Our sculptor has been short-listed for a prestigious award

We are delighted to offer our congratulations to "Our Sculptor", Mark Richards, on being shortlisted for this year’s Public Statues and Sculpture Association Marsh Award for The Vernon Minewarfare and Diving Monument in Gunwharf Quays.

Many thanks to Admiral of the Fleet, Baron Boyce and Professor Brian Falconbridge for their support of his nomination and well done David Sandiford, our Project Manager, for pushing through this initiative..

The winners will be announced at an online ceremony on Thursday 9th December.

Mark Richards presenting us with his conceptual figure.

Mark Richards 'measuring up' in Pool B at Gunwharf Quays (formerly HMS VERNON) in Portsmouth.

Mark Richards with his half life-size maquette.in his studio at Ludlow in Shropshire.

Mark Richards with the one-and-a-quarter life size bronze sculpture at the Morris Singer foundry at Lasham in Hampshire.

Date Set for Reprogrammed Dedication Ceremony

A statement by Project Manager David Sandiford:

This announcement is to let all of our supporters know that we have now set 15 July 2022 as the provisional date for the Monument Dedication Ceremony to take place at Gunwharf Quays in Portsmouth, our monument's gracious hosts.

As you might imagine we looked at a variety of dates, not least of which was the second anniversary of the actual unveiling by Commodore Jeremy Bailey on 17 March 2020, but decided to go for the summer in the hope that Covid would no longer have its grip on us.

Unveiling of Vernon Mine Warfare & Diving Monument on 17 March 2020

Unveiling of Vernon Mine Warfare & Diving Monument on 17 March 2020

The intention will be for an event similar to that planned for 2020 but without the actual unveiling which we deliberately completed to get the monument "Open to visitors".

Unveiling of Vernon Mine Warfare & Diving Monument on 17 March 2020

Unveiling of Vernon Mine Warfare & Diving Monument on 17 March 2020

Please watch for further announcements as our plans develop. We hope to see you there.

New pewter statuette available

A statement by Paul Guiver, founding co-proprietor of Divers Gifts & Collectables:

Divers Gifts & Collectables are delighted to announce that we have agreed to embark on the running of the Vernon Minewarfare & Diving Monument Project shop. We now have the sole responsibility for retailing all existing project merchandise and have been granted a licence to produce new lines and gifts in the future. A substantial contribution from all sales in this range will be made to the Vernon Monument Project Charity.

The first of these new items is The Vernon Minewarfare & Diving Monument handcrafted pewter statuette. These are available to order now, with shipping from 20th December

To promote the launch of the new store customers who use code LAUNCHPROMO21 at checkout will receive a 20% discount off of some of the existing project Vernon items.

This is a limited offer so act quickly!

The new webstore can be located HERE:

Vernon Monument merchandise at Divers Gifts

The Vernon Monument Project is adopted as an eligible charity by AMAZON SMILE.

TO USE THEIR OWN WORDS:

You shop. Amazon gives.

Amazon donates 0.5% of the net purchase price (excluding VAT, returns and shipping fees) of eligible purchases to the charitable organisations of your choice when you shop at smile.amazon.co.uk.

Same products, prices and service.

AmazonSmile is the same Amazon you know with the added benefit of supporting charitable organisations.

Please select “The Vernon Mine Warfare and Diving Monument” as the charity chosen to receive your support and that of Amazon Smile.

Vernon Monument installed and unveiled

New VMP logo 800 with background.jpg

Project Vernon

The Minewarfare & Diving Monument

Project Vernon is the charity responsible for erecting the monument at Gunwharf Quays in Portsmouth to celebrate the heritage of HMS VERNON, which previously occupied the site, and honour those involved in mine warfare, diving and bomb & mine disposal - past, present and future.  It is staffed entirely by unpaid volunteers.

Original ceremony cancelled owing to Coronavirus...

On 14 March, it was reluctantly decided to cancel the originally elaborate unveiling ceremony for the Vernon Mine Warfare & Diving Monument at Gunwharf Quays (GWQ) in Portsmouth.  This was long planned for Wednesday 25 March and the invitation list for over 800 guests was compiled with much effort and deft determination by former WO(MW) Dixie Dean MBE and Capt Grenville Johnson MBE RN.  

As you will be aware, the risk to health from Coronavirus had increased dramatically and the Project, like GWQ, is risk averse.  In short there was no point in risking the life of even one of our supporters or our management team or those in GWQ in the face of the undoubtedly increasing threat of COVID-19.  It was also taken into account that a high percentage of the 800 invited to attend the ceremony fell into the definition of "Vulnerable" where the virus is concerned.

