The Autobiography of Phineas Pett

audiobook

The Autobiography of Phineas Pett

by Phineas Pett

EN·~9 hours·15 chapters

Chapters

15 total

PREFACE

9:19

1.—The Shipwrights.

39:59

2.—The Family of Pett.

12:29

3.—Phineas Pett.

1:24:49

AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF PHINEAS PETT

4:23:48

I Grant to Phineas Pett. 26th April 1604

4:41

II Petition of Shipwrights for Incorporation (?) 1578

1:40

III Charter to Shipwrights, 22nd April 1605.

6:33

IV Charter to Shipwrights, 6th May 1612

1:02:34

V. New Building the Prince Royal at Woolwich

7:04

Description

Inside this intimate memoir you hear the voice of a seventeenth‑century shipwright who spent his life turning timber into the vessels that carried England’s ambitions across the seas. He recounts his apprenticeship, the bustling yards of Chatham, and the pressure of fulfilling royal commissions for Prince Henry and later the king himself. The narrative is peppered with the practical details of design, labor, and the politics that surrounded the navy’s expansion.

The text is drawn from a meticulous diary, with entries dated to the day, and even bears marginal notes added later by Samuel Pepys, giving modern readers a rare cross‑generational commentary. As the writer ages, his reflections turn toward the broader currents of his era, from court intrigue to the looming conflicts that would soon engulf the nation. The manuscript ends abruptly in 1638, leaving his final thoughts unfinished and inviting listeners to imagine the closing chapter of a life lived at the heart of maritime power.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~9 hours (531K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Release date

2016-03-04

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Phineas Pett

Phineas Pett

1570–1647

A master shipwright in the great age of the Stuart navy, this remarkable builder helped shape some of England’s most important warships. His own memoir also leaves a rare firsthand record of dockyard life, ambition, and court politics in the early 1600s.

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