[personal profile] jomarch posting in [community profile] little_details
My characters are traveling from London to Berwick-upon-Tweed in 1590. I figured they could ride on horseback to King's Lynn and take a ship to Berwick (or?), bur I don't know: how long would a sea journey like that last and what type of ship would be used? All I could find was that a ship called Anne made that journey quite regularly a few decades before that - I'm guessing it could still be doing it at that point? How long would a ship like that operate for?

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Date: 2025-02-18 10:46 pm (UTC)
nineveh_uk: Illustration that looks like Harriet Vane (Default)
From: [personal profile] nineveh_uk
Without a reason to be there particularly, if you want them to travel by ship, I'm not sure that it would make sense to ride to King's Lynn first rather than simply sail from London, itself a substantial port. Even if they couldn't get passage on a ship all the way to Berwick, theyd be able to get one some distance. However, by 1590 there is also a well-established road for your journey, the Great North Road covering the journey from London to Edinburgh, generally via Berwick, so they can simply travel by land if you want. You're about 60 years too early for stage coaches, though by this time private coaches did exist in England, but they could also ride. There were inns at the towns en route.

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Date: 2025-02-18 10:48 pm (UTC)
zero_pixel_count: a sleeping woman, a highway stretching out, mountains (Default)
From: [personal profile] zero_pixel_count
I know it's not what you're asking for but the first part might also need checking if you haven't already - you're writing in a time before the big fen drainage projects and I don't think there would have been much in the way of good roads out that way. Even if there's a reason they need to go via Lynn, I think it probably would still make more sense to take ship from London itself, and very likely quite a lot faster. (Gut feeling says it would probably also be cheaper, but I have to admit I've got nothing to back that up with.)

Journey time wise, I feel like 5-7 days would be entirely plausible, but could easily be longer if plot reasons call for it, perhaps because of weather, or because the ship is making other stops. (A few years back, my spouse was supposed to sail from Newcastle to the south coast in a 60ft boat, and that was planned to take between a week and 10 days and they were taking it easy.)

In terms of operational life it seems entirely plausible that that ship would still be sailing a few decades later, if she'd been maintained - the reason there are only a small number of hundred-plus-year-old wood boats on the Norfolk Broads has nothing to do with the theoretical working life of the boats themselves (and everything to do with the fact that a great many of them were used as decoys during WW2 and, unsurprisingly, did not survive the experience...)

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