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Tiger 131 is a German Tiger I heavy tank captured by the British Army on 24 April 1943 during Operation Vulcan in Tunisia during World War II. Preserved at The Tank Museum in Bovington in Dorset, England, it is currently the only operational Tiger I in the world.

Key Information

German service

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Known to the Allies as the Tiger I, the German model designation was Panzerkampfwagen VI, Tiger I (H1), Sd.Kfz. 181. It was built in Kassel, central Germany; the hull was constructed by Henschel, while the turret was made by Wegmann AG. The tank was completed in February 1943. It was shipped to Tunisia between 12 March and 16 April 1943. The tank was assigned to the Schwere Panzer-Abteilung 504 (German: Heavy Tank Battalion 504) during the Tunisian campaign of the wider war in North Africa. It was placed in No. 1 Company, No. 3 Platoon, as the 1st (platoon commander) tank, giving it tactical number 131 painted on the turret, by which it has come to be known.[1][2]

Capture

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Tiger 131 photographed in Tunisia on 6 May 1943 (top). Restored tank 131 at The Tank Museum showing the damage that immobilized the turret (bottom).

Until 2019, the Tank Museum believed that Tiger Tank 131 was captured at Djebel Djaffa in Tunisia on 21 April, 1943. The largely-intact vehicle had been immobilised after the Afrika Korps launched a spoiling attack - code named Operation 'Fliederblüte' (Lilac Blossom). This was a large spoiling attack against the British V Corps on Djebel Djaffa also known as 'Banana Ridge'. On the night of 20/21 April 1943 while the Allies were preparing a push toward Tunis.[3], the Germans attacked four points simultaneously, including a pass on the north side of a hill called Djebel Djaffa.[4]

Two Tigers and several other tanks advanced through this pass before dawn, and were gradually driven back during the day. One Tiger was hit by three shots from the 6-pounder guns (57mm) of the Churchill tanks of A Squadron, 4 Troop of the 48th Royal Tank Regiment (48 RTR). A solid shot hit a Tiger's gun barrel and ricocheted into its turret ring, jamming its traverse ability, wounding the driver and front gunner and destroying the radio. A second shot hit the turret lifting lug, disabling the gun's elevation device. A third shot hit the loader's hatch, deflecting fragments into the turret. The German crew bailed out, taking their wounded with them and leaving the knocked-out but still driveable and largely intact tank behind.[5] The tank was secured by the British as they captured Djebel Djaffa hill.[6]

The official story changed in April 2019 when Dale Oscroft visited the Tank Museum. He was struck by the similarity between Tiger 131 and a story his father, John Oscroft, told him when he was part of 2nd Battalion Sherwood Foresters who captured a position called "Point 174" (Gueriat el Atach) without promised tank support during the opening stages of 'Operation Vulcan'. After its capture the Germans immediately counter-attacked with tanks including Tigers. John Oscroft was told to hit one Tiger with his PIAT anti-tank weapon. After crawling forward to get as close as possible, he fired but the projectile bounced off the Tiger so he did not fire again. By this time, supporting Churchill tanks had arrived and a shot by a Churchill from either the 142nd Regiment RAC or 48 RTR jammed the turret, forcing the Tiger crew to abandon their tank. Photographic and documentary evidence corroborated Oscroft's story, proving that Tiger 131 was the tank disabled at Point 174 on 24 April 1943 and not the Tiger taken at Djebel Djaffa on 21 April.[7][8]

Dismissed claim

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A 2012 article in the Daily Mail newspaper, followed by a book by Noel Botham and Bruce Montague entitled Catch that Tiger, claimed that Major Douglas Lidderdale, the REME engineering officer who oversaw the return of Tiger 131 to England, was responsible for the capture of Tiger 131 as the leader of a secret mission appointed by Winston Churchill to obtain a Tiger for Allied intelligence.[9] This account has been rejected by The Tank Museum as inaccurate because it contradicts Lidderdale's own personal letters and papers which stated he was not personally present when the Tiger was captured.[10]

Preservation

[edit]
King George VI inspects Tiger 131, Tunis June 1943. The badge of the British First Army has been painted onto the tank

Tiger 131 was repaired with parts from other destroyed Tigers and evaluated to judge its performance. It was displayed in Tunis and formally inspected there by King George VI and Winston Churchill. The tank was sent to England in October 1943 where it was displayed as a trophy at various locations to raise wartime morale before it was subjected to extensive testing and evaluation by the School of Tank Technology at Chobham, which produced detailed reports on its construction.[11] The tank was transferred to what is today known as The Tank Museum by the British Ministry of Supply on 25 September 1951 where it was given the accession number 2351 (later E1951.23).

