It took several years for a figurehead design to be agreed upon for HMS
Trafalgar, most likely due to the long delays in the shop's construction. James Edward Hellyer Snr of
Hellyer & Sons and Browning of Rotherhithe submitted a design together in 1836, featuring Vice Admiral Lord
Horatio Nelson, at a cost of £31 10s 0d (approximately £3,020 today), alongside another design in the form of a full-length figurehead of
Pheme or Fama (Fame) of
Greek and
Roman mythology, with an estimate attached of £42 0s 0d (around £4,090). Robert Hall of Rotherhithe, frequently in competition for contracts with the Hellyers and
Dickerson family of
Devonport, Plymouth, forwarded a simply bust design in loose robes at £45 0s 0d (£4,380 today). It was not until James Edward Hellyer submitted another design in 1840, with an estimate of £45 (then worth approximately £3,905 today) based on a bust of Nelson that the Surveyor of the Navy had purchased in London that the figurehead was agreed upon. Then, in 1843, Hellyer & Sons were called upon to alter the 'Figure Head in consequence of the Bowsprit touching the hat' and charged the Royal Navy £5 15s 0d for the work (approximately £545 today.) The figurehead formed part of the
HMS Ganges (shore establishment) collection when the ship was sold for breaking up, until it was transferred to Portsmouth in 1976. Accessioned into the then Royal Naval Museum collection in 1984, it was restored by Phil Hudson of Dartmouth working in conjunction with Richard Hunter (a noted figurehead historian) in 2011. The figurehead can be seen at the
National Museum of the Royal Navy, Portsmouth, on site outside. ==Notes==