Portsmouth News

Plea to raise £75k to save D-Day tank

Public help needed after costs spiral as project is delayed by coronaviru­s

- By TOM COTTERILL

HERITAGE bosses have launched a fresh plea to raise £75,000 to protect a landing craft tank used during D-Day after coronaviru­s delays caused costs to spiral.

Charity chiefs at the National Museum of the Royal Navy (NMRN) have just two months to plug the funding gap in the £4.7m project to restore LCT 7074 and are now desperate for the public’s help.

LCT 7074 is the last surviving landing craft used during the pivotal Second World War invasion of France 76 years ago.

It had been hoped work to restore the huge 193ft, 300-tonne behemoth would be completed by May and that the tank could be moved to its new home near Southsea’s D-Day Story museum.

But the coronaviru­s outbreak ruined these plans leaving the project with a huge black hole in its budget.

Nick Hewitt, head of collection­s and research at the NMRN, said: ‘When the lockdown happened we were just coming to the end of the conservati­on of LCT 7074 and were on track to move the ship to its new home at The D-Day Story in Southsea in May. However, all of that work had to be paused

‘The project had to be delayed because of the coronaviru­s crisis, it was a difficult decision but essential to ensure the safety of the teams working on her.

‘However, unfortunat­ely the delay has bought additional costs on a project that was already reliant on the generous donations of the public. We now find ourselves having to raise an additional £75,000 to help us plug the Covid-19 gap by the end of August.’

The situation was revealed on Saturday, the 76th anniversar­y of the June 6 invasion of Normandy.

The huge tank is stored inside a shiphall at Portsmouth Naval Base, where refurbishm­ent work has been carried out.

The effort to complete the mighty craft was resumed last month, with conservati­onists and engineers carrying out key jobs to complete the ship.

Among the work includes the completion of the ship’s original disruptive pattern paintwork used to camouflage the vessel.

Over the coming weeks, the restored funnel, replacemen­t guns and rocket launchers will also be reattached ahead of the internal fit out of the ship.

It’s hoped the ship will be moved to its new position outside the D-Day Story museum in the summer

To donate to the fundraiser, see nmrn.org.uk/donate.

 ??  ?? PROJECT The landing craft tank with its new paint job
PROJECT The landing craft tank with its new paint job

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