharf, with the Art College to its left and the town bridge behind. |
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On 21 May 1855, the gunboats and armed steamers attacked the seaport of Taganrog, the most important hub near Rostov on Don. |
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The British were looking for a coal depot to service their steamers en route to India. |
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It was 1850 before enough paddle wheel steamers were available in the Atlantic and Pacific routes to establish regularly scheduled journeys. |
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From 1844 through 1857, luxurious palace steamers carried passengers and cargo around the North American Great Lakes. |
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A number of other steamers were built around the turn of the 20th century, in part due to the growing fish industry and the gold rush. |
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The largest, and one of the last, paddle steamers on the Mississippi was the sternwheeler Sprague. |
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Built in 1866, she operates from the Port of Echuca, on Australia's Murray River, which has the largest fleet of paddle steamers in the world. |
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Paddle steamers were operated in the Severn Estuary from the mid 19th century to the late 1970s by P and A Campbell of Bristol. |
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By 1846, 180 steamers plied German rivers and Lake Constance, and a network of canals extended from the Danube, the Weser, and the Elbe rivers. |
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River steamers carry cargo as far as Puerto Ayacucho and the Atures Rapids. |
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Numerous river steamers, build in England, plied the Amur by the late 19th century. |
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It was widely copied there and used to propel the Mississippi paddle steamers. |
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The valve was used in railway locomotives, beam engines, grasshopper engines and paddle steamers and became widely used during the 19th century. |
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Also built at Lakeside was a hotel to serve the tourists brought by the railway and steamers. |
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The remaining 15,000 tons of coal were later sold to tramp steamers and local citrus growers for smudge pots. |
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It's like those hand-held steamers on TV informercials but cheaper and far smaller. |
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Our steam irons, steam stations and garment steamers have been the official garment care products utilized on Project Runway for the past five seasons. |
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The call, which replaced CQD code in 1906, was recognised by two steamers who went to the aid of the Cunard liner SS Slavonia, wrecked off the Azores. |
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The call, which replaced CQD code in 1906, was recognised by two steamers which went to the aid of the Cunard liner SS Slavonia, wrecked off the Azores. |
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Her gunboat fleet alone is composed of one hundred and sixty-one small steamers, of the efficiency of which for war purports naval critics have formed a high estimate. |
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The hotel was built to serve overnight guests making the railway journey from Euston, and was close to the point of departure for the steamers to Scotland. |
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Stanvac's North China Division, based in Shanghai, owned hundreds of river going vessels, including motor barges, steamers, launches, tugboats and tankers. |
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This saved on height in the cramped engine rooms of steamers. |
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Before the bridge was built, a series of paddle steamers operated from the Corporation Pier railway station at the Victoria Pier in Hull to the railway pier in New Holland. |
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Five or six steamers could berth at the pier simultaneously. |
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Between 1840 and the 1960s, Red Funnel line and its predecessors operated 40 different classic passenger ferries, many of these being paddle steamers. |
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Swiss company CGN operates a number of paddle steamers on Lake Geneva. |
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Although often described as steamers, all are now diesel motor vessels. |
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A few paddle steamers serve niche tourism needs as cruise boats on lakes and others, such as the Delta Queen, still operate on the Mississippi River. |
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By then, coal exports from the South Wales Coalfield via Cardiff totalled nearly 9 million tons per annum, much of it exported in the holds of locally owned tramp steamers. |
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The jetty was extended in 1870, allowing sufficient depth for shallow draft vessels to dock at any tide, and soon daily steamers from Melbourne were calling. |
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He invented the steam gun and the pneumatic tube message system, and worked on one of the first British paddle steamers to cross the English Channel. |
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The last Victory ships had already been equipped with marine diesels, and diesel engine superseded both steamers and windjammers soon after the World War Two. |
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Featuring New England favorites such as whole belly clams,Maine lobster, steamers, haddock, clam chowder as well as local favorites like fresh grouper and oysters. |
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