Sunderland Echo

A tribute to naval heroes

EXHIBITION PLANNED AT SAME TIME AS TALL SHIPS

- By Chris Cordner chris.cordner@jpress.co.uk Twitter: @ccordnerjp

A famous painting of English naval hero Nelson is coming to Sunderland.

And so are lots more tributes to England’s most-loved naval commanders, thanks to a new exhibition which will be on Wearside in time for The Tall Ships Races.

Admiral Horatio Nelson and Newcastle-born Admiral Cuthbert Collingwoo­d, heroes of the Napoleonic Wars, will be remembered at an exhibition at Sunderland Museum,Libraryand­Winter Gardens.

It runs between Saturday, June 2 and Sunday, July 22.

The exhibition, Naval Heroes: Nelson and Collingwoo­d, will feature a famous portrait of Nelson by artist Lemuel Francis Abbott, painted in 1797, which is on loan from the National Portrait Gallery, London.

Other paintings on show will include After Trafalgar by Frank Mason (1907); A Naval Engagement by Richard Paton (18th century); Admiral Lord Collingwoo­d by James Lonsdale (1806), and a portrait of Lieutenant Granville Thompson, a Newcastle sailor who fought on Collingwoo­d’s flagship Sovereign at the Battle of Trafalgar.

Other exhibits include a silver kettle which was presented to Collingwoo­d by Newcastle Corporatio­n after Trafalgar, and a letter written by Nelson on board his ship Victory in 1804.

A night telescope, reputed to have been used by Collingwoo­d at Trafalgar and on loan from the Discovery Museum, Newcastle, will also be on show.

A Wearside connection will be a Sunderland creamware mug, produced at Dawson’s Pottery in the city in about 1800. The mug shows ‘Lord Nelson Engaging the Toulon Fleet of the Mouths of the Nile’.

Shauna Gregg, Exhibition­s, Collection­s and Archives Officer at Sunderland Museum, said: “We’ve collated a fascinatin­g collection of paintings, prints and artefacts about Nelson and Collingwoo­d and it seems fitting to time the exhibition for the visit of the Tall Ships.

“We’re known for our maritime heritage and Nelson and Collingwoo­d are rightly remembered for their vital roles in English maritime history.”

Sunderland City Council Portfolio Holder for Communitie­s and Culture, Coun John Kelly said: “Staging the Naval Heroes exhibition in Sunderland is a great opportunit­y to celebrate our country’s rich maritime heritage.”

The exhibition is free and will be open between 10am and 4pm from Mondays to Saturdays and between noon and 4pm on Sundays.

 ??  ?? Shauna Gregg, left, with Jo Cunningham, Exhibition­s, Collection­s and Archives Manager at Sunderland Museum. Left, Lemuel Francis Abbott’s Nelson portrait.
Shauna Gregg, left, with Jo Cunningham, Exhibition­s, Collection­s and Archives Manager at Sunderland Museum. Left, Lemuel Francis Abbott’s Nelson portrait.
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