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English ship White Bear (1563)

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Name
  
White Bear

Fate
  
Sold, 1629

Length
  
110 ft (34 m) (keel)

Launched
  
1564

Builder
  
Woolwich Dockyard

Class and type
  
57-gun royal ship

Beam
  
37 ft (11 m)

Tons burthen
  
661,300 kg

White Bear was a 40-gun ship of the English Tudor navy, launched in 1564. She was repaired in 1585–86 at Woolwich, and recommissioned under Lord Howard of Effingham. In 1588 she took part in the actions against the Spanish Armada, under the command of Lord Edmund Sheffield. She was rebuilt in 1599 as a 57-gun royal ship.

The White Bear remained in service until 1627, when she was deemed unserviceable, and was sold out of the navy at Rochester on 12 June 1629.

The timbers from the White Bear were used to rebuild a burned-down alehouse on the Old Packhorse track running between Halifax and Leeds (now known as The Old White Beare in the village of Norwood Green near Halifax).

References

English ship White Bear (1563) Wikipedia


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