HMS Victory mast damaged at the Battle of Trafalgar to go on display

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A wooden foremast from HMS Victory featuring a hole punched into it by a cannon ball during the Battle of Trafalgar is to go on public display.

The previously unseen piece is set to be one of the star exhibits as the HMS Victory: The Nation’s Flagship gallery reopens at Portsmouth Historic Dockyard on May 17.

A life mask of Vice Admiral Horatio Nelson that was taken in Naples in 1798 and later used to produce a marble sculpture of him by Anne Seymour Damer is also set to be among the key attractions, along with a classical figurehead that was once appeared on the bow of HMS Minerva (1820).

HMS Victory: The Nation’s Flagship gallery
Alice Roberts-Pratt, of the National Museum of the Royal Navy, studies a section of the original wooden foremast from HMS Victory (Andrew Matthews/PA)

The gallery is set to highlight the story behind HMS Victory as one of the Royal Navy’s most famous warships and her role in the Battle of Trafalgar.

HMS Victory: The Nation’s Flagship gallery
A life mask of Vice Admiral Horatio Nelson (Andrew Matthews/PA)

Organisers say that construction and conservation will be major themes among the displays which will compare ship-building skills 200 years ago and the painstaking work which is still undertaken today.

HMS Victory: The Nation’s Flagship gallery
A classical figurehead that was once in place on the bow of HMS Minerva (1820)(Andrew Matthews/PA)

“Even those who think they know all about the ship will discover something new.”

Tickets can be bought for timed slots to see the exhibition.

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