![]() ![]() The 64-tonne FV 214 Conqueror, also known as Tank, Heavy No. “I’d like to wish the team at the museum good luck with the refurbishment project over the coming months and I look forward to seeing the results of their hard work.” “Thoresby and the museum play a key role in Nottinghamshire’s visitor economy and I’m sure the presence of the FV 214 Conqueror will no doubt prove to be a huge attraction to people coming to our county. “Nottinghamshire is known for being a military-minded county and it was great to see so many people come out in force to see the tank arrive at the museum. He said: “Thoresby has a long association with the British tank, and it only seems fitting that a great venue like the Royal Lancers & Nottinghamshire Yeomanry Museum will be home to such a historic and significant exhibit. The Conqueror’s arrival at the museum is also a poignant one as Thoresby was used as a training ground for British Army tanks during the Second World War.Ĭouncillor Keith Girling, who is Nottinghamshire County Council’s Armed Forces Champion and served in the Grenadier Guards for 18 years, joined the crowds to witness the Conqueror’s arrival at the museum. ![]() Now volunteers at the museum will spend the next few months giving the tank – which saw service between 19 – a fresh new look ahead of a special unveiling that is expected to take place next spring. It was transported to the attraction from the Bovington Tank Museum in Dorset on Tuesday before a painstaking four-hour operation saw it manoeuvred into place on a specially created concrete plinth. ![]() The Royal Lancers & Nottinghamshire Yeomanry Museum at Thoresby Park, near OIlerton, is the new temporary home of the FV 214 Conqueror – one of the heaviest tanks produced in this country. A Nottinghamshire military museum has taken delivery of an iconic British tank as part of a special restoration project. ![]()
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