HMS Victory is a
first rate ship of the line of the
Royal Navy, started in 1759 and launched in 1765, most famous as
Lord Nelson's
flagship at the
Battle of Trafalgar. She is the oldest naval ship still in commission, and now sits in
dry dock in
Portsmouth,
England as a
museum ship.
[Although 30 years younger, is the oldest commissioned warship afloat.]Construction
In December 1758, the commissioner of
Chatham Dockyard was instructed to prepare a
dry dock for the construction of a new
first-rate ship. This was an unusual occurrence at the time as the Royal Navy preferred smaller and more manoeuvrable ships, and it was unusual for more than two to be in commission simultaneously; during the whole of the 18th century only ten were constructed.
The outline plans arrived in June 1759 and were based on
HMS Royal George which had been launched at
Woolwich Dockyard in 1756. The naval architect chosen to design the ship was
Sir Thomas Slade who, at the time, was the appointed
Surveyor of the Navy. She was designed to carry at least 100 guns; in practice, her armament varied from 104 to 106 guns and
carronades.
The
keel was laid on 23 July 1759 in the Old Single Dock (since renamed No. 2 Dock and now Victory Dock), and the name was finally chosen in October 1760. It was to commemorate the
Annus Mirabilis or Year of Victories, of 1759. In that year of the
Seven Years' War, land victories had been won at
Quebec,
Minden and
naval battles had been won at
Lagos and
Quiberon Bay. There were some doubts whether this was a suitable name since the previous first-rate
Victory had been lost with all on board in 1744.
Once the
frame had been constructed, it was normal to cover the ship up and leave it for several months to
season. However, the end of the Seven Years' War meant that she remained in this condition for nearly three years, which helped her subsequent longevity. Work restarted in autumn 1763 and she was finally
launched on 7 May 1765, having cost £63,176 and 3
shillings (present day £) and used around 6000 trees, 90% of which were
oak and the remainder
elm,
pine and
fir.
Because there was no immediate use for her, she was placed in
ordinary—in reserve, roofed over, dismasted and placed under general maintenance—moored in the
River Medway for 13 years until
France joined the
American War of Independence.
In March 1778,
John Lindsay was appointed her first captain, but he was transferred to captain in May 1778 when Admiral the Honorable
Augustus Keppel decided to raise his flag in
Victory. She was
commissioned in May 1778 under the command of Rear Admiral
John Campbell (1st Captain) and Captain
Jonathan Faulknor (2nd Captain), with the flag of Admiral Keppel. She was armed with smooth bore,
cast iron cannon - thirty 32- and 42-pounders (15 and 19 kg), thirty 24-pounders (11 kg), and forty 12-pounders (5 kg). Later, she also carried two carronade guns, firing 68-lb (31 kg) round shot.
In service
First Battle of Ushant
Keppel put to sea from
Spithead on 9 July 1778, with a force of thirty
ships of the line and, on 23 July, sighted a
French fleet of twenty-nine ships 100 miles (160 km) west of
Ushant. The French Admiral,
Louis Guillouet, comte d'Orvilliers, who had orders to avoid battle, was cut off from
Brest but retained the
weather gage. Two of his ships escaped into port leaving him with twenty-seven. The two fleets manoeuvred during shifting winds and a heavy rain squall until a
battle became inevitable with the British more or less in column and the French in some confusion. However, the French managed to pass along the British line with their most advanced ships. At about a quarter to twelve
Victory opened fire on the
Bretagne of 110 guns, which was being followed by the
Ville de Paris of 90 guns. The British van escaped with little loss but Sir
Hugh Palliser's rear division suffered considerably. Keppel made the signal to follow the French but Palliser did not conform and the action was not resumed. Keppel was court martialled and cleared and Palliser criticised by an inquiry before the affair turned into a political argument.
Second Battle of Ushant
In March 1780
Victorys hull was
sheathed with 3,923 sheets of copper below the waterline to protect it against
shipworm. On 2 December 1781 the ship, now commanded by Captain Henry Cromwell and bearing the flag of Rear Admiral
Richard Kempenfelt, sailed with eleven other ships of the line, a 50-gun
fourth-rate, and five
frigates, to intercept a French
convoy that had sailed from Brest on 10 December. Not knowing that the convoy was protected by twenty-one ships of the line under the command of
Luc Urbain de Bouexic, comte de Guichen, Kempenfelt ordered a chase when they were sighted on 12 December and began the
Second Battle of Ushant. When he noted the French superiority he contented himself with capturing fifteen sail of the convoy. The French were dispersed in a gale and forced to return home.