Events since this decision have only served to confirm its wisdom.

...but a lower key event was still possible (just!)

In the meantime, it was still possible to install the monument on Tuesday 17 March (but probably not for much longer) and it is intended to organise a "Dedication Ceremony" when the risk to health has subsided and circumstances are much more favourable.  It might even be next year before it is safe to celebrate together in a more appropriate manner.  However the Project Manager proposed to the trustees that we try to conduct an unveiling of the monument and still with a Guest of Honour if we achieved getting the monument in place on 17 March. The concern was that if we didn't do something we would not be allowed to leave it covered. Clearly neither we nor GWQ would wish to leave it in that state.

Installation

On Monday 16 March, the installation sub-committee comprising Lt John 'George' Turnbull RN, Maj Les Rutherford RE and Cdr David Sandiford went into Pool B to set up positioning marks for the monument so that it would be a simpler job to install it the following day.  At 0715 on a bright sunny Tuesday morning, the monument created by eminent sculptor Mark Richards FRSS arrived on a low loader trailer at Gunwharf Quays, the former site of HMS VERNON in Portsmouth.  Owing to the light traffic, the journey from the Morris Singer Foundry at Lasham had taken much less time than expected.

Vernon Monument arriving on low loader 17 Mar 2020.jpg

Much of the rest of the day was spent anchoring the monument's supporting framework to the bottom of Pool B, mounting the sculpture on top and then waiting for the newly cleaned pool to fill with sea water.  Many thanks to sculptor Mark Richards, the team from the Morris Singer Foundry and the hauliers ably assisted by Project supporter Cdr John Ling and Gunwharf Quays operations manager Mike Coulter and his team which included the late CPO(D) Colin 'Icy' Coldwell’s grandson Lee Davey, plus their helpers, for ensuring things went smoothly.

Vernon Monument Installation 17 Mar 2020 (11).JPG
Vernon Monument Installation 17 Mar 2020 (61).JPG

Thanks are due to project supporter James Dougill of Arc Sound, himself a former Ton class minesweeper man and a Greenie in HMS VERNON, for providing live video streams of the day's events, including interviews with some of the key players, via the Project Vernon Facebook group and watched around the world.  They can still be accessed and seen by anyone who missed them at:

Project Vernon - The Mine Warfare and Diving Monument

Rob Hoole with Mark Richards before Vernon Monument unveiling 17 Mar 2020.jpg

The unveiling

After being introduced by Cdr David Sandiford (the Vernon Monument's Project Manager), Cdre Jeremy Bailey, (Commander of Portsmouth Naval Base) said a few words before cutting the ribbon to unveil the monument in a deliberately low-key ceremony.

Vernon Monument Installation 17 Mar 2020 (72).JPG

This is the text of Cdre Bailey's speech.

