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  2. Killick Martin & Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Killick_Martin_&_Company

    Captain James Lowe. James Lowe - Captain of Agnes Muir. James Lowe was the son of Robert Lowe, another Captain in the Killick Martin & Company fleet. Robert Lowe had been Captain of Osaka for 11 years. James Lowe served in sixteen different ships from 1864 to 1918 and was an apprentice on the ‘Taeping’ during the Great Tea Race in 1866. [1]

  3. Edward Low - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edward_Low

    Edward Low (also spelled Lowe or Loe; c. 1690–1724) was a pirate of English origin during the latter days of the Golden Age of Piracy, in the early 18th century. Low was born into poverty in Westminster , London , and was a thief from an early age.

  4. List of sea captains - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_sea_captains

    Captain James Hook, captain in the play and novel Peter Pan; Horatio Hornblower, protagonist of a series of novels by C. S. Forester; John Silas Huntly, captain in The Survivors of the Chancellor; Captain Jat, sea captain of a number of stories by English writer William Hope Hodgson; Maak, ship's captain in the comic strip Maakies

  5. Harold Lowe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harold_Lowe

    Harold Godfrey Lowe was born in Llanrhos, Caernarvonshire, Wales, on 21 November 1882, the fourth of eight children, born to George Edward and Emma Harriette Quick.His father had ambitions for him to be apprenticed to a successful Liverpool businessman, but Lowe was determined to go to sea.

  6. James Lowe (inventor) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Lowe_(inventor)

    James Lowe was born in Rotherhithe, London, in 1798, to James and Elizabeth Lowe and baptised on 13 May. [1] In 1811 Lowe began working for Edward Shorter, a master mechanic and Freeman of the City of London, who had in 1800 taken out a patent (GB patent 2367) for propelling vessels, which he had named "the perpetual sculling machine".

  7. Columbia Rediviva - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Columbia_Rediviva

    A former gunner's mate during the final voyage of Captain James Cook, R.N., was the only man in the entire Columbia Expedition leaving Boston on the first voyage to have been to the Pacific. [3] Joseph Ingraham, first mate under the command of Kendrick. In 1790 he was captain of Hope, which competed with Columbia in the fur trade. [4]