Secret places in London that you won't find in your typical travel guide. The most unusual museums in London

27.02.2019

Offers its visitors a journey into the world of the extraordinary. Along with good cafes and bars, guests can visit extraordinary museums in the UK. This - mysterious places visits not normally found in standard London travel guides but uh well worth a look.

This one is the only one in the world in which the main object of interest is various varieties of tea and coffee. The exhibits take us back to the days of the British Empire and colonialism, showing the commercial interest in the society of that time in these two products.

The museum was founded by Edward Brahma in 1992. Its exhibits trace the history of tea and coffee over the past four centuries: from the moment they were imported to Europe from Africa and the Far East.



The museum has over 3,000 books of cartoons and drawings of every kind and with an emphasis on political caricature. It was founded in 2006 and consists of over 1200 exhibitions. The exhibits trace the history of British cartoons, comics, drawings and animation all the way back to the 18th century. The museum offers visitors the opportunity to see contemporary designs as well as unique, very rare examples of drawing art.

3. Museum of Surgery


To many, this museum will look like a scene from a horror movie, but that's what the operations rooms looked like in the early 19th century.

The hall is equipped with benches for those wishing to be present at the operation, which in those days took place without anesthesia and antiseptics.


In addition to a large operating room, furnished according to the original of that time, the museum offers visitors an exhibition of the development of surgery in early medical practice and tools.





Another museum dedicated to medicine is located in an old English church. It contains exhibits of medieval medical instruments, as well as numerous documents from which one can learn about strange medical cases, such as the case of the Elephant Man. Here you can also see exhibits of celebrities: artificial teeth and kidney stones.



6. Museum of the British Association of Optics

Seeing famous sights London such as Big Ben or Westminster, as a rule, travelers who have recently arrived in the country believe that there is nothing more interesting in the capital, but this is not at all the case. Moreover, sometimes Londoners themselves do not know about the existence of many memorable places, which can be located just a few tens of meters from their home. However, such places exist special interest in this sense represent museums. We bring to your attention a list of museums of the northern London, which you did not even know about, but which you should definitely visit.

The museum is located in the heart of the magnificent Markfield Park. It is dedicated to the treatment facilities of the city. At one time, thanks to these mechanisms, an epidemic of plague and other infectious diseases was overcome in Tottenham. The main steam engine of the system was installed in 1886 year and is still in working order. Sometimes, it is turned on so that visitors can see the mechanism in action.

Crowland Road, N15 4RB . It is open every second Tuesday of the month from 11 am to 5 pm. Free admission.

London- a city with a developed transport infrastructure, so it is not surprising that there are plenty of museums dedicated to transport in it. One of them is located in the northern part of the city. Here you can see rare models of motorbikes, buses and cars, get acquainted with the history of their creation and use.

The museum can be visited at: Whitewebbs Road, Enfield, EN2 9HP . It operates on Wednesdays from 10 am to 4 pm, as well as on the first Sunday of every month. Entrance fee - £4.

  1. willow road

This museum house unique monument architecture. It was designed by ourselves Erne Goldfinger for your family in 1939 , but became a museum only after the death of his wife in 1991. The uniqueness of the house is in its atypicality. Externally, the building resembles a garage house with columns. Inside the house is built in the best traditions of avant-garde. On the walls of work Max Ernst, there are sculptures on the tables Henry Moore, furniture by the owner of the house, as well as a host of other art objects.

You can visit this unique place at: 2 Willow Road, East Heath Road, NW3 1TH. Opening hours: Wednesday to Sunday from 11 am to 2 pm. Entrance fee - £7.20.

The house-museum once belonged to a famous literary figure - to John Keats. It offers its visitors a great way to learn about the beginning 18 century in London, about the life of the middle class then, and about the life of the Romantic poet Keats himself. The exhibits on display include wedding ring that Keats gave Fanny Bron(to his bride), and a lock of her hair. The museum holds regular poetry and literary events and also offers a range of educational programs.

