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Press gangs in Portsmouth. Press gangs were groups of soldiers or sailors sent out to enforce naval or military service on able bodied but unwilling men, often by violent coercion.
There is little basis to the widespread impression that civilians without any seafaring background were randomly seized from home, country lane or workplace by press gangs or that the latter were employed inland away from coastal ports; notably Portsmouth, Plymouth, Harwich and Yarmouth.
Jun 8, 2015 · In 1793, the inhabitants of Greenock hauled a tender to the middle of the public square and burnt it there. In South Shields, they captured the press gang and force-marched them down the middle of the street, with their jackets turned inside out, under a banner that read “Liberty for Ever.”.
Britain’s ports and harbours were once menaced by the dreaded press-gangs. Impressment, to give it its proper name, was the scourge of maritime communities across the British Isles and Britain’s North American colonies for 150 years from 1664–1830 and involved bands of thugs headed by naval officers being sent ashore from Royal Navy (RN ...
The Press Gang. In the 18th century, life aboard His Majesty’s ships of the line was hard, brutal and unhealthy. Figures published by the Navy Board in 1781 reveal that 175,008 men were raised for the navy between September 1774 and 1780.
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Aug 3, 2015 · New Scholarship on the Press Gang – Part 2 of 2. In The Myth of the Press Gang, J. Ross Dancy offers a quantitative approach to the subject. He developed a sampling system and entered the details as recorded in individual ships’ muster books covering the period 1793-1801. Data entry took twenty two weeks.