Portsmouth’s three warships that rewrote history in wood, sail, and steel.

Hello lovely readers,

If ever there was a place to step back through Britain’s naval story, it’s Portsmouth Historic Dockyard. Three ships — the Mary Rose, HMS Victory, and HMS Warrior — sit here side by side, spanning three centuries of courage, chaos, and clever engineering. They’re not just museum pieces, but living, breathing storytellers of the sea.

The Mary Rose

Built in 1510 and lost in 1545 defending England from the French, Henry VIII’s beloved Mary Rose lay silent beneath the Solent for over 400 years before being rediscovered in 1971. In 1982, the world held its breath as she rose from the water — a ghost ship brought back to life. Today she rests in her own gallery, reunited with thousands of artefacts that tell the tale of Tudor sailors who lived, worked, and perished aboard. Step inside and it’s not just timber and wax; it’s a time capsule of Tudor England, a story saved by science and saltwater grit.

Among the most touching finds: Hatch, the ship’s dog — discovered near the carpenter’s cabin and named after the hatch door under which he was found. Just 18–24 months old, Hatch was kept aboard as a ratter, chasing vermin below decks. Standing in the museum, looking at his delicate little skeleton, I was struck by how human the story suddenly became. It wasn’t just cannonballs and kings — it was the small companions who padded the decks, sharing the same fate as the men they lived alongside.

The Mary Rose remnants
Relics from the Mary Rose

HMS Victory

Then there’s Nelson’s HMS Victory, Trafalgar’s most famous warship and a floating fortress bristling with 104 guns. Hard to picture now, but 820 men once crammed into her decks, eating, sleeping, and working in stale air and hammocks strung where they could. As you wander her timbers, you trace the battle itself — punishments for unruly sailors, the horrors of Georgian battlefield medicine, and the very spots where history shifted.

One detail chills the most: the glint of a gold button on Nelson’s coat, catching the sun and a French sniper’s eye, changing the course of a battle and a life. That button survives, as does the bullet on display at Windsor Castle — two tiny objects that changed the course of history. On the Quarter Deck you’ll find a plaque marking where he fell, and deep below, a solitary lamp marks the Orlop deck where he died three hours later. Standing there, it wasn’t the thunder of cannons that stayed with me — it was the quiet weight of one shining button.

The Victory
Necessities on board the Victory
Nelson’s deathbed
The Victory

HMS Warrior

Fast forward to 1860, and the Victorians brought swagger to the seas with HMS Warrior, the world’s first iron-hulled, armoured warship. Larger, faster, and tougher than anything afloat, Warrior was a marvel of engineering — part battleship, part floating power statement. She never fired a shot in anger, but she didn’t need to; her iron presence alone made rivals rethink their fleets.

Walking her decks today, you glimpse both the bravado of Victorian innovation and the human side of service life — hammocks strung shoulder-to-shoulder, officers’ cabins with little comforts of home, and cavernous engine rooms where stokers once worked in furnace heat, shovelling coal in endless shifts. Those unsung men, sweating in the bowels of the ship, were the real heartbeat of Britain’s iron giant.

The Warrier
Below deck The Warrier

Three Ships, Big Battles & Small Lives

What struck me most about Portsmouth’s three warships wasn’t just their size or their role in history — it was the little, human details that quietly tugged at the heart. On the Mary Rose, it was Hatch, the young ship’s dog, curled forever near the carpenter’s cabin, reminding us that even Tudor sailors needed a loyal companion. On Victory, it was the glint of Nelson’s gold button, catching the sun and a sniper’s eye, changing the course of a battle and a life. And on Warrior, it was the invisible heat of the stokehold, where coal dust and sweat powered Britain’s iron giant — the unsung heroes never carved in marble.

Side by side, these ships tell the story of Britain’s naval might, but more than that, they whisper of the people (and pups!) who lived, fought, worked, and sometimes died aboard them. History isn’t just cannons, captains, and clever engineering — it’s the lives, big and small, that made them unforgettable.