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is bounded on the west by Mill Bay,-an inlet much wider than Sutton Pool. Northward of the Hoe and Mill Bay are the western portions of Plymouth, and the rapidly extending town or suburb of Stonehouse, which will ere long have filled up all the open space which once existed between Plymouth and Devonport. Mill Bay is bounded on the west by a very remarkable promontory, so bold and so elongated, and connected with Stonehouse by so narrow an isthmus, that one could almost imagine that it will one day be cut off into an island, by one of those freaks of wind and water which take such liberties with our coasts. This promontory is called Cremill Point or Devil's Point, and on it is built one of the finest of the Government establishments-the Royal William Victualling Yard. Rounding this promontory, we come to another inlet, Stonehouse Pool, which is the mouth of a shallow stream called Stonehouse Creek, or sometimes Mill Lake; when seen at low water it is anything but a beautiful lake, but at high water it winds gracefully between the towns, (Cut, No. 3.) Stonehouse Pool and Creek form a very decided division between Plymouth and Stonehouse on the one hand, and Devonport and Stoke on the other; and although there are two bridges, yet this water boundary will always point out the beginning and the end of the two pairs of towns. Crossing Stonehouse Pool, we arrive at the 'lines' or fortification of Devonport; and immediately

afterwards see before us Mount Wise-a rival to the Hoe in all that renders the latter attractive. Mount Wise is an elevated, gravelled, park-like spot; northward of it is Devonport town, north-west is the Dockyard, and south-west, across the strait or entrance to the Hamoaze, is the lovely Mount Edgcumbe. At Mutton Cove, a small inlet which bounds Mount Wise on the west, the coast line turns northward; and the dockyard, the gun wharf, the steam ferry station, and the vast new steam-dock at Keyham Point, may be considered as fronting the west. Stoke Damerel is an inland suburb, which is becoming more and more filled up with rows of houses: it lies north of Stonehouse and north-east of Devonport.

To sum up this sketch, we may consider the united towns as presenting, seaward, four projections or promontories, marked by the Catdown, the Hoe, Cremill Point, and Mount Wise; and separated by three inlets, Sutton Pool, Mill Bay, and Stonehouse Pool. Rows of houses now extend pretty nearly to the Lara; and if we allow this river to form the eastern limit, we have a length of three miles in a direct line westward to the Dockyard; while the breadth from Cremill Point to Higher Stoke may be a mile and a half. The Devonport extremity of the group of towns, as seen from Mount Edgcumbe, is sketched in Cut Nos. 3 and 4.

As a reader looks out for a table of contents to a

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new book, we must ask our reader to regard the above three paragraphs as a kind of table of contents to Plymouth and Devonport. Next, we have to see how the present state of things has grown up.

Plymouth, we are told, was originally inhabited by fishermen; and such was very probably the case. By the Saxons it was called Tameorworth. After the Norman Conquest, it received the name of South Down, or Sutton; which name is still retained in Sutton Pool. In the time of Edward I. the northern part of the town, built on the land of the priory of Plympton, was called Sutton Prior; while the southern part, built on the estate of the Valletorts, was distinguished as Sutton Valletort. There appears also to have been a third portion called Sutton Ralph. In the reign of Henry II. it was, on the authority of Leland, "a mene thing as an inhabitation for fischars." The name of Plymouth (rightly named as being at the mouth of the Plym) was given to it about 1380. In the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries the French cast many a wistful eye on Plymouth, and subjected it to repeated attacks. In 1338, 1350, 1377, 1400, and 1403, such attacks took place, in some of which the town suffered severely; especially on the last occasion, when six hundred houses were burned. Both sovereign and townsmen thought it full time to adopt some defensive measures; Henry VI. fortified and incorporated the town, although it is supposed to have been a

borough by prescription from an earlier date. The fortifications consisted of a wall, a square tower at the point where the citadel now stands, and forts extending along the shore to Mill Bay; and an Act of Parliament was passed, in 1512, for enlarging and strengthening the defences. On the dissolution of the monasteries, the lordship of the town and other immunities of the priory of Plympton were granted to the mayor and corporation of Plymouth. Sir Francis Drake, who was born not many miles from Plymouth, greatly befriended the town. By his influence with Queen Elizabeth, he obtained an Act of Parliament, empowering him to bring a leat or stream of water from Dartmoor, twenty-five miles distant, to a reservoir in the northern suburb of the town, whence an ample supply was furnished to the inhabitants. On the Ordnance map this stream, under the name of the Plymouth Leat, may be seen winding its way along from the hilly region towards the sea. It is difficult to imagine a greater boon to a town than this; for three centuries the leat has continued to furnish its supply, uncontaminated by town refuse. When we think and write and read about Sir Francis Drake, let us not forget the Plymouth Leat: like many other distinguished men, he is remembered more for his warlike than his peaceful acts.

