She was to be the flagship of King Henry VIII’s fleet and was a new breed of Tudor warship with purpose-built gun-ports. An eyewitness said that she had fired all of her guns on one side and was turning when she was caught in a strong gust of wind causing her to sink in the Solent whilst leading 60 ships against the French.
The wreck of the Mary Rose was discovered in 1971 and was raised on October 11 1982 by the Mary Rose Trust. The surviving section of the ship and thousands of recovered artefacts now sit in The Mary Rose Museum for us all to see.
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There may have been 700 men on board the Mary Rose when she sank, of which fewer than 40 survived. There have been 27,831 dives made to the Mary Rose during the main excavation, that’s 22,710 hours on the seabed. 60 million people worldwide watched the wreck being raised live on television.

25. Royal Navy Flagship The Mary Rose raising and artefacts
An aerial shot of the giant Tog Mor crane lowering the Mary Rose onto her barge on October 11, 1982. The News PP3739 Photo: The News archive

26. Royal Navy Flagship The Mary Rose raising and artefacts
'Henry VIII' at the Mary Rose Museum in Portsmouth Historic Dockyard. Photo: The News archive

27. Royal Navy Flagship The Mary Rose raising and artefacts
Personal items discovered. Picture: The Mary Rose Trust Photo: The News archive