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The Nelson Monument, Portsdown Hill

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The Nelson Monument, Portsdown Hill

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Portsdown Hill, Nelson Monument - Edinburgh, Fort Nelson - Hampshire, Coronation Chair, Portsmouth Harbour

The Nelson Monument, 120 feet (37 m) tall on a granite base, stands on Portsdown Hill about 2 miles (3.2 km) north of Portsmouth Harbour on the south coast of England. It was the eventual outcome of a movement started during Horatio Nelson's lifetime to “perpetuate the glorious victories of the British Navy.” By 1799 Nelson's prize agent Alexander Davison was able to use the Nelson name to spearhead a campaign, to honour “Britain’s naval glory and pre-eminence”. It was, however, Nelson’s death at Trafalgar, 21 October 1805, that galvanized the campaign.

A design for the monument by John Thomas Groves of the Board of Works was exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1807, and letters were written to The Times asking where the money Davison had raised had gone, but the £4050 he raised was never recovered. The final (and successful) attempt was paid for by the Navy itself. This time the fund’s driving force, Captain Thomas Freemantle, adopted a more altruistic approach, and the monument commenced construction on 4 July 1807 with the final checks to the inscription made just over a year later.

Today it is within the boundaries of Fareham Borough Council. The nearby Fort Nelson, Portsmouth, completed in 1871 as another Napoleon threatened England's South Coast, is so named because of its proximity to the monument.

References

The Nelson Monument, Portsdown Hill Wikipedia