Imperial War Museum

War museum · Elephant and Castle

Imperial War Museum

War museum · Elephant and Castle

1

Lambeth Rd, London, SE1 6HZ, United Kingdom

Photos

Imperial War Museum by null
Imperial War Museum by Luke J Spencer (Atlas Obscura User)
Imperial War Museum by Monsieur Mictlan (Atlas Obscura User)
Imperial War Museum by Luke J Spencer (Atlas Obscura User)
Imperial War Museum by Luke J Spencer (Atlas Obscura User)
Imperial War Museum by Luke J Spencer (Atlas Obscura User)
Imperial War Museum by Luke J Spencer (Atlas Obscura User)
Imperial War Museum by Luke J Spencer (Atlas Obscura User)
Imperial War Museum by Luke J Spencer (Atlas Obscura User)
Imperial War Museum by Julius Spada (Atlas Obscura User)
Imperial War Museum by Luke J Spencer (Atlas Obscura User)
Imperial War Museum by Luke J Spencer (Atlas Obscura User)
Imperial War Museum by Luke J Spencer (Atlas Obscura User)
Imperial War Museum by Luke J Spencer (Atlas Obscura User)
Imperial War Museum by Luke J Spencer (Atlas Obscura User)
Imperial War Museum by Luke J Spencer (Atlas Obscura User)
Imperial War Museum by Luke J Spencer (Atlas Obscura User)
Imperial War Museum by Luke J Spencer (Atlas Obscura User)
Imperial War Museum by Luke J Spencer (Atlas Obscura User)
Imperial War Museum by Julius Spada (Atlas Obscura User)
Imperial War Museum by Luke J Spencer (Atlas Obscura User)
Imperial War Museum by Luke J Spencer (Atlas Obscura User)
Imperial War Museum by Luke J Spencer (Atlas Obscura User)
Imperial War Museum by null
Imperial War Museum by null
Imperial War Museum by null
Imperial War Museum by null
Imperial War Museum by null
Imperial War Museum by null
Imperial War Museum by null
Imperial War Museum by null
Imperial War Museum by null
Imperial War Museum by null
Imperial War Museum by null
Imperial War Museum by null
Imperial War Museum by null
Imperial War Museum by null
Imperial War Museum by null
Imperial War Museum by null
Imperial War Museum by null
Imperial War Museum by null
Imperial War Museum by null

Highlights

Step into the Imperial War Museum, where the haunting tributes of WWI trenches, military exhibits, and poignant personal stories come to life in a strikingly modern setting.  

Lambeth Rd, London, SE1 6HZ, United Kingdom Get directions

iwm.org.uk

Information

Static Map

Lambeth Rd, London, SE1 6HZ, United Kingdom Get directions

+44 20 7416 5000
iwm.org.uk

Features

wifi

Last updated

Jul 7, 2025

Powered By

You might also like

Terms of Use • Privacy Policy • Cookie Policy
 © 2025 Postcard Technologies, Inc.
@atlasobscura

"The Imperial War Museum has been a poignant and moving memorial to Great Britain’s involvement in modern conflict for nearly a hundred years. In 1917, the British War Cabinet voted to create a national war museum that would record the horrific events still taking place in Flanders. The intention was to collect and preserve artifacts that would tell the story of the First World War, and Britain and her Empire’s role in it. In 1936, the collection was moved to the former home of the Bethlem Royal Hospital in Lambeth, South London. Better known as the infamous Bedlam, the suitably foreboding and austere Victorian building was one of the world’s most notorious asylums and homes for the criminally insane. With the outbreak of World War II, the museum’s remit was extended to include all current wars; the museum’s collection today includes the recent Gulf conflicts. The museum itself was hit by over 40 German incendiary bombs during the Blitz, but the museum survived and has grown to become one of London’s most fascinating collections. The front lawn of the imposing former Victorian asylum is dominated by a pair of giant 15-inch guns from the Royal Navy’s HMS Ramillies and HMS Resolution, aimed in the direction of the River Thames. The main atrium is just as over-awing; suspended from the ceiling are an RAF Supermarine Spitfire that saw action in the Battle of Britain, as well as actual V1 and V2 rockets that terrorized London during the Blitz, and a Reuters news agency Land Rover that was hit by a rocket in Gaza in 2006.  The scope of the museum runs to over 10,000,000 artifacts, including such extraordinary items as the original bronze eagle that crowned the Reichs Chancellery in Berlin, Captain T.E. Lawrence’s own personal Arab headdress, and one of the few surviving German “Enigma” code machines. But it is the original First World War exhibit that continues to be the most affecting. Benefitting from a recent £40 million refurbishment to coincide with the 100th anniversary of the start of the Great War, most of the entire ground floor of the old hospital is given over to the “war to end all wars.” Gas masks, bullet-ridden signposts from the British front lines named for familiar home streets such as Tattenham Corner and Picadilly Circus, and barbaric-looking homemade trench clubs all speak to the horrors of the Western front that millions of men lived such desperate lives in.  Two artifacts on display are perhaps the most moving of all. The first is a torn sheet from a British army signal pad. Hand written in pencil and headlined “VERY SECRET,” it reads, “Zero hour will be at 3:50am tomorrow, 31st July.” Delivered to a front line commander, it was the dreaded order to go “over the top,” and began the Third Battle of Ypres, known as Passchendale. It was one of the most infamous battles of the war, known for the colossal number of casualties, and the heaviest rain storms seen in Flanders for 30 years, which turned the trenches into a nightmarish landscape of craters in which many soldiers drowned in the clogging mud. The hastily written signal ordered hundreds of thousands of men to their deaths in the shattered landscape of mud, treacherous shell craters, and barbed wire.  The item next to it is a letter written from an Emily Chitticks to her fiancee William Martin at the front: “My Dearest Will, I wonder how you are getting on. I shall be so relieved to get a letter from you. I can’t help feeling a bit anxious dear.....time seems so dull and weary without any news of you, if only this war was over dear and we were together again. It will be one day I suppose.” Unbeknownst to her, it was written the day after he was shot by a German sniper. The letter was returned to her with one word scribbled in red pencil on the envelope: KILLED. Letters to soldiers in the trenches were the only form of communication and were essential to morale. Emily’s letter would have been delivered in one of the 19,000 mail bags that crossed over the English channel each day in 1917. The Imperial War Museum has curated over 7,000 of these heartbreaking letters to loved ones. Emily died in 1974 having never married.  The letter poignantly highlights the far-reaching consequences of the simple battle order marked “Very Secret.” The Battle of Passchendale ended just over three months later at a cost of over half a million casualties, with little gains to show.  A trip to the Imperial War Museum is a sobering reflection on the horrific events that took place a hundred years ago. Harry Patch was the last British veteran of the Western Front to die, passing away in 2009. He is quoted in the First World War Gallery: “I’ve tried for 80 years to forget it. But I can’t.”" - ATLAS_OBSCURA

