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The Statute Law of Merchant Shipping Comprised in an Alphabetical Analysis and a Summary of the Unrepealed Merchant Shipping Acts, From 1821 to
The Statute Law of Merchant Shipping Comprised in an Alphabetical Analysis and a Summary of the Unrepealed Merchant Shipping Acts From 1821 to Author:Great Britain Title: The Statute Law of Merchant Shipping Comprised in an Alphabetical Analysis and a Summary of the Unrepealed Merchant Shipping Acts, From 1821 to 1888 General Books publication date: 2009 Original publication date: 1889 Original Publisher: J.D. Potter Subjects: Maritime law Notes: This is a black and white OCR reprint of the original. ... more »It has no illustrations and there may be typos or missing text. When you buy the General Books edition of this book you get free trial access to Million-Books.com where you can select from more than a million books for free. Excerpt: First Schedule. , Constitution of the Committee. . 1. Three shipowners selected by the Council of the Chamber of Shipping of the United Kingdom. t 2. One shipowner selected by the Shipowners' Associations of Glasgow, and one shipowner selected-by the Liverpool Steamship Owners' Association and the Liverpool Shipowners' Association conjointly. 3. Two shipbuilders selected by the Council of the Institution ef Naval Architects. 4. Three persons practically acquainted with the navigation of vessels selected by the shipmasters' societies recognised by the President of the Board of Trade for this purpose. 5. Three persons being or having been able-bodied seamen selected by seamen's societies recognised by the President of the Board of Trade for this purpose. 6. Two persons selected conjointly by the Committee of Lloyd's, the Committee of Lloyd's Register Society, and the Committee of the Institute of London Underwriters. Second Schedule. Matters for which the Rules are to provide. 1. The arranging of British ships into classes, having regard to the services in which they are employed, to the nature and duration of the voyage, and to the number of persons carried. 2. The number and description of the boats, life-boats, life-rafts, life-jackets, and life-buoys to be carried by British ships, according to the class in which they are arranged, and the mode of their construction, also the equip...« less