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The D-Day Story
D-Day Museum, Southsea, Portsmouth (rear exterior).jpg
View from Southsea seafront
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Former name The D-Day Museum
Established 1984
Location Clarence Esplanade, Portsmouth, United Kingdom
Type War Museum
Key holdings Overlord Embroidery
Collections Military; 20th Century
Public transit access D-Day Museum (Bus); Portsmouth Harbour (Train)
Nearest parking On Site (charges apply)

The D-Day Story (formerly the D-Day Museum) is a visitor attraction located in Southsea, Portsmouth in Hampshire, England. It tells the story of Operation Overlord during the Normandy D-Day landings. Originally opened as the D-Day Museum in 1984 by Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother, it reopened as the D-Day Story, following a refurbishment funded by a £5 million Heritage Lottery grant, in March 2018.

Contents

Churchill Tank at Southsea
Churchill tank outside the museum

The story is told in three parts: Preparation; D-Day and the Battle of Normandy; Legacy and the Overlord Embroidery.

The Legacy gallery features the Overlord Embroidery, commissioned by Lord Dulverton to remember those who took part in D-Day and the Battle of Normandy. The embroidery took twenty members of the Royal School of Needlework seven years to complete and measures 272 feet (83 m) long. It consists of 34 different panels. Film clips of veterans talking about their experiences give visitors further insight into what took place.

Other major exhibits include a Sherman tank and a Churchill tank displayed on the tank deck of the newly restored LCT 7074, the last surviving D-Day landing craft. In addition there is a replica infantry landing craft. There are reconstructions of the operations room at Southwick House, a 1940s sitting room and an Anderson shelter.

The museum is run by Portsmouth Museum Services, a branch of Portsmouth City Council, and is supported by the Portsmouth D-Day Museum Trust, a registered charity.

Refurbishment

The museum closed in March 2017 for one year to undergo a £5 million refurbishment and allow for conservation work on exhibits. New exhibits include the "pencil that started the invasion" – the pencil used by Lt. Cdr. John Harmer to sign the order for Force G, the naval forces assigned to Gold Beach, to sail to Normandy.

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