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  • London Museums

  • The Natural History Museum located on Cromwell Road showcases some of the most fascinating exhibits you will ever see on geology and biology. Containing over 70 million specimens, the museum was originally used to house the discoveries brought back by Charles Darwin and Captain Cook’s botanist, Joseph Banks. The museum has both traditional exhibits as well as more modern, hands-on displays, such as the giant model of an unborn baby which demonstrates the sounds they can hear in the womb. The dinosaur collection is one of the most popular features of the museum, containing both fossilised skeletons and eggs, and a huge animatronic T-Rex, which pounces and roars sporadically sending scores of kids shrieking! A life-size model of a blue whale, the Earthquake Simulator and the Water Cycle Video Wall, are other big attractions. Collections of meteorites, gemstones and fossils are all great hits, but the most intriguing, if slightly disturbing exhibit has to be No. 1 Crawley House, which shows us just how many creepy-crawlies share our homes.

    The British Museum, located on Great Russell Street is the oldest museum in the world. The museum holds more than six million artefacts from around the world, covering 1.8 million years of history. The museum was founded in 1753 by Sir Hans Sloane, and throughout the 18th and 19th centuries, explorers added their newly-discovered treasures to the collection. Highlights of the museum include the Parthenon Sculptures, a magnificent 5th century frieze, the Mummified Cat from Ancient Egypt in 30 BCE, the statue of Rameses II, thought to date back to 1275 BCE, the Rosetta Stone and the extraordinary stone Amitabha Budda which dates from 585 CE.

    The Science Museum, located on Exhibition Road, charts the history of science and technological discoveries through the centuries with scores of hands-on exhibits. The museum showcases British innovations during the Industrial Revolution that changed the world, such as the spinning looms, steam engines and early flight, and also more contemporary inventions, such as the many interactive displays in the hi-tech Wellcome Wing. Highlights of the museum include Puffing Billy, the world’s oldest surviving steam engine locomotive, a replica of the Apollo 11 Lunar Lander, which Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin stepped out from onto the moon in 1969, and the forerunner of the modern computer, Babbage’s Difference Engine. Other highly popular exhibits are The Secret Life of the Home, Journey Through the Globe, ‘Who Am I?’, the SimEx Sim Rides (adventure simulator rides), Dish of E. Coli, which explores the danger of the common bacteria, and On Air, a mock-up of a radio and sound studio. 

    The London Transport Museum, housed in a former flower market building on Wellington Street, Covent Garden, portrays the history of the city’s transport system which spans two centuries, with posters designed by some of Britain’s most creative designers, photographs and real-life exhibits of early buses, tubes and horse-drawn carriages.

    The Imperial War Museum, located on Lambeth Road, charts the phenomenon of the 20th and 21st centuries that is modern warfare. This museum explores the human effects of war as well as the process of fighting it. Exhibits on rationing, air-raid procedures and morale-boosting strategies, are seen alongside reconstructions of World War I trench warfare and the lives of people in London during the World War II Blitz. The recent development of ‘total war’ is also delved into. A moving feature of the museum is the clock in the basement which records the world’s war dead, now numbering more than 100 million. This number includes the 6 million Jews who died during the Holocaust, who are remembered in the dedicated Holocaust Exhibition. Displays of tanks, bombers and aeroplanes are shown as well as various types of ammunition.

    The Victoria and Albert Museum (the V&A), located on Cromwell Road, is one of the most visited museums in London, displaying the decorative arts in all their glory. Named after the loving royal couple, this museum holds 145 galleries, exhibiting artefacts from all over the world, and each varying extraordinarily. One gallery holds the Fashion Collection, which is a big attraction in this museum, displaying clothes dating from 1600 to the present day. Other collections include those of jewellery, textiles, metalwork, glass, prints, sculpture, paintings and Indian and Far Eastern riches. Other highlights are the magnificent plaster copies of statues, the monuments and items from the Italian Renaissance, and the British Galleries containing over 3000 items demonstrating the wonder of British art and design since 1500.

    National Maritime Museum, located in part of the former Royal Naval Hospital in Greenwich Park, is the largest Maritime Museum in the world. There is a re-enactment of the Battle of Trafalgar, with Admiral Nelson’s damaged tunic on display as well. There are also displays about the expeditions to discover Antarctica, as well as a wide ranging collection of boats. Simulator rides give visitors a feel of what it was like when the Titanic sunk, and what modern navigation entails.

    Madame Tussaud’s, located on Marylebone Road has been a major London attraction for more than a century. The museum is home to hundreds of waxwork models of the rich and famous, from royalty and world leaders to filmstars and music legends, they are all immortalised here. Highlights include the Chamber of Horrors, where you can come face-to-face with some of London’s scariest criminals (as well as some more lifelike actors creeping up behind you!) and the actual guillotine which beheaded Marie Antoinette; models of Brad and Angelina, and the display of the royal brides in their wedding regalia. The newer London Dungeon carries on in a similar theme to the Chamber of Horrors, where you can witness the actions of Jack the Ripper, experience the Great Fire of London and got to your own execution! The London Aquarium, located in the building that was the former County Hall, is another fabulous attraction and one of the largest aquariums in Europe. There are seven different aquatic environments on display here, including freshwater ponds, coral reefs, mangrove swamps and oceans, each home to a wide range of marine life such as sharks and piranhas (which you can watch being fed), stingrays, and crabs and starfish which you can pick up in the hands-on tidal-pool.

    221b Baker Street, the fictitious home of the detective character Sherlock Holmes, does not actually exist, but there is a museum on the site designated as this address. The Sherlock Holmes Museum is actually located next to number 239, and is the ultimate experience for any Sherlock Holmes fan! A Victorian policeman stands guard outside this famous residence, scullery maids let you in, and wax dummies of the notorious villains from the books recreate famous scenes, Visitors are able to get their picture taken wearing the detective’s famous deerstalker hat, smoking his pipe and sitting in his famous front room, this is a fantastic experience in the surreal!

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