The Trusty Servant May 2020 Issue 129 | Page 20

No.129 first French voyage of exploration to the Pacific. After three years mapping the coasts of California, Alaska, and Siberia, Lapérouse and his ships disappeared without trace in 1788. It took almost 40 decades to discover what had happened to the expedition, whose story inspired a chapter of Jules Verne’s Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea (1870); it was not until 2005 that the wreck of Lapérouse’s ship La Boussole was conclusively identified in a remote part of the Solomon Islands. After his capture at Quiberon Bay, Lapérouse was quickly paroled and had returned to France by December 1760. All of the prisoners were released on the cessation of hostilities in 1763. While many ship models survive from the 18 th century, Formidable is of particular importance as the first example known to have been made by prisoners of war. Ship models were usually made in preparation for the construction of a full-size vessel or to explore alternative designs. Formidable is therefore also unusual in depicting a specific vessel already in service. Simon Stephens of the National Maritime Museum, who conserved the model and is a leading authority on the history of ship models, gave the following description of its construction: ‘The model was built in the traditional way – plank on frame – using the same process by which the actual ship was constructed, with planks pinned to wooden frames and held in position by wooden treenails or thin wooden spikes. Internal inspection with a medical endoscope has revealed that the frames were assembled vertically along the keel – the backbone of the hull. The planks were then clamped horizontally in position on the frames, holes drilled through the plank and into the frames, through which wooden treenails were hammered through. The heads of these wooden nails were then trimmed flush with the external planking on the hull. This is also the case with The Trusty Servant the deck planking and cabin bulkheads or walls, which are held in place in the same manner. The frames and planks below the waterline or main wales (the two thick layers of horizontal planks painted black) are made from oak. The use of this wood is unusual as it is very hard and difficult to work, and has a large noticeable grain which, left unpainted, can look out of scale with the rest of the model. The planking above is of pine and has been stained a dark colour and varnished. The main and lower gun decks are again in oak, with the upper quarter and forecastle decks laid in the softer and lighter pine. A number of the carved and turned fittings, such as the quarter galleries, capstans, deck beams and pillars are made from oak.’ The model of Formidable was given to the College by John Burton, Headmaster 1724-66. He was born near Coventry in 1690 and became a Scholar of Winchester College at the age of 14. He went on to study at New College, Oxford and was rector of several parishes in Hampshire, Gloucestershire and Oxfordshire. Few documents relating to Burton’s headmastership survive, but it was clearly a successful period in the school’s history. There is no evidence to show how Burton acquired the model of Formidable, or when exactly he donated it to the school. The College accounts show that the College had some contact with the French prisoners in the King’s House: at Christmas 1759 they were given five shillings. This sum is too small to have been payment for the ship model, but was perhaps for some other article that they had made. It is therefore quite likely that Burton acquired the model directly from the prisoners. It not certain where the model of Formidable was displayed in the 18 th and 19 th centuries. It seems to have 20 been kept for a time in Fellows’ Library in Fromond’s Chantry, but when the building was brought back into use for services in 1874, its contents were dispersed. It was at this point that the model was used each year as a Christmas decoration in Hall. Around 1900, the Bursar TF Kirby rescued the model from this casual treatment and had it repaired. From 1908 to 1920 it was loaned to the Royal Naval College at Osborne, Isle of Wight. Since then it has been kept in a classroom, the dons’ common room, and, until its recent restoration, in Armoury. Over the centuries, the model has experienced losses and alterations. While the masts, spars and standing rigging are original, the running rigging (the rope that allows the spars and sails to be operated and moved) is largely modern. The fabric sails have long since disappeared and only about 20 of the original guns remain, the rest being modern replacements. One of the main tasks of the recent restoration was the removal of unsympathetic modern paint from various parts of the model, including some around the hull that had obscured the original inscription. The model of Formidable may now be seen whenever the New Hall foyer is open for concerts, talks and other events. A pamphlet with further information about the model and its restoration is available free of charge to Treasury visitors.