Victory in 1884
Battle of Cape St. Vincent
In 1796 Captain
Robert Calder (First Captain) and Captain George Grey (Second Captain) commanded
Victory under Admiral Sir
John Jervis's flag. Sir John Jervis sailed from the
Tagus on 18 January 1797; after being reinforced on 6 February by five ships from England his fleet consisted of fifteen sail of the line and six frigates. On 14 February the
Portuguese frigate
Carlotta, commanded by a Scotsman named Campbell with a Portuguese commission, brought news that a Spanish fleet was close. Jervis manoeuvred to intercept, and the
Battle of Cape St Vincent was joined.
Principe de Asturias , leading the Spanish leeward division, tried to break through the British line ahead or astern of
Victory, but
Victory poured such a tremendous fire into her, followed by several raking broadsides, that the whole Spanish division wore round and bore up.
Horatio Nelson, in
HMS Captain (primarily), also played a decisive role in this action.
Reconstruction
In February 1798
Victory was stationed at
Chatham under the command of Lieutenant J. Rickman. On 8 December, unfit for service as a warship, she was ordered to be converted to a
hospital ship to hold wounded French and Spanish
prisoners of war. In 1799, Rickman was relieved by Lieutenant J. Busbridge.
However, on 8 October 1799 was lost off
Chichester, having run aground on her way back to
Portsmouth after escorting a convoy to
Lisbon. She could not be refloated and so was stripped and dismantled. Now short of a first rate, the
Admiralty decided to recondition
Victory. Work started in 1800 but as it proceeded an increasing number of defects were found and the repairs developed into a very extensive reconstruction. The original estimate was £23,500 but the final cost was £70,933.
Extra gun ports were added, taking her from 100 guns to 104, and her
magazine lined with copper. Her
figurehead was replaced along with her
masts and the paint scheme changed from red to the black and yellow seen today. Her gun ports were originally yellow to match the hull but later repainted black, giving a pattern later called the
"Nelson chequer", which was adopted by all Royal Navy ships after the Battle of Trafalgar. The work was completed on 11 April 1803 and the ship left for Portsmouth on 14 May under her new captain,
Samuel Sutton.
Nelson
Vice-Admiral Nelson hoisted his flag in
Victory on 16 May 1803 with Samuel Sutton as his
flag captain and sailed to assume command in the Mediterranean on 20 May. Nelson transferred to the faster
frigate Amphion on 23 May.
On 28 May Captain Sutton captured the French
Embuscade of 32 guns, bound for
Rochefort from
San Domingo.
Victory rejoined Lord Nelson off
Toulon on 30 May when Captain Sutton exchanged commands with the captain of
Amphion,
Thomas Masterman Hardy.
Victory was passing the island of
Toro on 4 April 1805, when
HMS Phoebe brought the news that the French fleet under
Pierre-Charles Villeneuve had escaped from
Toulon. While Nelson made for
Sicily to see if the French were heading for
Egypt, Villeneuve was entering
Cádiz to link up with the Spanish fleet. On 7 May Nelson reached
Gibraltar and received his first definite news. The British fleet completed their stores in
Lagos Bay, Portugal on 10 May, and two days later sailed westward with ten ships and three frigates in pursuit of the combined Franco-Spanish fleet of 17 ships. They arrived in the
West Indies to find that the enemy was sailing back to Europe where
Napoleon Bonaparte was waiting for them with his invasion forces at
Boulogne.
The Franco-Spanish fleet was involved in the indecisive
Battle of Cape Finisterre in fog off
Ferrol with Admiral Sir
Robert Calder's squadron on 22 July before taking refuge in
Vigo and Ferrol to land wounded and abandon three damaged ships. Calder on 14 August and Nelson on 15 August joined
Admiral Cornwallis's Channel Fleet off Ushant. Nelson continued to England in
Victory leaving his Mediterranean fleet with Cornwallis who detached twenty of his thirty-three ships of the line and sent them under Calder to find the combined fleet at Ferrol. On 19 August came the worrying news that the enemy had sailed from there, followed by relief when they arrived in
Cádiz two days later. On the evening of Saturday, 28 September, Lord Nelson joined
Lord Collingwood's fleet off Cádiz, quietly, so that his presence would not be known.
