Jacob Ackworth

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HMS Royal Oak c.1730

Sir Jacob Ackworth or Acworth (1668–1748) was an English shipbuilder and ship designer employed by the Royal Navy. As a designer he adopted Newtonian theories to create lighter and faster ships but this approach marginalised him with the very traditional dockyards and he spent his final years on the Navy Board as an advisor.[1]

Life[edit]

He was born in 1668 in Chatham, Kent the son of John Ackworth (1641-1690) and his wife Sarah Boyce (1643-1717).[2] He was probably apprenticed as a ship surveyor in the Royal Navy in 1682 aged 14. He served time on HMS Hope probably as apprentice ship's carpenter under Captain John Moore. He quickly showed a flair for design.[3] He was possibly still on the ship during the Battle of Beachy Head (1690).[4]

In July 1690 (two weeks after the battle) he transferred to the much smaller HMS Salamander (1687). As part of the crew of only 35 he was certainly the only Ship's Carpenter on board. He then moved successively to larger and larger ships as Ship's Carpenter: HMS Play Prize, 30-gun, 130 crew under Captain James Buck, 1691 to 1693; HMS Bonaventure, 52-gun crew around 300, from 1693 to 1696; HMS Swiftsure mainly involved in its break up at Harwich 1696 to 1698.[2] In December 1698 he moved wholly to land-based roles, becoming Master Mastmaker at Chatham Dockyard. In February 1705 he became Master Shipwright at Harwich Dockyard and in November 1705 became Master Shipwright at Sheerness. From this date the Royal Navy lists ships launched in his name.[5]

In August 1709 he became Master of Woolwich Dockyard. From 1711 he became involved in ship design, beginning with the sloops HMS Happy and HMS Hazard.[2] In 1715 he was appointed Surveyor of the Royal Navy.[3] From this point he appears involved in both design and build, beginning with the redesign of HMS Cambridge (1715). Other than this he disappears from Royal Navy records for 25 years, reappearing in 1740 solely as a designer: he designed the Drake-class sloop in 1740; in 1741 he designed the standard 20-gun frigate for the 1741 Establishment (later modified in 1745); HMS Portsmouth designed 1740/41; the Merlin-class sloop in 1743; HMS Kingfisher designed 1744/5; and the frigate HMS Seahorse designed 1747/8.

Ackworth was knighted in 1722 by King George I.[2] Non-naval works as Surveyor included the design of Putney Bridge.[6]

Ships built[edit]

Family[edit]

He was married twice: in 1696 at Chatham, Kent he married Elizabeth Slater; following her death (c.1709) he married Esther Loton (1682-1752). He had six children by his first marriage and two by his second, including the unusually named Avice Ackworth who married a Mr Wheate.[2]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Sir Jacob Acworth and Experimental Ship Design during the Period of the Establishments". Snr.org.uk. Retrieved 2022-07-31.
  2. ^ a b c d e ODNB: Sir Jacob Ackworth
  3. ^ a b "Sir Jacob Acworth | Science Museum Group Collection".
  4. ^ "British Third Rate ship of the line 'Hope' (1678)". Threedecks.org. Retrieved 2022-07-31.
  5. ^ "Jacob Ackworth (c.1668-1748/49)". Threedecks.org. Retrieved 2022-07-31.
  6. ^ "Putney Bridge". Hidden London. Retrieved 2022-07-31.