The RE Museum and Library hold over 500,000 objects relating to the history of the Corps of Royal Engineers and the development of military engineering.
On display are objects of great significance like the Waterloo map, complete with markings made by Wellington himself. It has the revolver used by Chard against the Zulus, Russian glass grenades from the Crimea, and a huge selection of objects belonging to Charles Gordon found on his travels in China and the Sudan. There is a relic of the Kashmir Gate and a set of armour reported to belong to the Last King of the Punjab, Duleep Sing. There is a Brennan Torpedo on display alongside an early prototype. The museum also has one of the largest public collections of orders, awards and medals in the country; most of which is on display, including 25 of the 52 Victoria Crosses awarded to REs, and three George Crosses.
The collection and museum galleries tell the story of the Corps and cover areas such as:
Aeronautics (the Corps was responsible for this prior to the formation of the RFC and RAF) Bomb Disposal, Bridging - the Bailey and other examples. Camouflage, Civil works (Pentonville Prison & the Royal Albert Hall are examples of RE engineering) Submarine Mining & Diving, Electrical (Searchlights), Forestry, Field (or Combat) Engineering (airborne, amphibious, armoured, commando, Queen's Gurkha, tunnelling), Gas Warfare, Military Works - mining, water supply, roads, airfields, canals, Photography including early aerial photographs and trench layouts, Postal & Courier, Quarrying, Royal Engineers Band, Survey (e.g. Canada, Great Britain & India) Telegraph and Signals, Transportation (Railways, Ports). Maps & Plans of places the Corps have been or built.
It has many prototype armoured vehicles, both inside the museum and externally in the grounds and within Chatham Dockyard. Also inside the museum is a complete Harrier Jump-Jet.
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