You can visit the museum at: 10 Keats Grove, NW3 2RR. Hours of Operation: Wednesday to Sunday from 11:00 am to 5:00 pm. Entrance fee - £6.50.

  1. Bruce Castle

This castle was previously known as Milord's house. The building was built in the 16th century. This is where Sir once lived William Compton, Richard Sackville, barons Coleraine and Sir Rowland Hill. Then the estate was located medical school, and later - a museum that kept the archive of the area Haringey. Now on the estate there is one of the oldest parks in Tottenham. By visiting the museum, you will learn a lot about the history of this part of the city.

You can visit the castle at: Lordship Lane, N17 8NU from Wednesday to Sunday from 1 to 5 p.m. Free admission.

This museum is dedicated to the water channels of the city. It is housed in a 19th century building once owned by an ice cream entrepreneur named Carlo Gatti. The cellars of the house were designed in such a way that they could store Norwegian ice imported for production needs. Until now, some ice has been preserved in excellent condition and is used by physicists for experiments. You can also get on one of the museum's water excursions through the tunnel Islington. Ticket price - £ 8.40 includes both the trip and the visit to the museum. Regular entrance to the museum costs less - £4.

The museum is located at: 2-13 New Wharf Road, N1 9RT and is open Tuesday to Sunday from 10 am to 4.30 pm (£4).

This museum is dedicated to the world famous psychotherapist Sigmund Freud. The internal arrangement of the museum fully reproduces the decoration of the doctor's office, including the couch, figurines collected by Freud, and many other little things. The museum regularly holds various seminars and cultural and educational classes.

Shop "Monster Supply"

London is one of the most interesting cities in the world. This is the place where centuries-old history closely coexists with the latest achievements of world progress. The history of the city goes back over 2000 years. During this time, the city experienced ups and downs, fires and epidemics, was the capital of the most powerful empire in the world. Of course, in London there are countless historical sites which are worth visiting and which I think you have heard of, but there is another London with its little-known museums, shops and cafes, which will be discussed.
In central London on Hoxton Street there is a Monster Supply store. Inside, the store, which has been operating since 1818, looks like an old pharmacy. For the choice of the sophisticated consumer, the shop offers a wide range of canned human meat, canned human fears and other necessary monstrous goods. Here you can buy jars of hermetically sealed vague anxiety, marmalade from internal organs and brain jam according to an old Saxon recipe, wrenches for tightening the cervical vertebrae, professional floss for cleaning poisonous dragon teeth, blood for vampire baby food, which by the way can be taken in bottling and a bunch of other useful goods. Oddly enough, but in this store there are quite reasonable restrictions. For example, there can only be one giant in it, tasting of goods is prohibited, as soon as you can resist it, and if you knock on the store at night, they will open it only to vampires and only upon presentation of the appropriate document. In general, this wonderful store is really worth a visit.

One of the most unusual and, perhaps, strange museums London is the "Castle of Horrors" on Tooley Street. The facade of the building resembles an old factory, everything in this building, even the smells, make the visitor transport himself to medieval London. Among the expositions of the museum you can see old london, as it was before the fire that occurred in 1666. Particularly impressionable should not visit the torture chamber, where severed heads are presented, eerily similar to real ones. Here you can also see the working tools of the London executioners of that time, and some of them are demonstrated in action, of course. human body replaces the mock. There was also a theatrical show. Judges in robes and wigs walk around the halls of the castle, and a museum employee among the crowd of tourists constantly looks for "criminals" and puts them in the dock. The judge asks the "defendant" the name and place of residence and, not listening to excuses, passes the verdict "Guilty!". So in XVII century all passed court hearings London, and no lawyers or retrial for you. So after visiting this museum, you will definitely have something to tell your friends when you return to your homeland. By the way, before the trip, do not forget to take care of housing in advance and book a 4-star hotel in London by clicking on the link - http://www.planetofhotels.com/velikobritaniya/london/oteli_londona_4_zvezdi

If you like to sleep or just lie in bed, then the theater for the lazy is what you need. Instead of armchairs, there are comfortable beds, and in order to fall asleep faster, the actors read a bedtime story to visitors. At the end of the performance, the audience does not leave the hall, but stay in their beds until the next morning.

