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 | HMS Victory leaving Portsmouth by Thomas Elliot Copyright © National Trust for Scotland, 2008 Licensor www.scran.ac.uk |
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| Mary Buick (or Buik) | | Footstep 20 | |
| 1777 - 1854
A ropemaker's daughter from a moderately well-off family, Mary married a
fisherman from Cellardyke in Fife when she was twenty. Her husband, Thomas
Watson, was subsequently pressed into the navy.
Mary followed him aboard - and gave birth to their first child during the Battle
of Copenhagen. They transferred to HMS Victory in 1803 under the command of
Admiral Nelson. Two years later came the battle of Trafalgar. Thomas was in
charge of a gun crew and Mary tended the wounded while their daughter was kept
out of harm's way by another seaman from Cellardyke, Malcolm McRuvie. At the
height of the battle, Nelson was killed and Mary helped to embalm his body - in a large barrel of brandy!
Her plaque is on the Frigate Unicorn at City Quay, which was not built until
shortly after Trafalgar, but gives an idea of life at sea on a fighting ship of
the time.
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