24 Hour Museum - official guide to UK museums, galleries, exhibitions and heritage
Gateway to Over 3,000 UK museums, galleries and heritage attractions
Skip to navigation

News

Dunkirk Destroyer's Nameplate Presented To Royal Naval Museum

By Richard Moss

09/02/2004

Image: Shows a black and white photograph of HMS Wakeful steaming through the English Channel in May 1940.

Photo: HMS Wakeful pictured just hours before she was sunk in 1940 with heavy loss of life. Picture courtesy: www.navynews.co.uk

The nameplate and crest from a World War two destroyer lost during the evacuation of Dunkirk are to be presented to the Royal Naval Museum in Portsmouth.

The relics were recovered during a maritime safety operation off the coast of Zeebrugge on the wreck of HMS Wakeful, sunk by a German torpedo on May 29, 1940.

Flemish Transport Minister Gilbert Bossuyt handed over the crest and nameplate to Britain’s ambassador to Belgium, Richard Kinchen, during a ceremony in the town of Ypres on January 26.

The plates are now awaiting delivery to the museum at Portsmouth’s historic dockyard where they will join a large collection of poignant relics and reminders from many of the old battleships of World War Two.

A spokesperson for the museum said, “we have over the years tried to collect symbolic relics from ships of the World War Two period and we have a strong collection of name plates and other memorabilia, so the pieces are going to a good home.”

Image: Shows the recovered crest (a bronzed shield with a crown) of HMS Wakeful

Photo: the crest of HMS Wakeful recovered during work to safeguard shipping in the English Channel. Picture courtesy: www.navynews.co.uk

In the thick of the Dunkirk rescue operation during May 29 1940, HMS Wakeful had already rescued some 600 soldiers from the beaches and was returning to Dover with a further 650 evacuees from the Bray Dunes beach at Dunkirk.

Shortly after 1.00 am she was attacked and hit by a torpedo, fired from a German E Boat. The ship broke in two and sank in 15 seconds with only 25 crew and one evacuee saved.

The Royal Navy corvette Sheldrake scuttled the wreck the following day leaving Wakeful and those who perished on board in the shallow waters of the Channel as a military maritime grave.

In 2001 the Belgian and British authorities commenced discussions about the increasing danger that the wreck, lying just 53 feet below the surface, posed to the modern deep-draught ships that use the English Channel. However the proposed plan to move the ship led to dismay among the few remaining survivors and the families of those who perished.

It was eventually decided to remove only part of HMS Wakeful’s superstructure, including funnels and navigation equipment and secure them to the ship’s side. It was during this sensitive operation that the nameplate and crest were recovered.

“These particular pieces have a special poignancy and significance,” added the spokesman for the Royal Naval Museum. “For us they are a symbolic reminder of the whole ship and of the sacrifice made by the men who perished on board.”

Royal Naval Museum
HM Naval Base, Portsmouth, PO1 3NH, Hampshire, England

Open: April-October Daily 1000-1700 November-March Daily 1000-1630 Closed 25 26 December

Related Articles

Museums And Galleries Get Behind Cultural Olympiad Weekend
Treasures On Show In Country Houses Thanks To Tax Scheme
Taskforce South - The Falklands War At Royal Navy Museum
Chasing Freedom - The Royal Navy & Suppression Of The Slave Trade
Online Museum Makes Waves For The Senior Service
News In Brief - Week Ending February 4 2007
News In Brief - Week Ending December 24 2006

E-news registration
E-mail story to a friend
Tell us what you think

Mark Leckey Scoops £25,000 And The 2008 Turner Prize

Library Thief Update: Sentencing Adjourned Until January 16, 2009

Fund Aims To Realise Long Campaign For Cardiff Museum

Britglyph Art Campaign Uses Web To Make Mass Geoglyph

Inaugural Awards Ceremony Honours UK Arts Philanthropists

Rare Silver Cup Commemorating Coronation Of Charles II Is Saved For The Nation

London Fire Brigade Museum Escapes Closure - For Now

Another Busy Year For Archaeology On Orkney In 2008

Severndroog Castle To Be Restored Thanks To Lottery Grant

Campaign To Save Captain Scott's Hut Needs Another £65,000

Open Air Lab Project Launches At The Natural History Museum

Gravity Defying Vertical Racer Drives Kids Up the Wall At MOSI

DCMS And English Heritage List Seven London Bridges

Railway Museums Launch Joint WWII Railway Worker Project

Bowes Museum Famous Mechanical Swan Goes Back On Show In December

Free Admission To Historic Scotland Sites For St Andrew's Day

Fund Raising Scheme Is Backing Great North Museum: Hancock

Tyneside Gallery Plots New Display After Funding Victory

Search this site

Advanced Search
Map Search

Home Page
News Page
Exhibition Page
What's On
Trails Page
Website of the Week
Letters Page
Welsh Home
Graphical Version

Skip to body

Copyright © 24 Hour Museum
Information published here was believed to be correct at the time it was prepared. Welsh language pages developed with CYMAL: Museums Archives and Libraries Wales, funded by the Welsh Assembly Government.

Skip to navigation
Go to top