Guide to... Natural History Museums in Soho




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Grant Museum of Zoology and Comparative Anatomy
Grant Museum of Zoology and Comparative Anatomy
Grant Museum of Zoology and Comparative Anatomy, Rockefeller Building, 21 University Street, London, WC1E 6DE

0.71km

Part of the University College London, skeletons, taxidermy, entomology and specimens preserved in fluid.Read more

Museums Tourist Attractions Sightseeing Natural History Museums

University College London
UCL Geology Collections
University College London, Gower Street, London, WC1E 6BT

0.76km

Part of the University College London, rocks, minerals, fossils on display in the Rock Room, limited opening hours[21]Read more

Museums Tourist Attractions Sightseeing Natural History Museums

Museum of Life Sciences
Museum of Life Sciences
Museum of Life Sciences, King's College London, London, SE1 1UL

2.15km

Historic biological and pharmaceutical collections, including skeletons, fluid-preserved material, taxidermy, and...Read more

Museums Tourist Attractions Sightseeing Natural History Museums

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FAQs about Soho and Natural History Museums in London


Oxford Street borders four different districts of London, Soho, Fitzrovia, Marylebone, and Mayfair .



Oxford Street is located in the borough of Westminster in central London.

Oxford Street can be considered to form part of the districts of Fitzrovia, Soho and Mayfair .



The best nightclubs in London and their location is rather subjective as there are great clubs in different areas of London each with a different vibe. Mayfair tends to have the most exclusive celebrity clubs whilst east London is a little bit cooler.

Soho has some good places too although you won't rub shoulders with high society if you cross over Regent Street.



London's China Town is located in central London around Gerrard Street, close to Leicester Square. The nearest tube stations are Leicester Square and Piccadilly Circus.



The main areas in London for the best London clubs are Mayfair and Soho. Shoreditch and East London are becoming increasing popular too.


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Blue Plaques in London

D. H. Lawrence Blue Plaque - D. H. Lawrence 1885-1930 novelist and poet lived here in 1915
Metropolitan Railway Bronze Plaque - Beneath this roadway runs the world's  first underground passenger railway.  It was opened for public traffic  by the Metropolitan Railway Company  on 10 January 1863
Henry Gray Brown Plaque - Henry Gray 1827-1861 anatomist lived here
George James Symons Blue Plaque - Here  from 1868 to 1909  lived   George James Symons  FRS  pioneer in the scientific study  of rainfall,  founder of the British rainfall  organization,  twice president of the  Royal Meteorological  Society.  1838-1900
Flying Bomb (V1/V2) Maroon Plaque - In memory of the 26 people who lost their lives, the 150 injured, and the many bereaved when a Vergeltungswaffe Eins V1 Flying Bomb destroyed Highbury Corner at 12.46pm, 27th June, 1944
Battle Of Lewisham Maroon Plaque - Remembering   the Battle of Lewisham  Thousands  united here against racism and facism  13 August 1977

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