ARCHIVE AND RESEARCH RECORDS DEPARTMENT
Welcome to the Royal Navy Submarine Museum
Archive.
Our extensive collection of archives and records together with a comprehensive
library provide the researcher with a wide range of material covering all aspects
of submarine history and development.
The library and documentary and photographic archives are separate from the
main museum complex. Researchers are welcome but only by prior appointment
with the Archivist. Contact George Malcolmson by e mail [email protected] or
by telephone 023 9251 0354 extension 226. Alternatively you can fax 023 92
511349 or send us a contact form. Please note
that our photographic department is contactable at [email protected] For
general research and genealogy
enquiries please complete a contact form.

Diaries and memoirs from the crews and letters home to their families provide
an invaluable insight into the life of a submariner.
- Documents belonging to the first submarine captain Lieutenant Arnold Forster
and the first coxswain William Waller - both from the Edwardian Navy of 1901
- Diaries from POW's in Turkey and Holland during WW1
- A letter home from a young naval cadet at HMS BRITANNIA, 20th August 1901
~
"I do not believe that anytime in my life will exist such things as
ships regarded as slow, old fashioned things because they can only go at a
speed of sixty knots! Nor, in hope, will the submarine come to anything of
importance during my existence. All these things, and flying machines, I utterly
abhor."
He was later killed when in command of HM Submarine E4 in 1916

- The salvaged diary of a young Japanese officer Lieutenant Sakuma who was
lost when his submarine sank in 1910. It ends with his last words ~
" I thought I had blown out gasoline but I am intoxicated with it.
It is now 12.40 pm
.."
- USN officer Lieutenant William Childs was lost on a British submarine during
WW1 whilst serving as Observer - a copy of his handwritten diary covering
1917 and 1918
- Original drawings and notes for the first steam driven submarine RESURGAM,
built by the Reverend William Garrett in 1879.

- Diaries, journals, letters and scrapbooks from WW1 and WW2.
A young naval rating writing home to his mother in 1940 writes ~
"Yesterday we were attacked by about 50 dive-bombers
he
pilots must be mad to dive into a barrage like they put up round here
several
planes were shot down. However air raids are getting to be a daily occurrence
here, or rather, twice daily. Well, I'll leave off now Mum. I'm waiting for
the next submarine to be announced lost and I don't think I shall have
to
wait long. Your loving son Billy."
A few months later he lost his life when his submarine was sunk. He was 21.
- Original newspapers, pamphlets and magazines including The Ditty Box and
The Maidstone Muckrag!

- A complete collection of "Good Morning" published by the Daily
Mirror from 1942 to 1945 with the co-operation of the Admiralty for the crews
of British submarines on operational patrols in all theatres of war
- Navy Lists from 1893 to the present, Jane's Fighting Ships from 1905 to
the present, The Red Lists and Pink Lists from 1947 to 1976, The Naval Review
from 1913 onwards
- Naval signals and submarine patrol reports. Submarines' commissioning books
and visitors books from 1929 to the present
- Naval Monographs, Weekly Intelligence Reports, Commonwealth War Graves Registers
- All Royal Navy submarines' service details are computerised
- Library and archive holdings on Access database