Operation Dynamo Archive Digitised
March 1940 collection now available online for researchers and educators.
Read moreCharting wartime sacrifice and today’s custodians
We keep Britain’s wartime fleet alive in memory and in the water. From preserved motor torpedo boats to Dunkirk Little Ships, our work spans seven tides of purpose that connect past service with present stewardship.
Honour every crew, convoy, and coastal unit through memorial rolls, ceremonies, and personal sea stories.
Provide grants, guidance, and hands-on expertise so historic craft remain seaworthy and safe in harbour.
Deliver learning resources, shipyard workshops, and outreach that illuminate Britain’s maritime war effort.
Host practical shipwright training so custodians gain hands-on confidence to care for their own vessels alongside trusted mentors.
Maintain the definitive ledger of surviving wartime vessels with maps, technical records, and custody trails.
Celebrate the volunteers, restorers, and coastal communities who crew the living story of remembrance today.
Convene get-togethers that open wider sailing opportunities and forge partnerships across the wartime vessel fleet.
Honouring courage at sea — past and present
A living flotilla of remembrance charting wartime service, preserved vessels, and the crews ashore who safeguard their sea stories today.
The Wartime Maritime Memorial Trust stands as a guardian of Britain’s wartime fleets — from minesweepers and motor launches to merchant lifelines. Through research, restoration, and storytelling, we ensure every craft and crew are remembered with dignity and a seaworthy future.
We serve descendants, historians, educators, and supporters who share a commitment to remembrance, maritime heritage, and life on the water.
Honour the sailors, volunteers, and coastal forces whose wartime service safeguarded the nation. Explore our roll of honour, discover personal accounts, and participate in remembrance events.
The Wartime Maritime Memorial Trust
In proud remembrance of the men and women who served, and of the crews of the wartime small craft.
Their courage endures through the vessels we preserve and the custodians who care for them today.
Preserving Memory, Honouring Service.
Dedicated tributes with biographies, service records, and family recollections.
Share messages, photos, and commemorations from around the world.
Search our digital registry to discover surviving wartime vessels, their history, current custodians, and restoration status. Interactive maps and filtering help you trace stories by fleet, theatre, or service.
“Every ship that survives does so because someone cares.” Meet the volunteers, restorers, and communities who keep wartime vessels afloat.
Read restoration diaries, listen to oral histories, and follow behind-the-scenes photo essays that celebrate craftsmanship and dedication.
Read Custodian StoriesProfiles highlighting skills, service, and community impact.
Step-by-step coverage of projects supported by the Trust.
Connect with commemorations, open days, and flotillas.
Traditional boatbuilding, seamanship, and heritage training.
Our signature £300 “Plank Grant” helps wartime vessel custodians tackle the kind of small yet vital repair that keeps a single plank, and a single story, afloat. The award level reflects the material cost of replacing one plank aboard Gerfalcon, a Royal Navy Patrol Service and Dunkirk Little Ship cared for by the Trust.
Applications move through quarterly voting rounds, with members using weighted vote allocations to prioritise the repairs that need support. Decisions are published on wartimemaritime.org, and recipients share before-and-after records that feed into our Supported Craft Register.
Trustees, Heritage Members, vessel custodians, and Friends of the Charity cast those votes, combining governance insight, specialist expertise, frontline experience, and community backing for each award.
Unlock digitised logbooks, photographs, and oral histories from Operation Dynamo to coastal convoys. Our learning hub supports schools, researchers, and heritage partners with curated resources.
Search and download high-resolution records.
Curriculum-aligned resources for schools and museums.
Audio and video testimonies from veterans and custodians.
Whether you are a descendant, vessel owner, educator, or supporter, there are meaningful ways to contribute to our mission.
Collaborate on research, exhibitions, and community programmes.
Explore PartnershipsMarch 1940 collection now available online for researchers and educators.
Read moreDamaged plank replacement funded through the Small Craft Plank Grant Scheme.
Read moreNew oral histories featuring volunteer skippers and shipwrights.
Listen nowGet in touch with our trustees and curators for press enquiries, research collaborations, or vessel support.
We treat all personal data with respect and in accordance with our privacy policy.
Built in 1937 by William Osborne Ltd. of Littlehampton, Gerfalcon is a 45-foot mahogany motor yacht that served with the Royal Naval Patrol Service and sailed to Dunkirk as one of the famed Little Ships. Today she is held in trust as a living memorial to the coastal forces who answered the call in Britain’s darkest hour.
Volunteer shipwrights have renewed 32 planks using traditional oak and mahogany, inspiring the Trust’s £300 Small Craft Plank Grant Scheme and showcasing the skills we champion. Gerfalcon now supports remembrance voyages, heritage events, and hands-on training for new custodians.