After visiting all the many sights of London, any tourist will get hungry, for this there are numerous cafes, bars and restaurants, but how can you leave England without visiting its famous pubs. One of these places is Ye Olde Cheshire Cheese, one of the oldest pubs in London. At the entrance to the pub, there is a board with the names of 15 monarchs who ruled at the time when the pub already existed. There is an opinion among the local population that the monarchs often went to the pub. The countless narrow dark corridors leading to the bar counters and dining rooms can confuse even regulars. Dark narrow corridors, ebony paneling and ceilings, leather-bound books on the shelves - this is the interior of this pub. In the center of the hall there is a fireplace, above which hangs a portrait of a waiter who worked in this pub in 1829.
There really is something to see in London! And most importantly, in this variety, choose the most interesting, so as not to regret the time wasted in vain!

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Arriving in this city, tourists first of all visit Big Ben, the Tower, Westminster, British museum, National Gallery, London Eye, Greenwich and other attractions, the fame of which has already "thundered all over the world." But there is another London - one that not every guide will tell you about and not all guidebooks will write. The British capital is fraught with many surprises, and some of the most pleasant are not regular museums London. It would seem that everyone has already seen - treasures royal family, masterpieces of world art, funny hats of beefeaters, even mummies of pharaohs. And still, London will find something else to surprise you with. Just surrender to the charm of this city and visit those places that, although not so famous, are full of original charm.

Museum of London Docklands

Strictly speaking, this is not a museum in the classical sense of the word, but a warehouse, but a warehouse with a two-hundred-year history, revealing the long period of London's prosperity. And this is demonstrated with the help of artifacts that are directly related to trade, migration and commerce in the British capital in different eras her life.

London Docks Museum. Statue of Robert Milligan

Discover a host of world-class art galleries including Sailortown, a recreation of 19th-century London, and London, Sugar & Slavery, which highlights the city's involvement in the transatlantic slave trade. Yes, this is not the brightest page in the history of London, but historical details so valuable that they show different aspects city ​​and country life. The museum provides impartial facts to the judgment of visitors, and how to evaluate them and how to treat them is a personal matter for everyone. With its unique finds, unusual items and fascinating tours, the London Docks Museum is one of London's little-known yet treasured treasures.


London Docks Museum at night

Old Royal Naval College (Old Royal Naval College)

Designed by Sir Christopher Wren, this building is one of the most famous landmarks in the world. An object world heritage UNESCO, the Old Royal Naval College attracts filmmakers, artists and other artists with its exquisite beauty. It is also often held here wedding ceremonies, because the beauty of the painted halls, lawns and college chapel evokes somewhat conflicting desires - to enjoy the views and photograph them. Located within walking distance of Greenwich Pier and Cutty Sark DLR station, this property is the perfect place to start your day exploring Greenwich.


Old Royal Naval College

For more than half a thousand years this architectural masterpiece on the banks of the river, and the rare visitors to Greenwich were not interested in its history. And the interiors of the 18th century, for which the Old Royal Naval College is famous, will not leave indifferent even those who are more than cool about art.

Until September 2018, visitors to the Old Royal Naval College have a probably once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to "live through the drama" of the closing of the huge ceiling of the Painted Hall. For subtle natures, Stendhal's syndrome is practically guaranteed here.


Painted hall in the picture

Royal Air Force Museum London (Royal Air Force Museum London)

If you're looking for something out of the ordinary, why not head to the Royal Air Force Museum at Colindale and trace the history of aviation from the earliest flight to hot-air balloon to modern aircraft itself newest model?


