Portsmouth Point

This hand-coloured print depicts a scene of bawdy activity taking place at Portsmouth Point, an area with a seedy reputation situated on the eastern side of the entrance to Portsmouth Harbour. On the left is a Jewish moneylender’s shopfront hung with clothes and a sign reading ‘Moses Levy / Money Lent’. Opposite is the ‘Ship Tavern’. The foreground is a bustle of activity as baggage and casks are carried and rolled towards the distant harbour. A child plays with dogs while a one-legged sailor plays the fiddle and his shipmates cavort with local women, some of whom may be sex workers. Some officers are shown leaving the tavern and bidding goodbye to a group of women and children. A further group, including an officer with a telescope, look out of the bay window, and an additional officer embraces his lover in the top-floor window. The print is inscribed beneath the image with the title, ‘Portsmouth Point’, the date, ‘1811’, and the artist’s signature, ‘Rowlandson Del.’ See PAG8620 for another, probably later, impression of this print. The print was subsequently reissued with the date '1814'.

Object Details

ID: PAF3841
Collection: Fine art
Type: Print
Display location: Not on display
Creator: Rowlandson, Thomas
Places: Unlinked place
Date made: 1811
Exhibition: Broadsides! Caricature and the Navy 1775–1815
Credit: National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, London
Measurements: Sheet: 254 x 405 mm; Mount: 405 mm x 558 mm