Open House Festival

Twickenham Museum

museum

Anthony Beckles Willson, 1720

25 The Embankment, Twickenham, TW1 3DU

Grade II listed former waterman's cottage c1720. Restored and converted into a museum celebrating the rich history of Twickenham, Whitton, Teddington and the Hamptons.

Getting there

Tube

Richmond

Train

Twickenham

Bus

H22, R68, R70, 290, 490, 267, 281, 33

Additional travel info

Walking distance from nearest bus stop: 3-5 minutes. Trains stations also at Richmond and St Margaret's.

Access

Facilities

Accessibility notes

No lift access to the first floor. Two steep steps from the outside into the museum.

What you can expect

Some internal steps are quite steep so a level of physical mobility is needed to ascend to the 1st floor Exhibits Room.

Create a free visitor account to book festival tickets

Drop in activities

Sat 13 Sep

11:00–15:00

Drop in: 15 Minute talks on 'JMW Turner & West London'

Special House Manager 15 minute talks on the exhibition 'JMW Turner and West London' on the hour at 11, 12, 1 and 2pm.

Sat 20 Sep

11:00–15:00

Drop in: 15 Minute talks on 'JMW Turner & West London'

Drop in: 15 Minute talks on 'JMW Turner & West London'. House Manager talks take place on the hour at 11, 12, 1 and 2pm

About

History of 25 The Embankment and opening times

Situated next to St Mary’s church, 25 The Embankment lies at the heart of historic Twickenham. First indicated on Moses Glover’s 1635 survey of the Isleworth Hundred, the idiosyncratic footprint of the building and exposed internal brickwork date the building to this time.
The Georgian symmetry of its present appearance is disturbed by an 18th century side extension over a former passageway, with the whole faced with nineteenth century London stock.
Believed to have once been owned by the Twining tea family, it was home to a branch of the local Hammerton watermen, ferrymen and boatbuilder family who lived here from 1896 until 1939 or later. The last private owner was local conservation campaigner Jack Ellis who left the property to become a museum for the old borough of Twickenham when he died in 1994 .

The museum will be open on Saturday 13th September and Saturday 20th September between 11 and 3pm with a special house managers 15 minute talk on the hour at 11, 12, 1 and 2pm of the exhibition 'JMW Turner and West London'. This marks the 250th anniversary of the birth of the great landscape artist in 1775.

Online presence

www.twickenham-museum.org.uk

twitter.com/TwickMuseum

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