David, thank you very much indeed.
We are, I think, in unprecedented times and not what we imagined this event was going to be like but how very good to see all of you here in Gunwharf Quays today for the unveiling of this Vernon Mine Warfare & Diving Monument.
Most of you know that HMS VERNON stood on the site where you now are and was the home of RN underwater warfare training, trials and operations.
As I was saying to David just as we were walking up here, it was also home to my school CCF sailing section and I sailed from the waters behind before it was converted into the fantastic Gunwharf Quays facilities that exist today.
The Monument I am about to unveil will commemorate all those who served here in HMS VERNON, ashore and afloat – but especially those involved in Royal Navy mine warfare and diving, past and present.
That the Monument is here at all is a very significant achievement by the many individuals and organisations that have donated generously and raised the necessary funding for the monument. To those who have given so unstintingly of their time and effort over the past 12 years, very many thanks and, as we would say in the Royal Navy, BZ from us all.
Although Royal Navy Mine Warfare and Divers have now gone from this site, they remain at the centre of Naval operations. Mine Warfare training is now conducted at HMS COLLINGWOOD in Fareham, the Fleet Diving Group and the Defence Diving School are at Horsea Island here in Portsmouth, and the 2nd Mine Countermeasures Squadron of Hunt class ships are home-based here in Portsmouth Naval Base; plus I should probably mention the Diving and MCM capabilities the Naval Bases at Plymouth and Faslane also hold.
But why is mine warfare still at the centre of naval operations?
Naval sea mines were first used in the sixth century and the fact is that they have been used in most maritime conflicts ever since.
In particular, we need to remember the vast amount of shipping and lives lost through mining in the two World Wars.
And today there is still a mine disposal task to be done, either sorting out the legacy issues or making sure that our freedom of navigation on the high seas can be sustained now and into the future.
This has never been a trivial undertaking – and never will be. In fact, the first naval gallantry awards in World War II were made not 50 yards from this spot in 1939, to Lieutenant Commanders Ouvry and Lewis (DSO), Chief Petty Officer Baldwin and Able Seaman Vearncombe (DSM) who between them had rendered safe and recovered the first two German magnetic mines from the mudflats of Shoeburyness. King George VI paid them the significant compliment of visiting HMS Vernon here to invest them in front of the entire ship’s company.
Many of the personnel who were involved in bomb and mine disposal and in the minesweepers at sea in World War II were from overseas including the USA, Australia, New Zealand, Canada and the Netherlands. Many were Reservists. Some were killed and all were gallant. Those nations who are not perhaps represented here today have also contributed to the cost of the Monument and they deserve our gratitude and this Monument represents their efforts. They are particularly in our thoughts.
On almost every day of every year since World War II, Royal Navy mine warfare personnel and divers have carried on dangerous work underwater and ashore, in war and in peace, in home waters and around the world.
In the two world wars, over one million mines were laid and by the end of World War II, about one third of those were unaccounted for but are still being found today. On average, twelve WWII mines are dealt with by Royal Navy Mine Countermeasures Vessels and Diving Units every year.
As I speak to you now there are minesweepers and mine hunters with diving teams embarked in the Gulf, the NE Atlantic, around the UK, in the Mediterranean and operating with NATO. A Diving Unit is at immediate notice to move, just up the road at Horsea Island.
And of course much closer to home, in 2018 and 2019, as we were preparing the harbour for the operation of the Queen Elizabeth class aircraft carriers, Royal Navy mine warfare ships and diving teams located and removed some 46 tonnes of explosive ordnance from the seabed, in sight of Gunwharf Quays, very close to where we are now.
So, altogether, this is a branch which is absolutely relevant to today’s maritime operations.
To mine warfare men and women past and present, I should like to thank you all wholeheartedly for your dedicated service, sometimes given in extreme circumstances where your life was put on the line for your country, and for your shipmates. I’m extremely proud to be among you today, both here and online.
This monument is yours. It honours you, your forebears and your successors yet to come and it is now my huge privilege to unveil the Vernon Mine Warfare & Diving Monument.
Vernon Monument Installation 17 Mar 2020 (73).JPG

The physical unveiling was performed by members of the Portsmouth-based Fleet Diving Squadron comprising CPO(D) Alex Newnes, LS(D) Michael ‘Dolly’ Parton, AB(D)s Adam Leonard, Connor Whiting, Daniel Mulholland, Thomas Waterhouse and AB(MW) Charles Wood.

Vernon Monument Installation 17 Mar 2020 (63).JPG
Vernon Monument Installation 17 Mar 2020 (159).jpg
Vernon Monument Installation 17 Mar 2020 (79).JPG

Aftermath

Celebratory drinks were then enjoyed in the Old Customs House pub, formerly the Captain's offices in HMS VERNON.

VM in front of Old Customs House 21 Mar 2020.jpg

The following day, information boards were mounted each side of Pool B in which the monument 'floats'. Many thanks to Cdr Geoff Goodwin, the staff of Southsea-based Starfish Creative Design and Gunwharf Quays for their production and display.

IMG_0881.JPG

The information boards provide access to the new Vernon Link website, specially created to describe and illustrate what the Vernon Monument symbolises.  Many thanks to Cdr Geoff Goodwin, Lt Cdr Martyn Holloway, the University of Portsmouth and a host of other contributors involved in its production.  There is a lot to see and read so have a good look around it.  Click on the drop-down menus at the top of the page for lists of sections:

Vernon Link -  Linking Gunwharf Quays with HMS Vernon, the Royal Navy, Mine Warfare and Diving

Many favourable reactions

Public reaction to the monument has been overwhelmingly positive in social media.  Press coverage includes the following articles but please note that contrary to some reports, the sculpture is a monument, not a memorial:

Portsmouth News: Amazing new statue honouring Royal Navy sailors unveiled at Portsmouth's Gunwharf Quays

