The National Museum of the Royal Navy Hartlepool | Vlog 11
A short tour at the museum of Hartlepool.
Best Attractions and Places to See in Hartlepool, United Kingdom UK
Hartlepool Travel Guide. MUST WATCH. Top things you have to do in Hartlepool . We have sorted Tourist Attractions in Hartlepool for You. Discover Hartlepool as per the Traveler Resources given by our Travel Specialists. You will not miss any fun thing to do in Hartlepool .
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List of Best Things to do in Hartlepool , United Kingdom (UK)
HMS Trincomalee
National Museum of the Royal Navy Hartlepool
Heugh Battery Museum
Hartlepool Quay
Museum of Hartlepool
Seaton Carew Beach
Summerhill Country Park and Outdoor Activities Centre
Tweddle Children's Animal Farm
Ward Jackson Park
Saint Hilda's Church Donegal Town - County Donegal
RML 497National Museum of the Royal Navy Hartlepool
National Museum of the Royal Navy Hartlepool
A TOUR ON BOARD HMS TRINCOMALEE AT THE MUSEUM OF THE ROYAL NAVY IN HARTLEPOOL - 20th May 2018
A tour around HMS Trincomalee, a Leda Class Sailing Frigate of the Royal Navy that was built in 1817 and is today preserved at the National Museum of the Royal Navy in Hartlepool.
RML 497 arrives at The National Museum of the Royal Navy Hartlepool
Places to see in ( Hartlepool - UK )
Places to see in ( Hartlepool - UK )
Hartlepool is a town in County Durham, England. The town lies on the North Sea coast, 7.5 miles north of Middlesbrough and 17 miles south of Sunderland. The Borough of Hartlepool includes outlying villages such as Seaton Carew, Greatham and Elwick.
Hartlepool was founded in the 7th century AD, around the Northumbrian monastery of Hartlepool Abbey. The village grew in the Middle Ages and its harbour served as the official port of the County Palatine of Durham. After a railway link from the north was established from the South Durham coal fields, an additional link from the south, in 1835, together with a new port, resulted in further expansion, with the new town of West Hartlepool.
Nearby towns and cities include: Billingham (8 mi or 13 km): Darlington (25 mi or 40 km); Durham (17 mi or 27 km); Middlesbrough (12 mi or 19 km); Peterlee (8 mi or 13 km); Seaham (17 mi or 27 km); Sedgefield (13 mi or 21 km); Stockton-on-Tees (10 mi or 16 km) and Sunderland (21 mi or 34 km). The monument at Eston Nab can be seen, beyond the far side of the Tees Bay, to the south.
Hartlepool is served by two primary routes which are the A179 road and the A689 road, both linking the town to the A19 road. Hartlepool is served by Hartlepool and Seaton Carew railway stations. Hartlepool has been a major seaport virtually since it was founded, and has a long fishing heritage.
Alot to see in ( Hartlepool - UK ) such as :
HMS Trincomalee
National Museum of the Royal Navy Hartlepool
Museum of Hartlepool
Heugh Battery Museum
Hartlepool Quay
Seaton Carew Beach
Tweddle Children's Animal Farm
Summerhill Country Park and Outdoor Activities Centre
Ward Jackson Park
PSS Wingfield Castle
Saint Hilda's Church
Teesmouth national nature reserve
( Hartlepool - UK ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting the city of Hartlepool . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in Hartlepool - UK
Join us for more :
Hartlepool Maritime Experience
The Historic Quayside Hartlepool's Maritime Experience Museum of Hartlepool
Hartlepool's Maritime Experience is a visitor attraction in Hartlepool, County Durham, in the northeast of England. The concept of the attraction is the thematic re-creation of an 18th-century seaport, in the time of Lord Nelson, Napoleon and the Battle of Trafalgar. HMS Trincomalee, a Royal Navy frigate and Britain's oldest warship afloat is at the centre of the quay. She was built in Bombay, India in 1817. The 190th anniversary of the ship's official launch was on Friday 12 October 2007.
Before April 2005 it was known as Hartlepool Historic Quay. It was built by Teesside Development Corporation as part of the economic regeneration of old industrial sites of Teesside, on the derelict docks that was formally used for industries such as ship building and the timber yards etc.
