Norfolk Tank Museum
The Norfolk Tank Museum is a collection of armoured fighting vehicles in Norfolk, East England. It is located just outside the village of Forncett St. Peter and south of the City of Norwich. The collection is made up of mostly British vehicles from the Cold War. The Museum contains around 30 military vehicles as well as a large collection of small arms. It includes the prototype Centurion AVRE 165, the only remaining Crossley-Kégresse 20-30 cwt half-track and a replica British First World War Mark IV that was built for The TV show Guy Martin's WWI Tank.
History
The Norfolk Tank Museum was founded in 2011 from the private military vehicle collection previously known as Turrets and Tracks by the current chairman, Stephen MacHaye who had been collecting military equipment since childhood. When the museum was founded, many of the vehicles and firearms were from the MacHaye collection that was started in the early 1980s, with the purchase of an Alvis Saladin in 1995 that started the collection of many military vehicles. The Saladin is still on display.In 2017 the Norfolk Tank Museum was approached by Channel 4 with the idea of building a replica Mark IV Female for the TV show Guy Martin's WWI Tank. The hull and many other larger components were manufactured by JCB, with Chasetead manufacturing the track pads, exhaust system, and smaller components. The parts were then sent to the museum for the remaining construction. The museum along with assembling the tank, assembled the engine and transmission. Deborah II was completed to running order in six months and was taken to Cambrai, where the original Deborah had been knocked out by artillery fire 100 years before at the Battle of Cambrai. Deborah II is on display at the Norfolk Tank Museum as of 2018, whereas Deborah is on display in the town of Flesquières in North East France, it still shows the damage from the battle. The museum became a registered charity in November 2018.
Exhibition halls
Main Hall
The Main Hall contains the bulk of the restored and running vehicles in the Museum as well as small displays about WWI and D-Day. Three of the vehicles are open for visitors to explore inside.- Featured: Centurion Mk 13, Fox CVR, Centurion ARV, L5 Pack Howitzer, Cymbeline, Ferret armoured car, Saro Skeeter and Sultan CVR.
Gun Container
- Featured: Martini-Henry, Vickers machine gun, P14, vz.26, Sterling submachine gun, Super Bazooka, AK-74, Carl Gustaf recoilless rifle and M2 Browning.
Nissen Hut Display
- Featured : Clansman radio, Larkspur radio and R1155
Open Air Exhibits
- Featured : Alvis Saracen, 9K31 Strela-1, Anderson shelter, ZPU-4, FV101 Scorpion, AEC Militant Mk III, 9K35 Strela-10, 15 cm sFH 18 and FV434
Assault Course and Range
The museum also has a purpose built archery range and club which runs on Tuesday evenings. the range can be set up to teach visitors how to fire Air rifles or Bows in small groups and is open on the first Sunday of every month.
- Featured : M41 Walker Bulldog, 9P122 Malyutka and Alvis Stalwart
Tank museums
- The Tank Museum - Dorset, England
- Kubinka Tank Museum – Russia
- Musée des Blindés – France
- Military museum Lešany – Czech Republic
- Deutsches Panzermuseum – Germany
- Parola Tank Museum – Finland
- Nationaal Militair Museum – Soesterberg, The Netherlands
Other
- Norfolk and Suffolk Aviation Museum
- City of Norwich Aviation Museum
- 100th Bomb Group Memorial Museum
- Seething Control Tower Museum
- Eden Camp Museum
- Imperial War Museum Duxford
- Muckleburgh Collection
- Imperial War Museum London
- Lists of armoured fighting vehicles
- Tank classification