Historic House Museums: Difference between revisions

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File:TheGeorgianHouse-Bristol.jpg‪|The Georgian House, Bristol built in 1790 for John Pinney, slave plantation owner and sugar merchant. It was also where the enslaved man of African descent, Pero Jones lived. ‪http://bit.ly/2CsUUrg‬
File:TheGeorgianHouse-Bristol.jpg‪|The Georgian House, Bristol built in 1790 for John Pinney, slave plantation owner and sugar merchant. It was also where the enslaved man of African descent, Pero Jones lived. ‪http://bit.ly/2CsUUrg‬
File:No1RoyalCrescent-Bath.jpeg|Number 1 Royal Crescent, Bath was the first of the Royal Crescent Houses to be built and is a museum to ‘fashionable English 18C living’.


File:RegencyTownHouse-Brighton.jpg|The Regency Town House, Brighton is a Grade I listed terraced house from the mid-1820s. It celebrates the architecture and social history of Brighton & Hove between 1780 and 1850.  http://www.rth.co.uk
File:RegencyTownHouse-Brighton.jpg|The Regency Town House, Brighton is a Grade I listed terraced house from the mid-1820s. It celebrates the architecture and social history of Brighton & Hove between 1780 and 1850.  http://www.rth.co.uk

Revision as of 18:48, 21 January 2019

There are many museums around the UK based in houses. Many of these wonderful museums celebrate a particular person or a social issue and we have listed a small number of examples below. There are also museums and visitor attractions made up of complete towns or suburbs, very often the work of a singular visionary individual. Again, there is a selection of these listed below. However, the main focus on this page is on house museums whose emphasis is the design and presentation of a particular style and ones that celebrate a particular period in architectural history. Often called ‘memory museums’, these are historic house museums that contain a collection of the traces of memory of the people who once lived there.

House Museums

Historic Towns & Villages

Historic Houses Commemorating People

At Chimni we are mainly focussed on house history, architecture and building styles, so our focus in this section is on house museums that celebrate and explain different periods of house building. However, dotted around the country are a series of wonderful house museums celebrating famous people and their work. We have listed some of our favourites below:

Sir John Soane Museum - http://www.soane.org/

Dickens Museum - https://dickensmuseum.com/

Dylan Thomas' Boat House http://www.dylanthomasboathouse.com/

Dr Jenner's House - http://www.jennermuseum.com/

Jane Austen's House - http://www.jane-austens-house-museum.org.uk/about/about.htm

The Brontë's Parsonage, Haworth, West Yorks. https://www.bronte.org.uk/about-us

Robert Burns House -http://www.burnsmuseum.org.uk/

Virginia Woolf's 'Monks House' - http://www.nationaltrust.org.uk/monks-house/

Winston Churchill's 'Chartwell' http://www.nationaltrust.org.uk/chartwell/

Benjamin Franklin House. http://www.benjaminfranklinhouse.org/site/sections/default.htm

JM Turner's House - Sandycome. http://turnershouse.org/

Oscar Wilde's House - 21 Westland Row, Dublin http://www.tcd.ie/OWC/history/westland.php

Dr Johnson's House - http://www.drjohnsonshouse.org/

John Milton's Cottage. http://www.miltonscottage.org

Darwin's home at Down House http://www.english-heritage.org.uk/visit/places/home-of-charles-darwin-down-house/prices-and-opening-times

See Also In Chimni

Chimni Wiki Page: House History Books

Chimni Wiki Page: House History Projects

Chimni Wiki Page: House History Categorisation

References