In 1990 the tank was removed from display for a joint restoration effort by the staff and the Army Base Repair Organisation, which involved its almost complete disassembly. The Maybach HL230 engine from the museum's Tiger II was installed as the Tiger's original Maybach HL210 had been removed and cut into cross sections for display. A modern fire-suppressant system was added to the engine compartment, the only other significant alteration.[12] The wear and performance of the refitted Tiger engine was studied by metallurgists to explore the alloys and performance of WWII German manufacturing.[13]

Tiger 131 at The Tank Museum in Bovington, Dorset, England, 2017.

In December 2003, Tiger 131 returned to the museum with a working engine, making it the only operable Tiger tank in the world and the most popular exhibit at the museum.[14] Further work and repainting in period colours completed the restoration in 2012, for a total cost quoted at £80,000.[15]

This tank was used in the 2014 film Fury,[16] the first time a real Tiger has appeared in a feature film since They Were Not Divided (1950).[16]

See also

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Tiger 131 is a German Panzerkampfwagen VI Ausf. E (Tiger I) heavy tank, captured intact by British forces on 24 April 1943 during the North African campaign of World War II, and is the world's only operational example of its type, preserved and demonstrated at The Tank Museum in Bovington, Dorset, England.[1] Weighing 57 tonnes with armour up to 102 mm thick, it was armed with an 88 mm KwK 36 main gun and two 7.92 mm machine guns, designed for a crew of five, and capable of speeds up to 40 km/h.[1] The tank's designation "131" refers to its turret number, assigned to the commander of the 3rd Platoon in the 1st Company of a heavy tank battalion, rather than its chassis number.[2] Tiger 131 saw combat as part of the German 501st Heavy Tank Battalion in Tunisia, where it participated in defensive operations against Allied advances in early 1943.[3] On 24 April 1943, during an engagement at Point 174 (also known as Gueriat el Atach), between Medjez el Bab and Montarnaud, the tank was disabled by combined fire from British Churchill tanks of 'B' Squadron, 48th Royal Tank Regiment, and a captured French 75 mm anti-tank gun operated by the 2nd Battalion, Sherwood Foresters. The hits jammed its turret, leading the crew to abandon the vehicle after advancing perilously close to British positions; the crew surrendered shortly thereafter. Recovered on 7 May 1943, it was the first Tiger I captured intact by Western Allied forces, providing invaluable intelligence on the tank's design and capabilities.[3] Following its capture, Tiger 131 was inspected in North Africa by King George VI and Prime Minister Winston Churchill before being shipped to the United Kingdom in late 1943 for detailed evaluation at the Gunnery School in Lulworth and the School of Tank Technology at Chobham.[3] It underwent thorough testing, including a comprehensive report by Lieutenant Peter Gudgin, which contributed to Allied countermeasures against the Tiger's formidable 88 mm gun and heavy armour.[3] Transferred to The Tank Museum in September 1951, the tank remained a static exhibit for decades until a major restoration project from the early 1990s to 2004 returned it to full running order, making it a unique historical artifact.[4] Today, Tiger 131 symbolizes the fearsome reputation of the Tiger I in wartime propaganda and popular culture, despite the type's limited production of 1,354 units and logistical challenges that curtailed its battlefield impact.[4] It features in films like Fury (2014) and video games such as World of Tanks, drawing global audiences to The Tank Museum's events, including annual Tiger Days where it is driven for demonstrations.[4] Retained battle scars, such as shrapnel impacts, underscore its combat history, while ongoing research, including recent discoveries of embedded shrapnel in 2025, continues to refine understandings of its final engagement.[5] As a preserved engineering marvel, it educates visitors on the evolution of armoured warfare and the Axis powers' heavy tank doctrine.[4]

