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Sherlock Holmes Museum
The
last word in factional conceit, 221b’s study is a loving Victorian
recreation and a splendid photo op. Bedrooms are fittingly scattered
with iconic personal effects, make-believe papers and paraphernalia,
and waxwork tableaux from the stories have recently been added
upstairs.
Best exhibit Mr Holmes’s armchair by the fireplace – the perfect place to relax with a pipe.
Sherlock Holmes Museum, 221b Baker St, NW1 (7935 8866/ www.sherlock-holmes.co.uk). Baker St tube.
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Sikorski Museum
FREE
Named
after General Wladyslaw Sikorski, a war hero and leader of the Polish
government-in-exile, this museum was set up to document the social and
military history of Poland. Like the nearby Institut Français, there is
the feeling that it’s been set up purely for Polish ex-pats, as all of
the exhibits are labelled in Polish, but there are guided tours in
English. Best on show here is one of the Enigma deciphering machines
that were used by Polish mathematicians to crack codes.
Best exhibit Although
the line, ‘Hey kids, we’re going to the Sikorski Museum!’ doesn’t have
a particularly appealing ring to it, younger visitors may enjoy the
full-size model of Wojtek the 'soldier bear' mascot of the Polish
soldiers.
Sikorski Museum, 20 Princes Gate, SW7 (7589 9249/www.sikorskimuseum.co.uk). South Kensington/Knightsbridge tube.
Sir John Soane’s Museum
FREE
You’ll
never forget your first visit to the home of architect Sir John Soane.
It’s stuffed with curios and is almost exactly as Soane left it when he
died in 1837. Among the treasures are an Egyptian sarcophagus that
Soane was so elated at acquiring that he partied for three days.
Best exhibit Hogarth’s ‘An Election’. Sir John Soane’s Museum, 13 Lincoln’s Inn Fields, WC2 (7405 2107/www.soane.org). Holborn tube.
Smythson Stationery Museum
FREE
Smythson’s is one of a few ancient London shops that also doubles as a museum.
Smythson Stationery Museum , 40 New Bond St, W1 (7629 8558/www.smythson.com). Bond St tube.
Spencer House
Built
1756-66 for the first Earl Spencer (one of Diana’s ancestors), Spencer
House is London’s finest surviving eighteenth-century private palace.
Eight meticulously restored state rooms are open to the public on
Sundays only. Tours of the house, which take in paintings by Sir Joshua
Reynolds begin every 15 minutes.
Best exhibit The
spectacular garden, designed by Henry Holland, covers almost half an
acre and backs on to Green Park.
Spencer House, 27 St
James’s Place, SW1 (7499 8620/ www.spencerhouse.co.uk). Green Park
tube.
V&A Museum of Childhood
FREE
This
East End museum houses the national childhood collection. Exhibits are
displayed so that all ages can get the most out of them and there are
numerous temporary exhibitions, as well as a programme of events and
workshops.
V&A Museum of Childhood, Cambridge Heath Rd, E2 (8983 5200/www.vam.ac.uk/moc). Bethnal Green tube.
V&A Theatre and Performance Galleries
FREE
In March 2009, the new Theatre and Performance galleries at the V&A opened to the public. The galleries replace those at the Theatre
Museum in Covent Garden, which closed in 2007. Best exhibits Over a million (count ’em) original programmes and playbills.
V&A Theatre and Performance Galleries , V&A, Cromwell Rd, SW7 (7942 2000/www.vam.ac.uk). Kensington tube.
Wiener Library
FREE
The
world’s oldest establishment dedicated to collecting information about
the Holocaust is currently fundraising for a move to a larger building
that will allow it to show larger, more regular exhibitions. Try to
help.
Wiener Library, 4 Devonshire St, W1W (7636 7247/www.wienerlibrary.co.uk). Regent's Park tube.
Wimbledon Lawn Tennis Museum
This
enjoyably interactive museum surveys tennis
throughout the world from its medieval beginnings. Highlights include a
3D ‘ghost’ of John McEnroe and an insight into the science of the game
that uses the same camera techniques as ‘The Matrix’. The tour takes in
No 1 Court, the press room and Centre
Court. Best exhibits Kit from the 1880s onwards, and the Wimbledon trophies.