It opened to the public July 1994. The attraction consists of Gift shop and reception, Marine Barracks and Guard Room, a number of period shops and houses, Fighting Ships, Pressganged, Sir William Gray Suite and Baltic Rooms, Skittle Square and children’s playship, Bistro and Quayside Coffee Shop, Children’s Maritime Adventure Centre, HMS Trincomalee, Wingfield Castle and the Museum of Hartlepool.
The PS Wingfield Castle, preserved at the Museum of Hartlepool is a floating exhibit and cafe. There are hundreds of other exhibits in the museum charting the history of the town from prehistoric times right up to the present day. One of the most popular features is the description of the Hartlepool monkey legend. Others include a full size coble boat, a lighthouse, a genuine German shell from the Bombardment of Hartlepool and many ships' models and engine displays.
The site has seen some improvements in 2006/2007 including a renewed Fighting Ships which is an audio / visual tour of a warship. There is now a new character which is Jim Henshaw, a young powder monkey.
New for 2008 include a HMS Trincomalee Exhibition, Viewing Balcony overlooking HMS Trincomalee, Upgrading and re-design of the Maritime Adventure Centre and the Restoration of P.S.S. Wingfield Castle.
Nearby is Hartlepool Marina and Navigation Point where there are many restaurants and bars. Hartlepool is the host port for the final leg of The Tall Ships' Races in 2010.
National Museum of the Royal Navy | Walkthrough Tour August 2019 | 4k
Walkthrough tour of the National Museum of the Royal Navy, Portsmouth.
The National Museum of the Royal Navy, Portsmouth, formerly known as the Royal Naval Museum, is a museum of the history of the Royal Navy located in the Portsmouth Historic Dockyard section of HMNB Portsmouth, Portsmouth, Hampshire, England. The museum is part of the National Museum of the Royal Navy, a non-departmental public body sponsored by the Ministry of Defence. It received 1,081,909 visitors in 2017.
The museum was founded in 1911. Known originally as the Dockyard Museum, it was conceived by Mr Mark Edwin Pescott-Frost, then secretary to the Admiral Superintendent at Portsmouth. With a passion for naval history he spearheaded a project to save items for future generations, eventually leading to the opening of a new museum. His foresight ensured the survival of many interesting and important artefacts, several of which are still on display today. He was awarded the Imperial Service Order in 1916.
In 1985, under the terms of the National Heritage Act 1983, the museum was devolved from the Ministry of Defence to become an executive non-departmental public body, supported by a grant-in-aid. At this juncture, the name was changed to become the Royal Naval Museum, Portsmouth.
In 2008, the National Museum of the Royal Navy (NMRN) formally came into being with the express purpose of providing greater co-ordination of naval heritage in the broadest sense and, following on from this, in 2010, the Royal Naval Museum became a full subsidiary of the National Museum of the Royal Navy, and changed its name to National Museum of the Royal Navy, Portsmouth.
Filmed on GoPro Hero7 Black, August 2019
HMS Trincomalee & The National Museum of the Royal Navy
HMS Trincomalee, Britain's oldest warship still afloat, is pleased to announce that it will become a full subsidiary of the National Museum of the Royal Navy (NMRN).
The move brings the warship, the last of Admiral Lord Nelson's frigates, into the ever-growing fleet of historic ships under the care of the NMRN which includes the world famous HMS Victory, HMS Caroline, the sole survivor from the Battle of Jutland in 1916 and the newly refurbished HMS Alliance, the UK's only surviving British WW2 era submarine.
Hartlepool Marina Trip
Hartlepool Marina Trip
Marina in Hartlepool, England
Lock Office, Slake Terrace, Hartlepool TS24 0RU
The Museum of Hartlepool
P.S.S. Wingfield Castle
The P.S.S. Wingfield Castle was built in 1934 for the LNER as a River Humber paddle steamer.
We did Not look inside the National Museum of the Royal Navy Hartlepool or onboard the
HMS Trincomalee . HMS Trincomalee is the oldest British warship still afloat and Hartlepool is proud to have it! With its towering structure and thundering cannons, is a perfect tribute to Hartlepool's seafaring tradition. Built in Bombay, India in 1817
Seaton High Light
The Seaton High Light was built in 1839 and originally stood 1 mile inland as it was used in conjunction with the Seaton Low Light to mark a shipping channel
P.S.S. Wingfield Castle
Hartlepool Museum
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Captured And Sunk
Photographs of some of the ships sunk by the German submarine UC-21 during the early years of the First World War.
