fortune E.
Google
This is the 4-room house museum of the famed Suffragette Emmeline Pankhurst. Although tiny, it's fantastic.
The staff are welcoming, helpful, charming & passionate advocates for women's rights. I loved the colorful REBEL! t-shirts so much I bought one myself.
The cafe/tearoom features a wide choice of teas you basically make yourself, a few biscuits & some fruit & nut bars. It's quirky in that definitely British way. You'll love it.
The largest room features a timeline of the Suffragette movement, its success with the labour movement to improve worker's rights, and how that v energy has carried into the peace movement.
The front room is the family room describing the Pankhurst family, their activities & their influences during the Victorian era, as well as post-WWI.
The middle room offers an engaging 15-minute summary of Suffragette history as well as Pankhurst's passionate part in its tumultuous events as they strove to gain the right to vote in the face of media ridicule & brutal government over-reaction, an over-reaction that only served to radicalize otherwise normal upper-middle-class mothers.
The back parlor is a gorgeous Art Noveau room with amazing wainscoting, a beautiful wallpaper of twisting plants, and e original period furniture.
This is the very room in which Pankhurst held the first meeting of the Suffragettes, committing themselves to the struggle for women's rights.
The museum is a bit hard to find as it's hidden at the back of a hospital parking lot. But walk towards the street corner. You'll see a gate that takes you through the calm & tidy Suffragette garden along a side path that twists around the building to the front door.
In the summer you'll want to follow the museums advice & purchase your £5 ticket in advance, as the place could get crowded very quickly.
This tiny museum is surprisingly relevant in light of today's events in both the US & the UK. I highly recommend for both women & men.
And remember: REBEL. Stand up lawfully for women's civil rights. Refuse to go backwards.