Guide to... Crime Museums in London

Information about Crime Museums including Crime Museums in Central London.


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Crime Museums (City of London) Crime Museums (Covent Garden) Crime Museums (Fitzrovia) Crime Museums (Mayfair) Crime Museums (Oxford Circus) Crime Museums (Soho) Crime Museums (South Kensington) Crime Museums (St James's)


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Clink Prison Museum
Clink Prison Museum
Clink Prison Museum, 1 Clink Street, London, SE1 9DG

Site and history of the notorious prison in use from the 12th century to 1780Read more

Museums Tourist Attractions Sightseeing Crime Museums

City of London Police Museum
City of London Police Museum
City of London Police Museum, 2 Aldermanbury, London, EC2V 7HH

Uniforms, Victorian-era police equipment, communications devices, famous murders, WWII displayRead more

Museums Tourist Attractions Sightseeing Crime Museums

Jack the Ripper Museum
Jack the Ripper Museum
Jack the Ripper Museum, 12 Cable Street, London, E1 8JG

History of the East London in the 1880s, providing a serious examination of the crimes of Jack the Ripper within the...Read more

Museums Tourist Attractions Sightseeing Local History Museums Crime Museums

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Map of Crime museums in London

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Blue Plaques in London

Luigi Manze Blue Plaque - Manze's Pie & Mash Shop.  Locally listed building.  Originally from Ravello in Italy, the Manze family emigrated to England in 1878 and founded an empire of fourteen pie & mash shops across London. In 1929 Luigi Manze rebuilt 76 High Street in its present form.
Blue Plaque № 9666 - Chingford Mount Cemetery – Developed in1884 by the Abney Park Cemetery Company on land originally called “Caroline Mount”, named after the landowner. The original Chapel and gatelodges are now gone but the impressive gates, railings, and gatepiers survive
John Keats Blue Plaque - In a house on this site the "Swan & Hoop" John Keats poet was born 1795
Charles Voysey Blue Plaque - C. F. A. Voysey 1857-1941 architect and designer lived here
Charles Holden Brown Plaque - Chiswick Park station  Listed as a building of National Significance  Architect: Charles Holden, 1933  The station first opened on 1 July 1879 by the Metroploitan District Railway when the railway was extended from Turnham Green to Ealing Broadway.  The station was originally named 'Acton Green' and was renamed to 'Chiswick Park' on 1 March 1910.  The original station was demolished in 1931 to accommodate the new Piccadilly line tracks, although the Piccadilly line has never served this station,
Black Plaque № 11634 - Coronation Avenue  In memory of over 160 people who died when a high explosive bomb fell on this building during the blitz on 13th October 1940.

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Crime Museums in the News

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