Background

Tiger I Design

The development of the Tiger I heavy tank, officially designated Panzerkampfwagen VI Ausf. E (Sd.Kfz. 181), was initiated in response to the German Army's need for a heavily armored vehicle capable of countering superior Soviet tanks encountered during Operation Barbarossa in 1941. Adolf Hitler personally ordered the creation of a new 45-tonne heavy tank in May 1941, directing Henschel und Sohn and Professor Ferdinand Porsche to submit competing prototypes under the VK 45.01 specification. Henschel's design evolved from earlier projects, including the VK 30.01 (H and VK 36.01 (H prototypes tested in 1940–1941, which were deemed insufficiently protected and armed for mounting the desired 88 mm gun. By early 1942, two VK 45.01 (H) prototypes were completed and demonstrated to Hitler on April 20, 1942, at the Arsenal proving grounds near Rügenwalde; the Henschel design was selected over Porsche's gasoline-electric hybrid due to its reliability and compatibility with mass production. Production commenced in late August 1942 at Henschel's Kassel facility, with the first combat-ready vehicles entering service by September 1942.[6][7][8] The Tiger I weighed approximately 57 tonnes in its standard configuration, making it one of the heaviest tanks fielded during World War II, with dimensions of 6.3 meters in length (8.45 meters with gun forward), 3.7 meters in width, and 3 meters in height. Its armor featured sloped and flat plates up to 120 mm thick on the frontal hull and turret, providing exceptional protection against most Allied anti-tank weapons at typical combat ranges, while side armor consisted of 80 mm on the upper hull and turret sides, and 60 mm on the lower hull sides. The five-man crew consisted of a commander, gunner, loader, driver, and radio operator, positioned in a layout that improved situational awareness and fire control compared to lighter German tanks. Powered by a Maybach HL 230 P45 V-12 gasoline engine producing 700 horsepower, the Tiger I achieved a top road speed of 45 km/h, though its weight limited cross-country mobility to about 20 km/h; fuel consumption was high at 1,000 liters per 100 km on roads.[6][1] Central to the Tiger I's design was its armament, dominated by the 88 mm KwK 36 L/56 high-velocity gun developed by Krupp, which could penetrate 100 mm of armor at over 1,000 meters and engage targets effectively up to 2,000 meters or more. This weapon, adapted from the Luftwaffe's Flak 88 mm anti-aircraft gun, fired armor-piercing rounds at 800 m/s muzzle velocity, supplemented by high-explosive shells for infantry support. Secondary armament included two 7.92 mm MG 34 machine guns, one coaxial and one hull-mounted. The suspension system employed interleaved overlapping road wheels—24 per side in eight sets of three—to distribute the tank's weight over soft terrain, enhancing cross-country performance despite the challenges of maintenance in field conditions. These features underscored the Tiger I's engineering focus on firepower and protection over speed and simplicity.[6][1] Strategically, the Tiger I was conceived for breakthrough operations in heavy tank battalions, where its combination of thick armor and long-range gun allowed it to spearhead assaults against fortified positions and enemy armor, often demoralizing opponents through its reputation for near-invulnerability in frontal engagements. This psychological impact amplified its tactical value, as Allied forces frequently reported exaggerated numbers of Tigers due to their imposing silhouette and destructive power on the battlefield. However, the design's complexity contributed to mechanical vulnerabilities, such as transmission failures and high breakdown rates in mud or extreme conditions.[6][7]

