Brunel's SS Great Britain was the longest passenger ship in the world from 1845 to 1854, and today, beautifully restored, a museum, a leading research centre, a ... read more
Buckland Abbey dates from 1278 as a Cistercian abbey and was afterwards the home of Sir Richard Grenville and Sir Francis Drake, whose collateral descendants lived there ... read more
Burgh House is an independent, self-funding charity and a dynamic space for art, events and history, where everyone can discover the rich heritage of Hampstead, through ... read more
Burnby Hall and Gardens (3.64 ha, 9 acres), were bequeathed in 1962 to the people of Pocklington by Major Percy Marlborough Stewart and his wife Katharine. The ... read more
The Calderdale Industrial Museum is dedicated to the industrial heritage of the area. The museum houses a collection of industrial machinery and artifacts such as a ... read more
Callendar House, surrounded by a landscape park and since 1963 purchased by the Falkirk Burgh Council, is now an art, history and historic house museum. read more
Carisbrooke Castle has a long history, having been a military fortress, a Royal prison and a Royal residence. Charles I was imprisoned here and two of his children were ... read more
Carlyle's House, today in the hands of the National Trust, is the 18th century townhouse, once the residence of Thomas Carlyle (1795 – 1881), the historian, writer ... read more
The Castle & Regimental Museum is a volunteer-run museum tells the story of the Royal Monmouthshire Royal Engineers, from the starting point of a muster in 1539, ... read more
The Castletown D-Day Centre is an authentic recreation of the busy wartime dockyard on the Isle of Portland, from which in 1944, thousands of American troops of the 5th US ... read more
Charles Dickens Museum is the former home of Dickens and his family and where he wrote 'Oliver Twist', 'Pickwick Papers' and 'Nicholas ... read more
The Chepstow Museum reveals the rich and varied past of this ancient town, once an important port and market centre. The wine trade, shipbuilding and salmon fishing are ... read more
Chiddingstone Castle has Tudor origins, and was rebuilt in the 1800s to resemble a medieval castle. Set in 35 acres of grounds and gardens, the Castle is filled with ... read more
The Churchill War Rooms, or also known as the Cabinet War Rooms, is a WW II top-secret basement offices, created in 1938, for the leading government ministers, military ... read more
London’s Cinema Museum is devoted to keeping alive the spirit of cinema from the days before the multiplex. The Cinema Museum houses a unique collection of artefacts, ... read more
Claverton Manor, now housing the American Museum, was built in 1820 replacing an earlier manor house. It was designed by Sir Jeffry Wyatville, commissioned by John ... read more
The Conway Railway Museum was created in the early 1970s by Alan Pratt and later expanded by the current owner Colin Cartwright with the actual museum building to ... read more
The Courtauld Gallery, located in Somerset House, displays the art collection of the Courtauld Institute of Art and is best known for its 19th- and early 20th-century ... read more
The 'Crum', or Crumlin Road Gaol Visitor Attraction and Conference Centre, is a former prison and the only remaining Victorian prison in Northern ... read more
Crystal Palace was the famous iron-plate-glass construction, built for the Great Exhibition in 1851, and designed by Joseph Paxton. Originally located in Hyde Park, it ... read more