50 Obscure and Amazing Places to Visit in 2017
View Postcard for Imperial War Museum

Ramaswamy Narayanan

SerpAPI
Wonderful experience. If you care about. War history this is the place to go. Amazing collections of items. I learned a lot.. Very well organized. Handicap friendly. Excellent Museum shop and very friendly staff here. This was on my bucket list and I'm very happy to have had an opportunity to see this place and spend time. Thank you staff!

wallace yuen

SerpAPI
Excellent place for everyone who wants to know more about the history of the two world wars. The exhibitions covers political aspects, the battles and the life of the common people during the era. With the aid of the documents, photos and items during the time, visitors could have a profound feeling of the events. The museum also encourage visitors to think how the world wars related to them. An educational and meaningful place.

Soupy Tiger (GTA V Rockstar Editor)

SerpAPI
Just a five minute walk from Lambeth north underground, the IWM is easy to get to. The museum is free to access and has a massive coastal gun outside its doors. The museum runs live activities through the day at certain times but in general their is three floors of war history to see. From the WW1 to some more modern wars. They have some nice presentations that I wish not to spoil. A good way to fill two hours. They have a cafe inside. I would recommend if you have never been before.

Estelle Hopson

SerpAPI
Really well set out. You can look round for ages. The new Holocaust display is very humbling. Quite eerie but not in an uncomfortable way. Really makes you think how lucky we are. This is real History that all our young ones should have the chance to see and hear about.

Peter Hughes

SerpAPI
Yet another historic museum ticked off. Very informative and well staffed, loved the new second world war gallery, it certainly brought home the absolute pointlessness of war and its repercussions. All very neatly planned out with precision and maximum effect. Well worth it and it's FREE

Christopher Witt

SerpAPI
Both WW1 & WW2 exhibitions are well layed out with a broad range of items displayed. A lot of personal accounts have been included so you can understand what occurred on a human level and not just the global changing events. Canteen not bad, bit squashed. More than enough to see in a day.... Holocaust exhibition updated to give a very human based explanation of the terrors that occurred.... Recommended.

andy wood

SerpAPI
Fabulous and moving. A superb example of a modern museum, blending a number of fascinating objects with deep, involving context provided by video, audio and written word. The museum is split into several sections. I visited the First and Second World War areas, and after the effect that those sections had on me I felt unable to view the Holocaust area as I was already emotionally exhausted. The amount of personal items, with accompanying information putting them into context is truly engaging. I'm no historian but I did feel I understood the two Wars fairly well. The museum challenged and I believe deepened my understanding of the global and very local and personal effects of the period. I love an old fashioned museum with lots of tanks, planes and guns. IWM London certainly has plenty of those, but they are not the things I came away thinking about. I think this museum made me think about the past, present and future of our wonderful world, and species, more than any I've ever visited before.

David Geoghegan

SerpAPI
Was here during half term with my Grandson. To show him what this and many other people/countries went through during the war's. I think everyone should go and visit just to see the sacrifice people made for this country and other countries too. I would go back again. Great Museum .