Production and Assignment

Tiger 131, identified by its turret number, was an early production variant of the Tiger I heavy tank, completed in February 1943 with chassis number 250122 at the Henschel und Sohn factory in Kassel, Germany.[2][9] The turret, manufactured by Wegmann, bore the number 131, signifying its position as the lead vehicle in the 3rd Platoon of the 1st Company.[2] As an early model from the initial 1943 batch, it featured the original turret design without later production modifications.[9] The vehicle left the factory in standard configuration, lacking Zimmerit anti-magnetic mine paste, which was not yet standard on Tiger I tanks until later in 1943 to counter magnetic anti-tank mines.[9] No significant field modifications were applied prior to deployment, preserving its as-built specifications including the 8.8 cm KwK 36 L/56 main gun and interleaved road wheels.[2] Following completion, Tiger 131 was assigned to the 1st Company of schwere Panzer-Abteilung 504, a heavy tank battalion formed in early 1943 specifically for North African operations.[2][10] The battalion, equipped with 12 Tiger I tanks including this vehicle, was shipped to Tunisia between mid-March and mid-April 1943 to reinforce Axis forces after the Allied landings of Operation Torch in November 1942.[10] Upon arrival, schwere Panzer-Abteilung 504 was temporarily attached to the 10th Panzer Division, bolstering defenses amid the intensifying Tunisian Campaign.[11]

North African Service

Deployment to Tunisia

Tiger 131 arrived in Tunisia in late March or early April 1943, having been shipped from Germany via Italian ports to the Axis-held harbor at Tunis amid intensifying defensive preparations against the advancing Allies.[12] The tank was offloaded in a partially disassembled state and reassembled near the port area, where German maintenance units worked to integrate it into frontline operations as the noose tightened around Axis forces in North Africa. This deployment occurred during the final phases of the Tunisian Campaign, with reinforcements like Tiger 131 bolstering the heavy tank units facing mounting pressure from the British First Army's eastward push toward the capital. Upon arrival, Tiger 131 was assigned to the 1st Company of schwere Panzer-Abteilung 504 (s.Pz.Abt. 504), a heavy tank battalion newly formed in March 1943 after receiving transferred Tigers from s.Pz.Abt. 501 along with new shipments.[2][13] By April 1943, the battalion fielded around 11 operational Tigers following these reinforcements, though availability fluctuated due to ongoing repairs and the harsh theater conditions. The unit was integrated into the 5th Panzer Army, commanded by General Hans-Jürgen von Arnim, which focused on holding northern defensive lines against British forces while coordinating with Erwin Rommel's broader Army Group Africa until his departure in late March 1943.[14][9] Logistical challenges plagued the deployment of Tiger 131 and its contemporaries in the desert environment, where fine sand and dust readily infiltrated engines, causing overheating and accelerated wear on components like air filters and tracks. Spare parts were scarce, as supply convoys from Italy faced Allied air and naval interdiction, leading to frequent immobilization of vehicles for maintenance rather than combat readiness. These issues compounded the Tigers' inherent complexity, resulting in low operational rates—often fewer than half the battalion's tanks were serviceable at any given time—and forced crews to improvise repairs under combat conditions.[14][15]

Combat Engagements

Upon its arrival in Tunisia, Tiger 131, assigned to the 1st Company of schwere Panzer-Abteilung 504, participated in defensive operations near Medjez el Bab in early April 1943.[2] These actions supported broader German efforts to counter Allied advances in the region.[16] In engagements near Medjez el Bab, Tiger 131 and its unit faced British forces equipped with Churchill and Crusader tanks, leveraging the Tiger's long-range 88 mm KwK 36 gun to engage from hull-down positions where its sloped frontal armor provided superior protection.[16] The battalion as a whole was credited with destroying over 150 Allied armored vehicles during the Tunisia campaign, achieving a kill ratio of approximately 18.8 enemy tanks per Tiger lost, though individual attributions to Tiger 131 are not detailed in records.[16] The tank's performance highlighted the Tiger's tactical advantages in defensive roles, often forcing British retreats without close-quarters combat.[16] By mid-April 1943, mechanical breakdowns, supply shortages, and combat attrition had reduced the battalion's operational Tigers to around four, with many sidelined for repairs amid challenging terrain and limited recovery capabilities.[16] Tiger 131 itself sustained minor damage from artillery fire during these operations, visible as shrapnel scars preserved on the vehicle today.[17] A persistent but erroneous rumor circulated among Allied intelligence in 1941 of a Tiger tank captured in Libya, later debunked as impossible since Tiger I production did not begin until August 1942 and the first units reached North Africa in December 1942; this claim had no connection to Tiger 131.[16]

