We visited the London Docklands Museum on June 12. London wouldn't be London without the river and port that sustained it for 20 centuries, and the Docklands Museum interprets and celebrates that long history from Roman times to nearly the present. Among topics covered, more or less chronologically, are ships and shipping, the evolution of the port itself, docks and cargo handling, warehousing and distribution, the slave trade, sail and steam and the industrial revolution, the port during the many wars, particularly Napoleonic, WWI and WWII, the Docklands population over the centuries and its evolution, the later 20th century development of the Docklands area, and so on. And more. Much more. The museum fills two large floors of a huge old (1802) sugar warehouse on the West Indies Wharf, very close to today's popular Canary Wharf. Most of the Museum's collections are from the old London Port Authority, which went to the London Museum, were held for some years in storage, and then brought out to join with other collections when the Docklands Museum was created. It is all administered now by the London Museum, a splendid collection, beautifully displayed and interpreted. I'll just post some of our better pix, hoping they can tell some of the great story.

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The great bend of the river came to create Dog Island...once the canals and wharves were built, it became, sort of, actually, a real island |
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| A gibbet; looks very restful, once you're dead |
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| Sugar from the West |
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| Tea from the East |
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| The quays that make it an island |
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There was a vast exhibit on the slave trade, Britain's profit from it and eventual departure from it; and apologies; much of this museum is about justice and injustice...a continuing story; the Brits are uncomfortable with their history but are dealing with it honestly straightforwardly...unlike some nations... |
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| Earlier steam-powered vessel...note both side-wheeler and screw |
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| Street scene...depicting the vastness of the museum |
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Much art work adorns the collection...this, Charles Deane, Waterloo Bridge and the Lambeth Waterfront from Westminster Stairs, 1821 |
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| The rise of unions |
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| Inspections, standards, etc. |
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Sainsbury's (our favorite supermercado) had its beginnings in the Docklands, and funded much of this museum (and others) |
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| Anti-aircraft batteries in the river |
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Developed and manufactured in the Docklands, the cross-Channel pipeline that fed the Allied invasion at Normandy and its aftermath |
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Much of the Docklands area was bombed away in WWII, and the consequent suffering and displacement of the resident population became the story |
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| Moving on...in the 1960s |
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| Development |
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| And anti-development |
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| Stay tuned...the story continues right outside the museum's door |