The Heroism and Heartbreak” Project aims to rediscover and retell the stories of more than 260 Hartlepool sailors who lost their lives during the First World War – but we need your help. If you have a photograph, letter or diary from a Hartlepool family member who served in the Merchant Navy, Royal Navy or local Fishing Fleets during WW1 please contact us by e-mail: (infodesk@hartlepool.gov.uk), telephone: 01429 242909, or by calling in to Hartlepool Central Library.
All of these stories, together with more than 9,000 photographs and a great deal of other fascinating facts and information relating to the port town of Hartlepool, can be viewed free of charge on our website hhtandn.org
Hartlepool Maritime Experience
A day visit to this fascinating maritime museum.
Musket Firing @ HMS Trincomalee Royal Navy Museum Hartlepool 4.1.19
Hartlepool Maritime Experience! Canon and Musket Demo!
Poor Rhys shat himself when the first pistol went off! the rest sent him into a panic frenzy! just as he calmed down and stopped crying, the canon went off!
Hartlepool-built: Glenroy, Bainbridge & Quebra
The story of three Hartlepool-built ships sunk during the First World War.
The “Heroism and Heartbreak” Project aims to rediscover and retell the stories of more than 260 Hartlepool sailors who lost their lives during the First World War – but we need your help. If you have a photograph, letter or diary from a Hartlepool family member who served in the Merchant Navy, Royal Navy or local Fishing Fleets during WW1 please contact us by e-mail: (infodesk@hartlepool.gov.uk), telephone: 01429 242909, or by calling in to Hartlepool Central Library.
All of these stories, together with more than 9,000 photographs and a great deal of other fascinating facts and information relating to the port town of Hartlepool, can be viewed free of charge on our website hhtandn.org
Heroism and Heartbreak - Shipmates O' Mine
This Roll of Honour lists the 263 Hartlepool seafarers known to have lost their lives during the First World War.
At the outbreak of the First World War, almost every family in Hartlepool had links with the sea and the loss of every local ship and crewman deeply affected a great many people. German U-boats and mines sank more than 400 locally owned or built merchant ships and over 260 Hartlepool sailors lost their lives.
“Heroism and Heartbreak” aims to rediscover and retell the stories of these selfless and courageous men – but we need your help. If you have a photograph, letter or diary from a family member who served in the Merchant Navy, Royal Navy or local Fishing Fleets during WW1 please contact us by e-mail: (infodesk@hartlepool.gov.uk), telephone: 01429 242909, or by calling in to Hartlepool Central Library.
This 'talking history' is a Roll of Honour commemorating all those Hartlepool seafarers who lost their lives during World War I :
Shipmates O' Mine (1913) sung by Peter Dawson
All of these stories, together with more than 9,000 photographs and a great deal of other fascinating facts and information relating to the port town of Hartlepool, can be viewed free of charge on our website hhtandn.org
Don't miss Armed Forces Day in Hartlepool this Saturday 29th June!
Rachel Shepherd, Events Manager for the National Museum of the Royal Navy Hartlepool, outlines the fun-packed programme lined up at the Museum.
Portsmouth Royal Marine Museum. Inside Warrior Ship and Submarines
Portsmouth Marine Museum Ships and Submarines
The new Royal Marines Museum, at the very heart of Portsmouth Historic Dockyard, will place the 355-year history of the Royal Marines firmly within the story of the Royal Navy.
For the first time the story of the Royal Marines – a national story, but also a story with impact across the globe – will be told in a building appropriate to its scale. The National Museum’s vision for the museum has developed following extensive audience research, consultation and activity planning and will transform access to this story, developing exciting new programmes and activities, and increasing visitors four-fold.
The museum will be at the heart of sharing the on-going story of the Royal Marines.
#RoyalMarineMuseum #portmouth #Submarines
Egbert and Nelson
West Hartlepool's successful 1918 War Savings Drive and the 'prize' of the tank Egbert.
The “Heroism and Heartbreak” Project aims to rediscover and retell the stories of more than 260 Hartlepool sailors who lost their lives during the First World War – but we need your help. If you have a photograph, letter or diary from a Hartlepool family member who served in the Merchant Navy, Royal Navy or local Fishing Fleets during WW1 please contact us by e-mail: (infodesk@hartlepool.gov.uk), telephone: 01429 242909, or by calling in to Hartlepool Central Library.
All of these stories, together with more than 9,000 photographs and a great deal of other fascinating facts and information relating to the port town of Hartlepool, can be viewed free of charge on our website hhtandn.org