The cover on her quarter deck reminds me of the lid over the whole of HMS Unicorn. It looks like summat from an old garden shed.

The lid (on Unicorn) is about 150 years older than the ship and the custom was to stick a shed roof onto an unmasted hulk so she could serve as office space, powder hulk or prison ship, whatever, till she was needed when the lid was removed and plonked on the next hulk.
The cover on the q-deck looks just exactly the same but smaller
See they`ve found me old mate James T. Cook`s ship, His Majesty`s Barque,
Endeavour. She`s lying off the eastern US and was sunk along with many others as block ships in the War of Independance and can we have our colonys back please Elmer because you are seriously farking them up son
Upon this day of Our Lord, Monday May 21st 1770, Endeavour`s Log records," Mod`te breezes. From noon to 2, soundings reg`lar from 9 1/2 to 11 fathoms"
Cook records, "In the PM we kept along the East side of the shoal untill 2 oClock when judgeing that there was water for us I sent a boat ahead to sound and upon making the signal for more than 5 fathom we hauled our wind and stood over the tail of it in six fathom"
They were off to the NW of the Cape York peninsula, Archie`s neck of the woods.
She carried a Detachment of twelve Royals, led by Sarnt John Edgecumbe.
Think about those twelve Bootys.
They would have known many of our words of command, shared our humour, our love of rum,our capacity for decisive individual action in times of crisis.
Today,two hundred and thirty six years ago, Royal was sunning himself off the N E coast of OZ, ready to Do His Duty.
We can`t imagine what would be the equivalent today. Mission to Mars, maybe

Three of her Detachment were "Discharged Dead" and one was recorded as "Lost Overboard"
Presumably eight made it back to Guz
Here`s to them and those like them, those guys were living up to a tradition that was already one hundred and six years old when they first saw Australia.