Royal Air Force Museum London

This world-class collection of over 100 air aircraft, military aircraft and war memorabilia, will provide the whole family with a day filled with vivid impressions.


CR 42 Falco in the Battle of Britain Hall

Don't forget to visit the 3D cinema in the Milestones of Flight History hall, where impressive sound and light show immerse you in the days of the Battle of Britain. Toddlers will be interested in interactive gallery for children Aeronauts (Aeronauts), in which you can find various games, helping to adapt to flying and even teach them the technique. Opening hours of the institution - daily from 10:00 to 18:00, free admission and ample parking.


Avro Lancaster R5868 Share:

Victoria and Albert Museum

Continuing the conversation about the museums of London, I would like to separately mention the most unusual museums. The capital of Great Britain is famous for the fact that the choice of its museums is truly inimitable, whether it be the huge British Museum in Bloomsbury or the group of museums in South Kensington (Science, Museum natural history and the most famous of them is the Victoria and Albert Museum).

But there are twenty small, but very eccentric museums in the capital, hiding along the streets. Each has its own story. We will talk about a few of them.

Museum in Covent Garden (LT Museum)

This cultural institution is rightfully included in the most unusual museums: after all, there are old subway cars, buses, trams. However, only a small part of it is located there, while the main one is concentrated in the Acton area in West London. Located in the depot, it is more of a collection than an amusement park. For example, there you can see the remains of a spiral escalator that exists in a single copy!

Blood Surgery Museum

Blood Surgery Museum (The Old Operation Theater & Herb Garred)

This is truly not only the most unusual museum, but also one of the creepiest. Here, near the London Bridge, an operating theater was founded in 1822, today offering immersion in the surgery of those times when anesthetics and antiseptics were not yet invented.

Canal Museum (London Canal Museum)

The colorful history of the canals is collected here - boats, horses, tunnels, art dedicated to the canal, people connected with them in some way. You can sail here by boat and feel yourself in the depths of the London canals.

Interestingly, this place used to be an ice cream warehouse by Carlo Gatti, one of the pioneers of this area. Before the invention of refrigeration chambers, ice was brought here from Norway and stored to be used later in the heat. Therefore, the Tunnel Museum is also part of the Ice Cream Museum.

cartoon museum

The Cartoon Museum

Although this is also the most unusual museum, it certainly does not need a description. Amazing drawings, hundreds and thousands of characters and caricatures, including the most amazing firstborns. Not to mention the acute political satire also expressed on paper.

Museum of eccentric collections (Cuming Museum, the Museum of Southwark History)

Here you can find truly unusual things: the scalp of an Indian, a fragment of the ceiling of the room where Napoleon died, a piece of the vest of Charles I, worn on the day of his execution, the sawn off leg of a mummy. You won't find anything like this anywhere else in the world!

Fan Museum

Fan Museum (London Fan Museum)

This museum has more than three thousand folding fans, and their collection is the largest in the world. There is also a special exhibition, opened in 1999, of special fans in the Art Nouveau style. And in the nearby tea shop, napkins are also folded in the appropriate shape.

Museums of great writers

The houses of such great writers as Dr. Johnson or Charles Dickens have long since become museums. There is also a separate museum dedicated not only to Arthur Conan Doyle, but to his hero Sherlock Holmes. So all admirers of great writers in London are in for some pleasant surprises.

Money Museum (Bank Of England Museum)

The Old Lady of Threadneedle Street Museum houses a variety of banknotes, from the earliest ones, which were still handwritten by bank clerks and signed by cashiers. Previously, the banks of the countries that surrounded Britain produced their own personal banknotes. These banknotes were valued as much as the bank itself. And the banknotes of England were considered as reliable as the Bank of England.

Today, only a few banks in Scotland issue their own banknotes. The museum also tells how the fight against counterfeiters has been improved.

Anyone who finds ordinary museums boring will surely be interested in the most unusual museums in London, or at least one of them. English learners via Skype, we are waiting for your story about which one seemed the most interesting to you!

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