The Tank Museum
The Tank Museum is a collection of armoured fighting vehicles at Bovington Camp in Dorset, South West England. It is about north of the village of Wool and west of the major port of Poole. The collection traces the history of the tank with almost 300 vehicles on display. It includes Tiger 131, the only working example of a German Tiger I tank, and a British First World War Mark I, the world's oldest surviving combat tank. It is the museum of the Royal Tank Regiment and the Royal Armoured Corps and is a registered charity.
History
The writer Rudyard Kipling visited Bovington in 1923 and, after viewing the damaged tanks that had been salvaged at the end of the First World War, recommended that a museum be set up. A shed was established to house the collection but was not opened to the general public until 1947.George Forty, who was appointed director of the museum in 1982, expanded and modernized the collection. He retired in 1993 after which he was appointed an OBE. David Fletcher, who had been a historian at the museum since 1982, retired in 2012 and was also appointed an MBE "for his services to the history of armoured warfare".
The museum established its own YouTube channel in January 2010. Early episodes were largely one-take affairs of museum staff talking about specific tanks in the collection and their role in history, with notable series led by Fletcher called "Tank Chats." The channel has more YouTube subscribers than famous museums such as the Metropolitan Museum of Art, and the Louvre; and has gained over 100 million views across its videos by April 2023, the first museum channel to hit such a milestone. In December 2023 the museum hosted a long distance footrace involving multiple laps around the museum.
During the Russo-Ukrainian War the tank museum was able to provide blueprints and track samples of Soviet equipment allowing Cook Defence Systems to manufacture track for use by Ukraine.
Exhibition halls
World War I Hall (Tank Men)
As well as containing the majority of the museum's World War I tanks the hall tells the story of the men who crewed the first tanks between 1916 and 1918.- Featured tanks: Mark I tank, IV, V, IX & Mark VIII "Liberty" tanks.
Inter War Hall (War Horse to Horsepower)
- Featured vehicles: Vickers A1E1 Independent, Peerless armoured car & Vickers Light tank, Mark II.
World War II Hall
- Featured vehicles: Panzer I, III, IV, Stug III, Tiger II, Jagdpanzer 38, Jagdpanther, Jagdtiger, Sd.Kfz. 251, Somua S35, Comet I, Matilda Mk I, A38 Valiant, Ram Cruiser Mk II, M24 Chaffee, M4 Sherman, 17pdr SP Achilles, M48 Patton, M26 Pershing, T17E1 Staghound, Hamilcar glider, DUKW, SU-76, T-26, KV-1, L3/33 LF, M13/40, Tortoise, Black Prince.
Battlegroup Afghanistan
- Featured tanks: Conqueror, Chieftain, Challenger 1 and TOG II.
Cold War Hall
- Featured Tanks: Tog II, Chieftain, Centurion.
Tanks For the Memories - Tanks in Popular Culture Exhibition
- Featured tanks: Mark IV.
The Tank Story Hall
- Featured tanks: Little Willie, Whippet, Renault FT, Char B1, Panzer II, Tiger 131, M3 Grant, T-34, Panther, DD Sherman, Churchill Mk VII, Sherman Firefly, M48 Patton, T-72, T-62 and Challenger 2.
Royal Armoured Corps Memorial Room
The Vehicle Conservation Centre
The Vehicle Conservation Centre provides cover for more of the collection and puts on view vehicles that had previously not been seen by the public:- Featured tanks: Charioteer, M41 Bulldog, M103, M60 Patton, T-54, Cold War and Iraqi T-55s, BMP-1, AMX-30, Type 69, Infanterikanonvagn 91, A33 Excelsior, T14 and SU-100.
Film