Panacea Museum

Museum · Bedford

Panacea Museum

Museum · Bedford

1

11 Newnham Rd, Bedford MK40 3NX, United Kingdom

Photos

Panacea Museum by null
Panacea Museum by The Panacea Museum on Facebook
Panacea Museum by The Panacea Museum on Facebook
Panacea Museum by gavlav (Atlas Obscura User)
Panacea Museum by Wikipedia (Public Domain)
Panacea Museum by null
Panacea Museum by null
Panacea Museum by null
Panacea Museum by null
Panacea Museum by null
Panacea Museum by null
Panacea Museum by null
Panacea Museum by null
Panacea Museum by null
Panacea Museum by null
Panacea Museum by null
Panacea Museum by null
Panacea Museum by null
Panacea Museum by null
Panacea Museum by null
Panacea Museum by null
Panacea Museum by null
Panacea Museum by null
Panacea Museum by null

Highlights

Victorian house museum detailing a religious society & sealed box  

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11 Newnham Rd, Bedford MK40 3NX, United Kingdom Get directions

panaceamuseum.org
@panaceamuseum

Information

Static Map

11 Newnham Rd, Bedford MK40 3NX, United Kingdom Get directions

+44 1234 353178
panaceamuseum.org
@panaceamuseum
𝕏
@panaceamuseum

Features

restroom
crowd family friendly
crowd lgbtq friendly
wheelchair accessible entrance
wheelchair accessible restroom

Last updated

Oct 26, 2025

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25 Places Commemorating Women Who Were Ahead of Their Time

"Preserving the teachings of the religious prophetess Joanna Southcott, the Panacea Museum also campaigns to finally open Southcott’s sealed box of revelations which has supposedly remained closed for over 200 years. Joanna Southcott, born 1750, began having religious visions around the age of 42, believing that she had supernatural contact with God and was the woman spoken of in the Book of Revelation. Southcott often talked of the coming of new messiah and messenger from God, and in her 60’s, she even claimed that she was pregnant with the holy child. His name was to be Shiloh. Unfortunately the pregnancy was a hoax (or as Southcott claimed, the child was immediately called to heaven upon its birth), and the religious maverick died not long after. By the time of her death it is said that she had near to 100,000 followers, however it was not her following that would be her lasting legacy, but the sealed box of visions she left behind. Before she died, Southcott collected what is believed to have been a number of her visions that would help save her followers. She sealed these things in a box that was not to be opened until a time of “national crisis.” The contents of the box were to shown only to the 24 (in Southcott’s time) bishops of the Church of England, who were then to study the findings for a full seven days. No one knows what is truly in the box, or for that matter if it is even still around.  In 1927, a publicist and psychic researcher named Harry Price claimed to have acquired the box and made a very public display of opening it. The contents of the Price box included such odds and ends as scraps of writing, a pistol, and a lottery ticket. However, devoted Southcottians such as the Panacea Society believe that Price’s box was a hoax and that they and they alone known where the true box lies. The Panacea Society in particular has been extremely vocal about trying to call the bishops together to open the box, going so far as to hire billboards in the 1970’s that carried the slogan, “War, disease, crime and banditry, distress of nations and perplexity will increase until the Bishops open Joanna Southcott’s box.” The Catholic church has refused to give any credence to the importance of Southcott’s Box. Today, the Panacea Society is known as the Panacea Charitable Trust and runs the Panacea Museum out of the house that was appointed to garrison the 24 bishops when they came to open the box. Each lush Victorian room walks visitors through the history and beliefs of the society, even displaying a replica of the Southcott box. The messiah has not yet returned for these religious devotees, but they may be more prepared than anyone when he does." - ATLAS_OBSCURA

https://www.atlasobscura.com/lists/25-places-commemorating-women-who-were-ahead-of-their-time
View Postcard for Panacea Museum

REBECCA SMITH - Glutarama

Google
We are so lucky to have some many places of interest in Bedford, UK. The Panacea Museum is a fascinating bit of history that many Bedford folk don't know about! The museum is free to visit you can make donations and support them by having something from the Café or buying a plant or the odd vegetable from a stand in the Garden of Eden...that's right, Bedford is home to a Garden of Eden. The staff are wonderful, super friendly and helpful. The café has simple snacks such as crisps, prepacked cakes and flapjacks and biscuits. My daughter was able to have a gluten free flapjack and a packet of gluten free custard creams. Altogether got two cups of tea, 1 carton apple juice, 2 flapjacks and custard creams and it all came to £6.50 AMAZING! Will defo go back again if passing even if just for the café and some peace in the Garden.

John Summers

Google
This is the most fascinating place in Bedford, set in a large Victorian house and gardens set in 1934, telling the story of the Panacean Society, a mysterious box, 24 Bishops and Octavia the self proclaimed Daughter of God, it is a intriguing story spanning 200 years, and so interesting you will end up reading every plaque. Catch the guided tour if you can, well worth it, and it’s free to enter, anyone with an interested in the bizarre or a unique British story will love it. Allow 2 -3 hours to view everything.

Peter Hadfield

Google
Really interesting place to visit, once the headquarters of the Panacea Society and home of 'Octavia,' the daughter of God (according to the followers,!) The Society was a Southcottian sect that really established itself in the years following the Great War and when the last member died in the first decade of the 21st century the Society ended and a charitable trust took over the properties and opened them as a museum. It's a fascinating window into a movement that was very significant in the 1920's and 30's but has largely been forgotten now. The museum is a real time capsule and it's free to visit. Peaceful gardens, preserved interiors, an incredible story and knowledgeable staff and volunteers. If you're in Bedford it's a must!

goz

Google
5+ star visit. Highly recommended. Very interesting museum to visit if you go to Bedford. It is surprising to see how people have lived and built this community/cult however you call it and how it ceased after so many decades. Garden of Eden was believed to be here… and a lot of interesting stories..

Jeremy Peake

Google
A fascinating museum, charting the life and times of a highly eccentric religious society. Set in the Panacea Society's former residencies, it contains many information packed rooms, pictorial displays, a beautifully kept garden and the society's chapel. Many of the rooms have been restored to look as they had in the society's heyday. The Founder"s House, home of the 'prophet' Octavia, almost feels as though it could still be inhabited. There's a charming tea room too. And it's free. What's not to like?!

Kay Tee

Google
Fascinating museum about the history of the Panacea Society, a relatively benign, very English middle class cult based right here in Bedford. Very worthwhile visiting if you have an interest in religions and beliefs. Excellent knowledgeable staff and interesting displays.

Louise

Google
Very unique museum and was pretty interesting. Free to get in. Nice little tea room very reasonably priced and nice grounds.

Michael Ridley

Google
Excellent - highly recommended. After 20+ years as a local resident, we finally visited on Saturday - spurred into action after reading "The Rapture" novel, set in the society. Our visit definitely exceeded expectations. Apart from the beautifully preserved period furnished rooms, gardens, and well presented displays, for me the real value was the way that the [often bizarre] activities of the society were presented in the context of their times, vital in helping to make sense of what would otherwise feel pretty inexplicable. Although it seems the 24 Bishops were never persuaded to come to Bedford to open the box, the social wider impact of the marketing and publicity efforts of the society in the interwar period seems to have been really remarkable. Who knows what they'd have managed had social media been around at the time. Sadly we were too late to sample the refreshments in the tea room, but there are some really collectable souvenirs for sale (based on some of the society's madder rules).