Capture

Battle at Point 174

The Battle at Point 174 took place on 24 April 1943 at Gueriat el Atach, a hill feature designated Point 174 and situated near Medjez el Bab in northern Tunisia, amid the British First Army's push during Operation Vulcan toward the final Axis positions in North Africa.[3] Tiger 131, assigned to the 1st Company of schwere Panzer-Abteilung 501, was committed to a counterattack by its crew to repel the advancing Allies.[18] The opposing British forces consisted of infantry from the 2nd Battalion Sherwood Foresters, who had just seized the position, bolstered by Churchill tanks from 'B' Squadron of the 48th Royal Tank Regiment positioned nearby at Point 151.[18] As Tiger 131 advanced to engage the British lines at long range, it came under fire from the supporting Churchills and a captured French 75mm anti-tank gun manned by the Foresters; the disabling shot, from the 75mm gun, struck the turret, wedging in the ring mechanism and rendering the main armament unable to traverse.[18] This disablement occurred despite the tank's prior combat wear from earlier engagements in the Tunisian campaign.[19] Unable to return effective fire, the five-man German crew bailed out under intensifying small-arms and artillery fire from the Foresters and quickly withdrew on foot, abandoning the vehicle intact without internal sabotage or further destruction.[3] Historical accounts of the engagement were long distorted by an erroneous narrative placing the action at Djebel Djaffa on 21 April 1943, involving only the 48th Royal Tank Regiment; research conducted by The Tank Museum from 2017 to 2019, drawing on wartime documents, photographs, and terrain analysis, definitively relocated and redated the battle to Point 174 based on eyewitness reports and archival evidence.[3]

Recovery and Initial Examination

Following the abandonment of Tiger 131 during the fighting at Point 174 on 24 April 1943, British forces from the 2nd Battalion Sherwood Foresters and elements of the 142nd Royal Armoured Corps quickly secured the site to prevent German recovery attempts, with infantry holding the position under artillery fire until engineers arrived.[20][10] On 7 May 1943, recovery personnel from the 104th Army Tank Workshop, led by Major A. D. Lidderdale of the Royal Electrical and Mechanical Engineers, assessed the vehicle and towed it using British recovery vehicles to a secure plain southwest of the battlefield near Medjez el Bab, ensuring its safe extraction from the combat zone.[20][10] Initial on-site examinations confirmed the tank's hull and Maybach HL 210 P45 engine remained largely intact, with no major internal damage beyond minor scarring from shrapnel on the cupola, turret edge, mantlet, and driver's plate; the turret was jammed due to the impact of the 75mm shell in the traverse mechanism.[10][18] Basic functionality tests verified the engine could still turn over, though full mobility was not attempted in the field. In September 2025, a piece of shrapnel was discovered embedded in one of the road wheels during routine maintenance at The Tank Museum, likely originating from the 1943 engagement.[21] These preliminary checks were supplemented by filming on 26 April 1943 by the War Office Film Unit, capturing the tank's condition for immediate intelligence analysis.[20] As the first Tiger I captured intact by Western Allied forces, Tiger 131 offered unprecedented intelligence value, yielding complete samples of its turret assembly, Zeiss optics, and Maybach powerplant for on-site reverse-engineering and broader Allied study of German heavy tank technology.[19][10] After temporary repairs, including a welded hull plug for a small penetration, the tank was driven short distances and then transported to Tunis, where it was publicly displayed starting 24 May 1943 as a propaganda symbol of Allied success, under heavy guard to deter sabotage by Axis sympathizers.[10][20] The exhibit drew high-profile visitors, including Winston Churchill on 2 June and King George VI on 18 June 1943, before further preparations for shipment to the United Kingdom.[10][20]

