China Sea. Singapore Road.
(Attention is called to Notice to Mariners No.1 of each year) Principally from a Survey by Lieut. & Commr. H.P. Douglas R.N. and the Officers of H.M. Surveying Ship "Waterwitch" 1909.
London,
Published at the Admiralty,
30th Oct., 1925. Small corrections to 1932.
Engraved chart, including tidal information, compass roses, soundings, seabed notations, currents, sandbanks, shoals, lighthouses and beacons picked out in yellow and red, inland elevations and detailing, and buildings, paste-over printed in red.
1170 by 710mm. (46 by 28 inches).
1439
notes:
Detailed chart of Singapore Road.
Singapore was at the time undergoing significant dock and naval works in order to counter the increasingly ambitious Japanese Empire. The works - completed in 1939 at the cost some $500,000 - boasted the largest dry dock in the world, the third largest wet dock, and enough fuel tanks to support the entire Royal Navy for six months. The city was protected from naval attack by Royal Naval 15 inch guns and a Royal Air Force squadron...
Singapore was at the time undergoing significant dock and naval works in order to counter the increasingly ambitious Japanese Empire. The works - completed in 1939 at the cost some $500,000 - boasted the largest dry dock in the world, the third largest wet dock, and enough fuel tanks to support the entire Royal Navy for six months. The city was protected from naval attack by Royal Naval 15 inch guns and a Royal Air Force squadron...
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