The later history of Plymouth need not engage us long. With few exceptions it is a history of advance

ment. We may here say that Stonehouse has a history of its own, but not an important one. Stonehouse was originally called Hippeston,-the name of a mansion first inhabited by Joel de Stonehouse, in the reign of Edward III. This is sometimes called East Stonehouse, to distinguish it from West Stonehouse, which once stood on the other side of the Hamoaze. During the civil wars, the men of Stonehouse and the men of Plymouth, for reasons which we cannot now assign, took different sides; the former defended the king the Plymouth men sided with the Parliament, and underwent three sieges, all of which they successfully resisted. As the attention of Government became directed to that port, so did the elements of prosperity flow in upon it. Devonport may date its birth in the reign of William and Mary, when a naval station was established there, under the designation of Plymouth Dock, and land was purchased for the construction of docks and other works. It was first fortified in the reign of George II., and the fortifications were considerably enlarged in the next reign. In 1824 the royal permission was obtained for the assumption of the name of Devonport; and in 1832 another sprinkling of dignity showered upon it, in the shape of an elective franchise. Meanwhile Stonehouse had been gradually acquiring importance by the construction of Government buildings within its limits; such as the Royal Marine Barracks, the Royal Naval Hospital, the Royal Military Hospital, and, more recently, the magnificent Victualling-yard on Cremill Point. Plymouth, too, continued to advance; but this

advance was rather in a commercial than a warlike

chapel is large but simple, and calls for no particular comment. Near the entrance also are the Guard-house, the Pay-office, and a Dockyard Surgery.

To know what are the industrial arrangements of the yard, we must first know what work is done there. To build ships then; to build boats of all sizes; to fashion masts and yards and bowsprits for the ships; to spin and twist ropes; to cut and sew sails; to forge anchors and other heavy specimens of metal; and to fit together all these various portions of a ship-these are the labours of the dockyard. On these labours, and on others subsidiary to them, nearly 3,000 men and boys are em ployed. This force is classified in about forty divisions. When a Government inquiry was being conducted in 1848, the chief groups were ascertained to be filled up as follows:-Shipwrights, 894; Labourers, 519; Spinners, 235; Smiths, 211; Joiners, 198; Riggers, 208; and Sawyers, 132. There are two classes-estab lished workmen and hired workmen; the first have a sort of claim on the continued support of the government; but the others have not. That the employment of such a force leads to the expenditure of a large amount of money in Devonport need hardly be said; the salaries of officers and superintendents amounted, in 1848, to £20,000; and the wages of workmen and labourers to about £130,000; and the navy estimates for 1850-1 give about the same figures. In these estimates there are enumerated seventeen chief officers, at salaries varying from £200 to £1,000 each; twenty. six clerks, at salaries from £80 to £450 each; and fifty foremen, &c., at salaries from £100 to £250 each. The most important feature in the yard, is the as

direction. Devonport lives by Government expendi-semblage of docks and slips in which the ships are built ture Plymouth chiefly by mercantile expenditure.

THE DOCKYARD.

We will suppose the reader to do as most visitors do, run off to look at the Dockyard before attending much to the towns of Plymouth and Devonport: all the hotel keepers are alive to this thirst of curiosity; and whether located at the "London" or the " Royal" or else where, you can have no difficulty in procuring the requisite card of admission-unless you unfortunately smack of the foreigner in complexion or accent, in which case a little more scruple is exhibited.

The Dockyard is a wide-spreading, self-contained establishment, extending nearly half a mile from north to south, by half as much from east to west. A lofty wall, with one single entrance-gate, bounds its whole extent on the land side. Entered within this gate, we see before us a wide open court, bounded on either side by buildings. One of the first of these buildings which we meet with is the chapel, the dockyard chapel, which has its chaplain and organist and other functionaries, and internal arrangements to accommodate the resident officers of the dockyard; while the free seats are open to all indiscriminately; for the dockyard gates are opened for this purpose on Sundays. The

and repaired. There are six building slips for vessels of various dimensions; and five docks for fitting and repairing vessels, three for first-rates, and two for second-rates. The building slips are covered with immense roofs of sheet-iron, copper, or zinc, and be neath these roofs the huge fabrics of the ships rest in shelter, until they are dismissed from the shipwrights' hands. Devonport has not produced so many first. rate men-of-war as Portsmouth, but she still boasts a goodly list. There were twenty-seven war ships of various sizes built on these slips, in the twenty-one years from 1828 to 1848, among which were the St. George of 120 guns, the Royal Adelaide of 110 guns, and the Albion of 90 guns. It is impossible to stand under the projecting bow of one of these huge floating castles, as it stands in the building slip, without a feeling of astonishment: the vast quantity of wood em ployed, the bulky scantling of many of the beams, the art with which the shape of the timber is ac commodated to the curve of the ship, the strength with which the timbers are made to hold together in spite of wind and waves, the calculation required to fit the interior for the reception of everything necessary for a complement of (perhaps) a thousand men, the process of transferring this monster to the surface of its united element by merely knocking away a few wedges, all combine to render a man-of-war "on the slips"

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