British Evaluation

Testing and Analysis

Upon its arrival in the United Kingdom, Tiger 131 was unloaded at the port of Glasgow on 8 October 1943 before being transported by rail to Chobham Heath in Surrey on 19 October and subsequently to the School of Tank Technology (STT) at Chobham on 20 October.[10] The STT, a branch of the Military College of Science under the Ministry of Supply's Department of Tank Design, conducted the primary evaluations starting in late 1943, though the process was hampered by logistical challenges and incomplete repairs through 1944.[10] Initial assessments focused on the tank's overall construction, with the vehicle displayed briefly at Horse Guards Parade in London prior to technical examination.[9] Key tests included gunnery trials at the Gunnery School in Lulworth, where the 88 mm KwK 36 main gun was evaluated for accuracy and penetration performance, confirming its exceptional long-range direct fire capabilities against Allied armor equivalents.[22] Mobility trials were performed on ranges in Surrey, revealing a top speed of 18 mph (29 km/h) on roads but "very poor" performance in mud, with the interleaved road wheels prone to clogging and the suspension vulnerable to damage.[23] These tests were curtailed in March 1944 after the Maybach HL 210 engine and a suspension arm failed, highlighting the tank's mechanical unreliability; the engine broke down twice during related gunnery exercises.[10] Armor vulnerability assessments, using available ammunition including captured German rounds where applicable, demonstrated the frontal 102 mm plates' resistance to penetration beyond 1,800 yards by British 17-pounder guns, though the 82 mm side armor was vulnerable from 1,250 yards with 6-pounder rounds; the armor's brittle quality led to cracking and spalling on impact.[23] The evaluations underscored Tiger 131's superiority in direct firefights due to the 88 mm gun's power and precision, but exposed critical weaknesses such as flanking vulnerabilities from thinner side armor, limited off-road mobility, and high mechanical complexity requiring specialized maintenance. While invaluable as the first intact example, these insights largely confirmed existing Allied knowledge from examinations of destroyed Tigers.[23][10] These findings informed broader Allied understanding of heavy tank design trade-offs, emphasizing the need for balanced protection, reliability, and maneuverability in future developments.[20] Documentation consisted of detailed STT reports compiled by officers including Lieutenant Peter Gudgin in January 1944 and Major A. Douglas Lidderdale's draft in November 1943, covering fighting arrangements, engine performance, power plant disassembly, transmission analysis, optics examination, and special devices; however, sections on survivability remained incomplete, and some records were lost.[10] These reports, addended through November 1944, provided the first comprehensive Allied intelligence on Tiger I internals, aiding reverse-engineering efforts despite the tank's partial operational state.[20]

Transportation to United Kingdom

Following its capture and preliminary repairs in the field, Tiger 131 was driven under its own power to La Goulette harbour near Tunis for shipment to the United Kingdom, where further restoration work was conducted by a specialist workshop under Major A. Douglas Lidderdale to ensure seaworthiness, including hull repairs and securing the turret.[10] The tank was publicly displayed in Tunis from May to June 1943, allowing inspections by Allied leaders including King George VI and Winston Churchill, before logistical preparations for transport began.[19] Due to a lack of shipping priority amid wartime demands, the 57-tonne vehicle was shuttled between ports in North Africa; after display, it was ferried via landing craft from La Goulette to Bizerte on 3 August 1943 and then to Bone aboard the SS Empire Candida on 9 August 1943, before returning for final loading in Tunisia.[24][25] On 20 September 1943, Tiger 131 departed Tunisian waters aboard a merchant vessel as part of a convoy, positioned atop a cargo of iron ore on the reinforced deck to handle its substantial weight. The route crossed the Mediterranean Sea to Gibraltar for a brief stop, then continued across the Atlantic Ocean to Scotland, completing the approximately 18-day voyage despite persistent threats from German U-boats targeting Allied shipping.[10] Protective coverings and treatments were applied to mitigate saltwater exposure and corrosion during transit, with the tank arriving intact at Glasgow on 8 October 1943.[10] Upon docking in Glasgow, the tank was unloaded without incident and transported by rail southward to the School of Tank Technology and Department of Tank Design at Chobham Heath in Surrey, England, reaching its destination by 20 October 1943 for reassembly and in-depth analysis. This journey marked the first intact Tiger I to reach Britain, providing invaluable intelligence value.[10]