Wimbledon Lawn Tennis Museum, Church
Rd, SW19 (8946 6131/www.wimbledon.org/museum). Southfields tube then
493 bus.
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40 comments
Life is short, and this artilce saved valuable time on this Earth.
Why is it that most London musuems are funded by the department of medeia culture and sport but in the provinces councils have to fund there own . yet another hidden london subsidy.
There is also the Florence Nightingale musuem which is really good
I'm looking for an exhibition or museum of old office equipment - does anyone know of anything?
£16 for an adult is an extortionate fee it should adopt the pricing of an English Heritage site after all it is part of our national heritage. Charge that to the tourists if you wish but not British citizens who contribute through taxes and allowing charities like this tax exemptions.
I agree with Edgar West. Several of my favourite museums have had tall the atmosphere taken away by modernisation. Most The Royal College of Surgeons has been completely sanitised and many of the exhibits have been removed whilst the Natural History Museum has been dumbed down so 4 year olds can understand it.
If you are interested in exploring London's museums with other like minded people, then join the London Cultureseekers Group - www.cultureseekers.org.
We meet up 3-4 times a month and explore museums, art galleries, visit historical buildings, the theatre and go on guided walks.
It's the best way to make friends whilst exploring London.
I visited the Clink Museum with a friend last year and we both agreed it was disappointing, with badly designed displays. Information was often difficult to read and there was too much repetition of the same material, as though nobody had considered the overall effect. Not good value for money. This is a shame, as it's a unique site in an interesting area.
The North Woolwich Old Station Museum closed in January 2009. The station building is boarded up, the yard behind has been redeveloped and the exhibits have been dispersed.
Found out today that where the Bramah museum was there is a hardware store. The museum closed a year ago!
Edgar West - It's not about 'vapid contemporary apology', it's about exhibiting objects with a better understanding of their significance. This is obviously more the case with anthropological objects than with anything involving natural history - the Victorians did a good job of physically acquiring objects but there was little if any genuine concern about their function or contemporary significance - it really was literally a 'treasure hunt'. With the prevalence of the internet being 'culturally poor' is becoming less and less of an issue (and in fact saying so is inaccurate - virtually all of the objects collected during the era of Empire are not 'British' at all, so it's not British culture that's being impovershed) , alterations in museums nowadays are made to convey that artifacts did - and still do - hold deep cultural importance as well as being beautiful, and this normally results in a need for compromise in display methods. Objects from natives here on the Northwest Coast are a great example of this - many of the masks they're world-famous for are in fact not meant to be seen unless being used for a dance, much less displayed openly behind glass. Hence you develop communication with the cultural owners of objects and as such alter display methods to enrich the functions of objects - instead of being permanently behind glass, natives might occasionally visit a museum and use those masks in ceremonial dances, for example.
It can get very complicated, but the short of it is that those changes you witness are genuinely meant to enrich the functions of museum collections rather than 'sterilize' them as might be interpreted. In the simplest terms, we simply know more now than they did then. In any case, there are certainly many places that continue to pay homage to British Victorian eccentricity (in many ways a museum-worthy subject of preservation in its own right), most notably the Sloane Museum.
I don't aim to berate you or anything like that, only to educate. I've been studying this kind of stuff a lot :)
The Wallace Collection is a great art museum that is free and near bond st tube.
The Huntarian and Soane's museums are pretty much opposite each other, and a 20-25 min walk from the British Museum. They make a great combination as they are both really unusual but in totally different ways! Around Lincoln's Inn are lots of historic buildings (the Inns of Court and so on) plus the fields themselves are a pleasant place to eat lunch and have a fairly upmarket cafe/restaurant.
They make a good combination for a day out in London and are themselves very close to Covent Garden for lunch/dinner.
They are my favourite London museums!
I agree with Erik. The Museum of Brands and Packaging is well worth a visit. It is a view of social history over the past 100 years or so by reference to everyday items such as food packaging, advertising styles etc. Educational and nostalgic. www.museumofbrands.com
Horniman Museum
Again took my niece there last summer and it was another museum she enjoyed, it has various exhibits, it also has lovely grounds to walk thru on a good day.. Has a basement fukllof aquariums, this museum is ideal for children as well as adult minds