1805 Club

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The 1805 Club was founded in 1990 to accomplish three objectives. To assist in the preservation of monuments and memorials relating to Vice- Admiral Lord Horatio Nelson and seafarers of the Georgian era. To promote research into the Royal Navy of the Georgian period, and especially of Vice Admiral Lord Nelson. To organize cultural and historical events.

Contents

1805 originates from the year of the Battle of Trafalgar, 21 October 1805. The Club's chairman since 2021 is Captain John A Rodgaard USN (Ret). The 1805 Club is a charity registered in England and Wales: No. 1201272.

Restoration efforts

The club restored the imposing churchyard memorial of Admiral Home Popham at St Michael and All Angels Church, Sunninghill, Berkshire, in 1999. [1] In the same year it restored the tomb of Admiral Sir Sidney Smith in Père Lachaise Cemetery, Paris. [2]

In 2006 it was reported that the 1805 club restored the grave of Capt Edward Berry, buried at St Swithin's Church in Walcot as part of their Trafalgar Captains' Memorial Project. [3]

In 2008, it was reported that the 1805 club restored the grave of Capt John Richards Lapenotière RN, at Menheniot Parish Church near Liskeard. The club also recorded the graves of all the British commanding officers at Trafalgar and raised funds to repair seven that were found to be in poor condition. The 1805 club documented the graves in their book, The Trafalgar Captains: Their Lives and Memorials. [4]

Cultural events

According to The Times, the club conducted a 200th anniversary memorial service at the tomb of Lord Nelson. Senior members of the Royal Navy, the Sea Cadets and HMS Victory's Cutter Crew were in attendance. The club vice-president, Mrs Anna Tribe, a 3rd great-granddaughter of Lord Nelson and Lady Emma Hamilton, laid a wreath at Nelson's tomb during the service. [5]

The 1805 Club is also the official custodian of The Trafalgar Way from Falmouth to the Old Admiralty in London. In 2020 the Club registered the trademark "The Trafalgar Way" to assert its custodianship and record the 'official' route today as determined from historic records and maps. [6]

Publications

The 1805 Club maintains a website with historical information about the Royal Navy and other state and merchant navies during the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries and concentrating on Lord Nelson and his fellow seamen, including a list of over seventy links to other Naval research databases.

The 1805 Club also publishes the following:

The 1805 Club has also published monographs, including:

See also

Monuments and memorials to Horatio Nelson, 1st Viscount Nelson

Related Research Articles

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Vice-Admiral Sir Thomas Francis Fremantle, 1st Freiherr von Fremantle, was a British naval officer in the Royal Navy whose accolades include three separate fleet actions, a close friendship with Lord Nelson, and a barony in Austria. He was the father of Admiral Sir Charles Fremantle, after whom the city Fremantle, in Western Australia, is named.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Charles Tyler</span>

Admiral Sir Charles Tyler, GCB was a naval officer in the British Royal Navy who gained fame during the Napoleonic Wars as a naval captain that fought at the Battle of Copenhagen (1801) and Battle of Trafalgar, becoming one of Nelson's Band of Brothers.

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This Bibliography covers sources for Royal Navy history through the 18th and 19th centuries. Some sources may be duplicated in sections when appropriate. Among the contemporary and earlier historical accounts are primary sources, historical accounts, often derived from letters, dispatches, government and military records, captain's logs and diaries, etc., by people involved in or closely associated to the historical episode in question. Primary source material is either written by these people or often collected, compiled, and/or written and published by other editors also, sometimes many years after the historical subject has passed. Primary sources listed in this bibliography are denoted with an uppercase bold ' (P) before the book title. Publications that are in the public domain and available online for viewing in their entirety are denoted with E'Book.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Commander-in-Chief, North Sea</span>

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Collingwood Monument</span> Monument in Tynemouth, UK

The Collingwood Monument is a Grade II* listed monument in Tynemouth, England, dedicated to Vice Admiral Lord Cuthbert Collingwood. A Napoleonic-era admiral noted for being second-in-command to Admiral Lord Nelson during the Battle of Trafalgar, Collingwood is sometimes referred to as the forgotten hero of Trafalgar. The monument's base is by John Dobson and the statue is a work of the sculptor John Graham Lough. It is situated just off Front Street in Tynemouth and overlooks the mouth of the River Tyne.

References

  1. "Exhibitions and Events". Newsletter of the Society for Nautical Research (33): 11. February 1999.
  2. "Exhibitions and Events". Newsletter of the Society for Nautical Research (34): 10. May 1999.
  3. "Grave of naval hero is restored by club". Bath Chronicle . Bath, Somerset. 2006-08-11. p. 16.
  4. Omara, Jane (2008-05-22). "Naval hero's tomb to be rededicated". Western Morning News . Plymouth. p. 18.
  5. "Funeral of Lord Nelson". The Times . London. 2006-01-11.
  6. https://trademarks.ipo.gov.uk/ipo-tmcase/page/Results/1/UK00003459468
  7. "City's heroes of Trafalgar". Express & Echo . Exeter. 2005-08-11. p. 12.

External sources