MERCHANT and Naval ships are set to sail onto the Mersey for three days of commemorations and celebrations marking 80 years since the Battle of the Atlantic.

The vessels, led by Royal Navy destroyer HMS Defender, are due to arrive at around 2.30pm today (Thursday, May 25), raising the curtain on a weekend of events to mark the anniversary of the longest, most brutal naval battle in history.

The French Destroyer FS Bretagne is due in at 9.30am on Friday (May 26).

The commemorative events will take place this Saturday, May 27 and Sunday, May 28.

Joining HMS Defender on the prime berth of the Cruise Liner Terminal at the heart of Liverpool’s waterfront will be the French frigate Bretagne, and Trinity House Vessel Patricia.

Wirral Globe: The French Destroyer FS Bretagne is expected to sail along the Mersey at 9.30am on Friday (May 26) The French Destroyer FS Bretagne is expected to sail along the Mersey at 9.30am on Friday (May 26) (Image: Louise McWatt)

The American destroyer USS Ramage will also call into Liverpool during the weekend.

The vessels will provide an impressive backdrop to events on and over the Mersey, while their sailors will join in commemorative events ashore. HMS Defender and the Bretagne will be open to visitors, welcoming members of the public on board throughout Saturday and Sunday.

The weekend will get underway with a private service of commemoration at St Nick’s Church at the Pier Head.

Her Royal Highness, Princess Royal will be the guest of honour at the service, which will acknowledge the sacrifice of the thousands of UK and allied sailors involved in the Battle of the Atlantic, both merchant and military.

After the church service, Princess Royal will unveil a new Battle of the Atlantic Memorial and garden of reflection – the first of its kind in the UK – on the church grounds.

The Princess Royal will also open a new Wrens Museum at Western Approaches Museum during her visit to Liverpool. The museum will be open for public visitors from 2pm on Friday, May 26 following its VIP launch.

Wirral Globe: There will be a parade of medals on May 28There will be a parade of medals on May 28 (Image: Louise McWatt)

Flypasts, ships open to visitors, and a 1940s-themed military village at Pier Head Both the Battle of Britain Memorial Flight and vintage Fleet Air Arm Swordfish and Seafire aircraft will stage flypasts on all three days of the event, weather permitting.

Flypast times for the weekend are, as follows:

Saturday:

11am–11.10am: Seafire and Swordfish display

11.50am–12.05pm: Battle of Britain Memorial Flight

1.15pm-1.30pm: Battle of Britain Memorial Flight

3pm-3.10pm Seafire and Swordfish display

Sunday:

12.30–12.45pm: Battle of Britain Memorial Flight

1.50pm–2pm: Swordfish display

5.20pm–5.30pm: Swordfish display

Participating ships HMS Defender - a Type 45 Destroyer, Royal Navy - and The Bretagne (D655 Frigate, French Navy) will open their gangways to the public on Saturday and Sunday from 10am – 4pm and various activities will be staged in a ‘military village’ across Pier Head.

The village will feature equipment and a whole host of free family activities from the Royal Navy, Army, and RAF including a Typhoon simulator, a Royal Navy VR speedboat simulator, climbing walls, bungee runs, a Spitfire replica, tanks, helicopters, and vintage military vehicles.

The extensive Battle of the Atlantic displays and special family activities will be open for visitors at Western Approaches Museum, and the Maritime Museum in the Royal Albert Dock.

Over the water in Birkenhead, Cammell Laird shipyard will run a series of BoA80-themed tours around its yard to celebrate the efforts of shipbuilders in WW2, and to show how things have moved on. Visitors will be given an exclusive behind-the-scenes commentary on board vintage buses supplied by Wirral Transport Museum on Saturday, May 27.

On Sunday, May 28, there will be a Drumhead service of thanksgiving at midday at Pier Head followed at 1.30 pm by a March for the Medals from Exchange Flags to Princes Parade, where a group of Battle of the Atlantic veterans, now all in their 90s, will take the salute from the marching troops.

Those who have family medals related to the Battle of the Atlantic campaign, or any other related Second World War campaign, are invited to wear them in honour of their loved one as they watch the local, national, and international contingents march in their memory.

The weekend’s commemorations will conclude with the visiting vessels sailing down the Mersey at 5pm, escorted by a convoy from Mersey’s maritime community and a Beat Retreat played by His Majesty’s Royal Marines Band at Pier Head.

A programme of theatre, music, and dance The weekend’s events include an engaging programme of theatre, music and dance, including a Battle of the Atlantic-themed variety show written and performed by students of Liverpool John Moores University.

Throughout the weekend, an outdoor stage at the Pier Head will host performances from 1940s and vintage-style musicians and performers including The Soldiers of Swing, The Lahdidah, The Swing Cats, Mersey Swing, Joanne Dennis and Hattie Bee. Sea Shanty band The Jack Tars, will also perform.

Visitors to the waterfront will also enjoy performances from 4tthe h Battalion, The Duke of Lancaster’s Regiment, the Royal Danish Navy ban and local cadet bands, drill and PT displays.

Over in Canning Dock, Art Deco steamer The Danny Adamson will open its saloon to host folk shanty performances by Gerry Ffrench, Yesterday’s Men, and the Port Sunlight Seadogs, as well as Battle of the Atlantic talks by historian David Hearn and seafarer David McNamee.

And on Saturday night, His Majesty’s Royal Marines Band are set to raise the roof with a special commemorative concert at the city’s Philharmonic Hall.

Celebrating and commemorating wir remarkable veterans Chairman of the Battle of the Atlantic Memorial Charity, Gary Doyle, said: "No city is more connected with the Battle of the Atlantic than Liverpool, and there can be no more fitting a setting for these important 80th-anniversary commemorations.

"The Battle of the Atlantic was the longest and most strategically important battle of the Second World War. If the Allies had lost the fight, there’s little doubt that we would have lost the war.

"The death toll was – and still is – staggering. Tens of thousands of Merchant Navy, Royal Navy, and Allied Naval seamen, and thousands of RAF and allied aviators lost their lives into our supply lanes open and our families fed.

"This 80th commemoration is extra-special because we will be joined by some of our Battle of the Atlantic veterans at events during the weekend, and they are without doubt the focus of the whole event.

"It is perhaps the last major commemorative opportunity we will have to come together to say thank you to those remarkable men and women, and to celebrate their great effort and achievement, in the pleasure of their company. We hope that the whole of Merseyside will get behind what we are doing and turn out to join us."

You can find more information about all the Battle of the Atlantic 80th commemoration events here