Sculpture of Nazi leader's head on display at Dorset's Tank Museum

The bust of Hermann Goring includes bullet holes

Author: Faye TryhornPublished 18th Apr 2023

A sculpture of top Nazi Hermann Goring’s head, with two bullet holes in it, is attracting attention at Dorset’s Tank Museum after featuring in a book.

The metal model was shot by either Russians or Americans at the end of WW2 and was probably brought back to the UK by someone from the Royal Tank Regiment.

The sculpture was displayed in Berlin through the war.

It was donated to the museum in Bovington in 1957 and is featured in a recently-released book that marks the visitor attraction’s centenary: The Tank Museum in 100 Objects.

Tank Museum Curator David Willey with the sculpture of Goring

The book shows items especially selected by curator David Willey:

“The Tank Museum’s mission has always been to tell the story of tanks and the people that served in them.

“I’ve put together a book detailing some of – what I find to be - the most interesting items in our collection that tell these stories.

“One of those is the head of Goring with bullet holes in it. There are two stories about who shot it – but it was either Russians or Americans.

“Disfiguring portraits of enemies has a long tradition going back to ancient Egypt and Rome – and more recently we watched as statues of Saddam Hussain were toppled after his defeat.

“Our WW2 exhibition in which this object is a part is running alongside our new exhibition called ‘Tanks for the memories: The Tank in popular culture’.”

The Tank Museum has amassed over 100,000 collection items since it was founded in 1923.

David added:

“Our extensive collection goes much further than just tanks, with medals, uniforms, weapons, photographs and art all playing a huge part in helping our audience to understand the history of tanks and tank warfare.”

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