Mailing List flyrotary@lancaironline.net Message #60234
From: Jeff Whaley <jwhaley@datacast.com>
Subject: Re: [flyRotary] : A Tot of Rum
Date: Wed, 18 Sep 2013 12:21:33 +0000
To: Rotary motors in aircraft <flyrotary@lancaironline.net>

They certainly didn’t DRINK all that alcohol …

79,400 + 68,300 + 64,300 + 40,000 = 252,000 gallons.

252,000 / 475 = 530.5 per man … 530.5 / 7 months at sea = 75.8 per man per month … 75.8 / 30 = 2.52 gallons per man per day.

Not a chance …

 

From:

Tracy <rwstracy@gmail.com>

Subject:

Re: [FlyRotary] Re: A Tot of Rum!

Date:

Wed, 18 Sep 2013 06:10:12 -0400

To:

Rotary motors in aircraft <flyrotary@lancaironline.net>

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Undecoded Message

I wonder how they managed to use all that canon shot and gunpowder if it  IS true!


Sent from my iPad


On Sep 17, 2013, at 23:12, David Leonard <wdleonard@gmail.com> wrote:

I have always wondered it that one is true.  Go Navy is right.

 

 

LITTLE KNOWN TIDBIT OF NAVAL HISTORY.




The U.S.S. Constitution (Old Ironsides), as a combat vessel, carried 48,600 gallons of fresh water for her crew of 475 officers and men. This was sufficient to last six months of sustained operations at sea. She carried no evaporators (i.e. fresh water distillers).

However, let it be noted that according to her ship's log, "On July 27, 1798, the U.S.S. Constitution sailed from Boston with a full complement of 475 officers and men, 48,600 gallons of fresh water, 7,400 cannon shot, 11,600 pounds of black powder and 79,400 gallons of rum." 

Her mission: "To destroy and harass English shipping."

Making Jamaica on 6 October, she took on 826 pounds of flour and
68,300 gallons of rum.

Then she headed for the Azores , arriving there 12 November. She provisioned with 550 pounds of beef and64,300 gallons of Portuguese wine.

On 18 November, she set sail for England . In the ensuing days she defeated five British men-of-war and captured and scuttled 12 English merchant ships, salvaging only the rum aboard each.

By 26 January, her powder and shot were exhausted. Nevertheless, although unarmed she made a night raid up the Firth of Clyde in Scotland . Her landing party captured a whiskey distillery and transferred 40,000 gallons of single malt Scotch aboard by dawn. Then she headed home.

The U. S. S. Constitution arrived in Boston on 20 February 1799, with no cannon shot, no food, no powder,no rum, no wine, no whiskey, and 38,600 gallons of water .
GO NAVY!

 

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