Sketch of two Peter boats

A starboard-broadside view of a Thames Peter boat, with her sail up, and what is probably a stern view of the same boat heeling slightly to port, set to the right of it. The broadside view shows two oar positions in the gunwale and the rudder, but no visible tiller. The drawing is presumably intended to record the appearance of the boat and its sprit rig since, though under sail, no-one is shown on board.

The Peter boat was a typical Thames fishing craft, of varying size, the larger ones being used from Greenwich (with whose local fishery they were especially associated) down to the Thames estuary. They had a wet fish-well in the centre, in which the catch could be kept alive until landed. Peter boats began to disappear when river pollution destroyed the Thames fishery in the later 19th century. Though well recorded in pictures, none survive, but the Museum has a good 19th-century model. Mounted with PAF0010 and bound with PAF0001–PAF0010, PAF0012–PAF0022.

Object Details

ID: PAF0011
Type: Drawing
Display location: Not on display
Creator: Pocock, Nicholas
People: Pocock, Nicholas
Credit: National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, London
Measurements: 97 mm x 157 mm
Parts: Pocock. 21 small pencil sketches of Naval (?) including pen & ink sketch of Nelson engaging the San Joseph at the Battle of St Vincent also a small watercolour drawing of launching of a ship (Album)
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