Marmaduke Stalkartt (1750 – 24 September 1805) was an English naval architect.

Life

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Marmaduke Stalkartt was the fourth child of Hugh Stalkartt. After presumably serving an apprenticeship at Deptford Dockyard, he was sent to India in 1796 to establish shipyards to build men-of-war in teak.

Stalkartt's Naval architecture (1781) was divided into seven books: 'Of Whole-Moulding'; 'Of the Yacht'; 'Of the Sloop'; 'Of the Forty-Four-Gun-Ship'; 'Of the Seventy-Four-Gun-Ship'; 'Of the Cutter, and Ending of the Lines'; and 'Of the Frigate'.[1] It was reviewed appreciatively in The Critical Review[2] and The Monthly Review.[3]

Works

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  • Naval architecture, or, The rudiments and rules of ship building: exemplified in a series of draughts and plans: with observations sending to the further improvement of that important art, 1781. Google Books

References

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  1. ^ Charles Lyon Chandler; Marion Vernon Brewington; Edgar Preston Richardson (1976). Philadelphia, port of history, 1609-1837. Philadelphia Maritime Museum. p. 20. ISBN 978-0-913346-02-0. Retrieved 18 September 2012.
  2. ^ Tobias George Smollett, ed. (1783). The Critical review, or, Annals of literature. W. Simpkin and R. Marshall. pp. 364–73, 420–34. Retrieved 20 September 2012.
  3. ^ Ralph Griffiths, ed. (1782). The Monthly Review. Printed for R. Griffiths. pp. 444–56. Retrieved 20 September 2012.
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