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Admiral Lord Nelson was extremely fond of his home county and Norfolk heritage. He once proudly declared to the people of Great Yarmouth: "I am myself a Norfolk man and glory in being so." He also ...
Admiral Lord Nelson was extremely fond of his home county and Norfolk heritage. He once proudly declared to the people of Great Yarmouth: "I am myself a Norfolk man and glory in being so." He also ...
Anderson and Garland’s Militaria Auction in Newcastle will feature an auction containing a lock of Admiral Lord Horatio Nelson’s hair.
The town's name is linked to the Admiral Lord Nelson Inn - which was near the new railway station - to differentiate it from another Marsden station.
In November 1787 Nelson returned to England from a three-year tour in the West Indies.
In this first article we examine his early life leading up to Nelson joining the navy. “I am myself a Norfolk Man and Glory in being so” (Vice-Admiral Lord Nelson, Great Yarmouth, 1800) Horatio Nelson ...
Admiral Lord Nelson’s famous last words may not have been “kiss me, Hardy,” according to a newly unearthed letter. Instead, the British naval hero is claimed to have declared, “Thanks be ...
Admiral Lord Nelson’s famous last words may not have been “kiss me, Hardy,” according to a newly unearthed letter. Instead, the British naval hero is claimed to have declared, “Thanks be to God, I ...
Admiral Lord Nelson’s famous last words may not have been “kiss me, Hardy,” according to a newly unearthed letter. The letter, set to be auctioned, challenges the long-held official account ...
LORD Nelson did not say “Kiss me, Hardy” as he died, says a newly found account of the Battle of Trafalgar. Instead he said the less dramatic: “Thanks be to God but I have lived this day and ...