| Hint | Answer | % Correct |
|---|---|---|
| Horatio Nelson's Flagship | Victory | 100%
|
| Port at which the Franco-Spanish Fleet was blockaded | Cadiz | 50%
|
| Nelson's second in command and good friend | Cuthbert Collingwood | 50%
|
| The ship that was most heavily armed | Santísima Trinidad | 50%
|
| This British Ship became separated just before the battle | Africa | 38%
|
| The ship which the Frenchman who killed Nelson was on | Redoutable | 38%
|
| Cuthbert Collingwood's Flagship | Royal Sovereign | 38%
|
| Nelson's trusted Flag Captain | Thomas Masterman Hardy | 38%
|
| Pierre-Charles Villeneuve's Flagship | Bucentaure | 25%
|
| Nelson's former Flag Captain, Captain of the Agamemnon | Edward Berry | 25%
|
| Name of both a French and British ship present | Neptune | 25%
|
| Federico Gravina's Flagship | Principe de Asturias | 25%
|
| Lord Northesk's Flagship | Britannia | 13%
|
| Battle that preceded Trafalgar, and where that Vice Admiral failed | Cape Finisterre | 13%
|
| Battle that culminated from the vanguard's escape | Cape Ortegal | 13%
|
| Famous Strategy which Nelson used during the battle | Crossing the T | 13%
|
| Nelson's secretary who was killed, leaving blood stains on Nelson's coat | John Scott | 13%
|
| French Rear Admiral who led the vanguard's escape | Pierre le Pelley | 13%
|
| Unsuccessful Vice Admiral who was sent back to England before the battle | Robert Calder | 13%
|
| Another name for both a French and British ship | Swiftsure | 13%
|
| British Rear Admiral who missed the Battle while off Gibraltar | Thomas Louis | 13%
|