Royal NavyDivers and Mine Warfare Memorial Unveiled in Portsmouth

UK Defence Journal: Vernon Mine Warfare and Diving Monument Unveiled

Gunwharf Quays: Vernon Monument

Thank you but keep the pennies rolling in

A big thank you to all our volunteer staff and other supporters to date.  As previously stated, it is still intended to hold a formal dedication service when circumstances permit (watch this space) but it is also intended to install lighting to bathe the statue in artificial light at night, which is why fundraising isn’t quite complete yet.  The latest moneyspinner devised by the team is selling bronze statuettes of the monument.  These can be pre-ordered via the Project Vernon website's shop although delivery is presently delayed as they come from China: 

www.vernon-monument.org.uk/shop

Meet the trustees

Project Vernon is the registered charity (UK Charity Commission No.1128677) responsible for the monument at Gunwharf Quays in Portsmouth to celebrate the heritage of HMS VERNON, which previously occupied the site, and honour those involved in mine warfare, diving and bomb & mine disposal - past, present and future.  It is staffed entirely by unpaid volunteers.

We are grateful to Mr Graham Wheatley for this photo he took recently of most of the charity's trustees at Gunwharf Quays, the site of the monument. 

GJW_0444 Sweeney-Sandiford-Handford-Ravenhall A4L @72ppi WEB.jpg

The current trustees comprise former CPO(D) Mike Handford (Chairman), Cdr David Sandiford (Project Manager), serving WO(D) John 'YoYo' Ravenhall, Sean Sweeney MBE (ex-Royal Navy) (Centre Manager at Gunwharf Quays) and Peter Emery (original Gunwharf Quays Centre Director).  Unfortunately, Peter Emery was out of the country when the photos were taken. 

Tragically, Dr John Bevan (ex-Royal Naval Scientific Service world record-breaking diver and founder of the supportive Historical Diving Society) crossed the bar last month while still in harness as a Trustee. 

Tribute must also be paid to the late Cdr Frank Ward, who was the Chairman of Trustees in the early days, as well as initial Project Manager Lt Cdr David Carey plus Lt Cdr Tony Griffiths, former WO(MW) Dixie Dean MBE and former WO(D) Tony Devitt for their past service as trustees.

Funding still required

While our various contributions to date have paid for the statue, we still need to keep the pennies rolling in to cover the costs of the now postponed dedication ceremony, permanent lighting, maintenance, insurance, signage and the new Vernon Link website telling the full story of what it represents.

Make a direct donation here or purchase merchandise via the Project's online shop here. Another good way to donate is to buy PV tickets for the Portsmouth Lottery here for as little as £1 per week. The Project receives at least half the income.

Unveiling Ceremony Cancelled Owing to Coronavirus

Owing to the dramatically increasing risk to health from Coronavirus, the Project Vernon management has issued the following statement with much regret.

Ladies and Gentlemen,

This is a further announcement on behalf of the Project Vernon trustees and management team.

As the result of a meeting yesterday 14 March between David Sandiford (the Vernon Monument’s Project Manager) and Sean Sweeney MBE (Gunwharf Quays Centre Manager and a trustee of Project Vernon), it has been decided to cancel the unveiling ceremony for the Vernon Mine Warfare & Diving Monument planned for 25 March 2020. It is fair to say that both VMP and GWQ went into the meeting with a broadly similar view, that the event has to be cancelled.

We know this will bring widespread disappointment but the alternative does not bear thinking about.

As you will be aware, the Coronavirus is spreading and we, like GWQ, are risk averse. In short there is no point in risking the life of even one of our supporters or our management team or those in GWQ in the face of the undoubtedly increasing threat of COVID-19. We have taken into account the fact that a high percentage of those invited to attend the ceremony fall into the definition of “Vulnerable” where the virus is concerned.

An email was sent yesterday to all trustees and members of the management team and, unsurprisingly, there was unanimous support for this action.

It is still intended to install the monument next week but leave it shrouded and, after some time for final work, to take the covers off.

The current plan is that the monument will be on show from next month in its designated site for all to see - virus permitting. A further announcement will be made once this has been done.

It is intended to organise a “Dedication Ceremony” at some time in the future but until it is known what is likely to happen with the virus, the team can’t even begin to guess when that will be. It might even be next year.

So - let’s get the monument in and let’s get it on display but let’s celebrate doing that together at a safer time in the future.

On behalf of
The Trustees and Management Committee
The Vernon Mine Warfare and Diving Monument

The health and welfare of potential attendees, particularly the elderly and infirm, is the Project's primary consideration. This was a difficult but necessary decision and your understanding and cooperation are requested.

Despite the destructive effect of Coronavirus on the unveiling ceremony, the good news is that the Vernon Mine Warfare & Diving Monument is now fully assembled and the patination process has started. It is still on track to be installed at Gunwharf Quays in late March 2020.

Vernon Monument patination begun.jpg