When Admiral Villeneuve learned that he was to be removed from command he took his ships to sea on the morning of 19 October, first sailing south towards the Mediterranean but then turning north towards the British fleet, beginning the
Battle of Trafalgar. Nelson had already made his plans: to break the enemy line some two or three ships ahead of their Commander in Chief in the centre and achieve victory before the van could come to their aid. In the event fitful winds made it a slow business. For five hours after Nelson's last manoeuvring signal the two columns of British ships slowly approached the French line before
Royal Sovereign, leading the lee column, was able to open fire on
Fougueux. Twenty five minutes later
Victory broke the line between
Bucentaure and
Redoutable firing a treble shotted broadside into the stern of the former from a range of a few yards. At 25 minutes past one Nelson was shot, the fatal musket ball entering his left shoulder and lodging in his spine. He died at half past four. Such killing had taken place on
Victorys quarter deck that
Redoutable attempted to board her, but they were thwarted by the arrival of
Eliab Harvey in the 98-gun
HMS Temeraire, whose broadside devastated the French ship. Nelson's last order was for the fleet to anchor, but this was countermanded by Vice Admiral Collingwood.
Victory lost 57 killed and 102 wounded.
After Trafalgar
Victory took Nelson's body to
England where, after lying in state at
Greenwich, he was buried in
St. Paul's Cathedral on 6 January 1806.
Victory bore many Admirals' flags after Trafalgar, and sailed on numerous expeditions, including two
Baltic campaigns under Admiral Sir
James Saumarez. Finally her active career ended on 7 November 1812, when she was moored in
Portsmouth Harbour off
Gosport and used as a depot ship.
It is said that when
Thomas Hardy was
First Sea Lord he told his wife, on returning home, that he had just signed an order for
Victory to be broken up. She burst into tears and sent him straight back to his office to rescind the order. Though this story may be apocryphal, the page of the duty log containing the orders for that day has been torn out.
In 1889,
Victory was fitted up as a Naval School of
Telegraphy. She soon became a proper Signal School, and signal ratings from ships paying off were sent to
Victory, instead of the barracks, for a two-month training course. The School remained on
Victory until 1904, when training was transferred temporarily to
HMS Hercules, and in 1906 the whole School was moved to a permanent establishment at the Chatham Royal Naval Barracks.
As the years passed by
Victory slowly deteriorated at her moorings. By 1921 she was in very poor condition, and a campaign to save her was started with the
Save the Victory
Fund under the aegis of the
Society for Nautical Research. The outcome of the campaign was that the
British Government agreed to restore and preserve her to commemorate Nelson, the Battle of Trafalgar and the Royal Navy's supremacy before, during, and after the Napoleonic period.
On 12 January 1922 she was moved into No. 2 dock at Portsmouth, the oldest drydock in the world, for restoration. In 1928
King George V was able to unveil a tablet celebrating the completion of the work, although restoration and maintenance still continued under the supervision of the Society for Nautical Research. In 1941,
Victory sustained some damage from a bomb dropped by the
Luftwaffe into her dry dock, causing damage to the hull. On one occasion German Radio
Propaganda claimed that the ship had been destroyed by a bomb, and the
Admiralty had to issue a denial.
Listed as part of the
National Historic Fleet, Core Collection, in the early 21st century the ship underwent another very extensive restoration for the
bicentenary of the battle in October 2005 to bring her appearance as close as possible to that which she had at Trafalgar. Replicas of items including mess bowls, beakers and tankards in the 'Marines' Mess', and a toothbrush, shaving brush and wash bowl in 'Hardy's Cabin' are on display.
HMS
Victory is still in commission as the flagship of the
Second Sea Lord in his role as Commander in Chief of the
Royal Navy's Home Command (CINCNAVHOME). She is the oldest commissioned warship in the world, although the
USS Constitution, launched 30 years later, is the oldest commissioned warship still afloat.
Victory attracts around 350,000 visitors per year in her role as a museum ship.
Victorys foretopsail was severely damaged during the battle of Trafalgar, perforated by upwards of 90 cannonballs and other projectiles. It was replaced after the battle but was preserved, and eventually came to be displayed in the
Royal Naval Museum. The sail is laid out across a large chamber, illuminated by alternating lowlight projectors.
The westernmost entrance to the Royal Navy's facility in
Portsmouth,
HMS Nelson, is known as Victory Gate.
The current and 99th commanding officer is
Lt-Cdr Douglas J 'Oscar' Whild
Royal Navy, who assumed command on 1 September 2008.
Of the living descendants of the the Trafalgar ship's company who are involved in HMS
Victory today, the most active (although not the most senior, as several of
Nelson's direct descendants are still alive) is the self-styled Honorary Commanding Officer, James Smith-Hardy, who only discovered he was descended from
Sir Thomas Hardy in October 2005.
Admirals who have hoisted their flag on the Victory
Over the two centuries since
Victorys launch, numerous admirals have hoisted their flag in her:
Gallery