Preservation

Early Storage

Following the conclusion of wartime testing and analysis, Tiger 131 was placed in outdoor storage at Bovington Camp starting in 1947, where it remained exposed to the elements for several years. This prolonged exposure to weather conditions led to significant rust and overall deterioration of the vehicle's structure and components.[1] In 1951, the tank was relocated to The Tank Museum at Bovington, where it was initially set up as a static outdoor exhibit accessible to the public. During this period, it was occasionally employed for training demonstrations by military personnel, providing hands-on educational value despite its non-operational state. The Ministry of Defence officially donated Tiger 131 to the museum in 1952, formalizing its transition to a preserved artifact.[1] Maintenance during the ensuing decades remained minimal, resulting in a seized engine and immobile tracks that rendered the tank completely static. It also appeared in several educational films produced for historical and instructional purposes, further highlighting its significance as a captured enemy vehicle.[1]

Restoration Process

The restoration of Tiger 131 to operational condition was a multi-phase effort undertaken by The Tank Museum at Bovington, involving disassembly, component repair, and reassembly to address wear from decades of storage and display. As detailed in the introduction, a major project from the early 1990s to 2004, supported by a £96,000 grant from the Heritage Lottery Fund in 1998, returned the tank to running order by December 2003, with further refinements in 2006 following an engine issue.[26][27][28] A subsequent comprehensive overhaul from 2010 to 2012, funded by approximately £80,000 raised through the MLA Prism fund and public donations, focused on restoring historical accuracy and full mobility. Between 2010 and 2012, the tank underwent full disassembly to inspect and refurbish its structure, with a focus on sourcing period-correct components to maintain authenticity. A Maybach HL 230 P30 engine sourced from a Tiger II was rebuilt using original specifications and spare parts, while the turret was carefully refitted after cleaning and repairs to its traverse mechanism. Electrical systems were updated with modern wiring and safety features, such as improved insulation and fire suppression, to comply with contemporary operational standards without altering the tank's historical appearance. International collaboration was essential for acquiring rare items like steering brakes and fan drives from collectors and museums in Europe.[29] Key milestones marked steady progress: the rebuilt engine fired successfully for the first time in 2011 during bench testing, demonstrating reliable power output. By late 2012, the tank achieved full mobility, including track propulsion and turret rotation, after integrating the suspension and final drive assemblies. Its public running debut occurred at the Bovington Tiger Day event in March 2012, where it demonstrated short-distance maneuvers before spectators.[30][31] Throughout the process, restorers faced challenges in reconciling historical fidelity with safety imperatives, such as disabling the main armament to prevent live ammunition use and reinforcing weak points without visible modifications. Sourcing authentic parts often required negotiations with global experts, as many Tiger-specific components were scarce due to wartime attrition rates exceeding 90 percent. These efforts ensured Tiger 131's revival as a functional exhibit while preserving evidence of its 1943 battle damage.[32]

Current Status

Tiger 131 serves as the world's only operational Tiger I tank, meticulously maintained to run bi-annually during The Tank Museum's Tiger Day events in spring and autumn, where it performs dynamic demonstrations for audiences.[33][34] This unique capability has also extended its role beyond exhibitions, as it was featured in the 2014 film Fury, marking the first appearance of an authentic Tiger I in a major motion picture since 1950.[35] Housed permanently in the Tank Story hall at The Tank Museum in Bovington, Dorset, England, the tank attracts over 220,000 visitors annually, offering public access to one of the most iconic artifacts of World War II armored warfare.[36] In September 2025, during a routine maintenance inspection, engineers discovered a chunk of shrapnel embedded in one of Tiger 131's road wheels, providing new physical evidence of its disabling in the 1943 Battle of Point 174 in Tunisia.[5] The fragment, a heavy lump of metal consistent with battlefield debris from a 57 mm anti-tank gun round—such as the British 6-pounder used by Allied forces—confirms the intense close-quarters combat that jammed the tank's turret and forced its abandonment.[25] This discovery, hidden for over 80 years, underscores the tank's authentic battle scars and enhances its historical narrative without altering its preserved condition, supporting ongoing research into its final engagement.[21] Looking ahead, The Tank Museum continues rigorous ongoing maintenance on Tiger 131 to ensure its long-term operational sustainability, including periodic overhauls by specialist engineers.[37] The tank also supports educational programs focused on World War II tank warfare, integrating it into interactive events and displays that educate visitors on the technological and tactical aspects of heavy armor in the North African campaign.[38]

References

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