The Tudor Yard: 1547 - 1613
'…under this bridge the Medway foams and rolls with great violence and rapidity, and presently abating both, forms a dock finished for the finest fleet the sun ever beheld, and ready on a minutes warning, built lately by our most gracious sovereign Elizabeth for the security of her subjects and the terror of her enemies…'Camden, Britannia
The first documentary evidence of the Royal Navy's use of the River Medway can be found in 1547 with the rental of two storehouses on 'Jyllingham Water'. By the reign of Elizabeth I (1588 -1603) the River Medway at Chatham had become England's principal fleet base with the majority of the Queen's ships overwintering in the river. From 1570, under the terms of John Hawkyns 'bargain' the majority of repair and maintenance was undertaken at Chatham in new facilities built around Sunne Hard, a site later occupied by the Ordnance Board. The first warship known to have been built at the new yard was the Sunne, a pinnace of five guns, launched in 1586.
The Historic Dockyard, Chatham, Kent ME4 4TZ, England
Info Line: +44 (0)1634 823807 Trust Office: +44 (0)1634 823800 Fax: +44 (0)1634 823801
Fully Accredited Museum - Registered as a Charity No. 292101
Web content Management systems by Netsite Ltd|