In this video, Sinead takes you on a virtual tour of London's Imperial War Museum. NEXT VIDEO: The Churchill War Rooms - ruclips.net/video/c8DggKaPGQ0/видео.html Want to book Sinead for a private tour? Contact our London Manager, Margaret: FTBFLondon@Gmail.Com. If you enjoyed this London tour, then please consider leaving Sinead a Tip at www.buymeacoffee.com/sinead (no account needed) or on Paypal at www.paypal.com/paypalme/sineadFTBF. Read our blog post on the Imperial War Museum - freetoursbyfoot.com/imperial-war-museum/
My grandfather lied about his age when he joined the army aged 14 to escape his strict father. He ended up in the Somme. When they went over the top German guns started firing. His Sargent pushed him into a bomb crater. He stayed there shivering. After the guns had stopped he came up and saw his battalion were all dead.
I've been to IWM 3x. My last time in an exhibit of walking through WWI trenches. The second was a simulation of sitting on a Underground platform during a bombing. I have never forgotten the experience. Prince Charles had once said that only 46% of British even know their own history of wars on their soil. When I was here I was gathering information for a book I was writing about 3 children evacuated from London to the Yorkshire Dales. I self-published, but it never made the mainstream. 1500 pages of actual events. Best to you, Sinead. Jane, Philadelphia
My mum was eight years old when the war started, and my dad a little older, both families lived just up the road from the war museum, Kennington underground station was almost a second home to my mum, and the Oval was my dad's "local", before she was evacuated, when an air raid warning sounded they would run like hell to get in the station, sometimes it would be full, and they would all have to get to the down to the Oval station. I was born just opposite the war museum, in a building that was originally Lambeth workhouse, and was converted for use as a hospital after they closed them all down. As kids we spent a lot of time in the museum, i can't tell you how much the place has changed over the years. Thank you for the visit, i really enjoyed it.
Hi Sinead during my basic army training we was taken to the imperial war museum just so that we got to know why we decided to serve queen and country (as was in the 1980s), just so we understood what our parents and grandparents had to live through and put up with and to show us why we made the decision to follow in their footsteps so to say
Thanks for bringing the Imperial War Museum to our attention, Sinead. I have a brother who's into the history of war; he'll definitely want to spend a couple hours here during our upcoming trip to London.
You used to be able to walk through "Old Fred" cockpit back in the day, so many things changed since I was there last .. 1990 used to be a crystalized woman caught in an atomic blast on display there it was gone for years after .. I just got a 1920's guide book from the IWM.. Granddads medals are on display IWM Duxford Airborne Museum..
@@Sineadlondontourguide I don't think you did and I watched the whole thing... might have missed it though as I'm a cloth eared clot. I'll look forward to that one! Heave a great one Sinead
Thank you Sinead, what a wonderful museum, another one for my list if I am lucky enough to get back to England for a holiday. Much love from New Zealand x
Karen in this museum it mentions a great RAF pilot Colin Gray. No recognition of him being a kiwi. You will also see a Chev truck belonging to the LRDG who had a lot of kiwis also in it but again no recognition.
The thing that struck me was that in general the people who lived through the privations of those wars were the most stoic , sweet , generous and righteous people you could meet . ✌️🕊️
As always a bright spot in my day. Really love when you think outside the box and show new sites. I joined right in the beginning of this channel and look forward to each of your lovely videos. Thank you again❤
Thank you for the wonderful video. I was fortunate enough to be able to visit the museum on a trip to London several years ago. The museum is a treasure. The most amazing thing I came across is easily missed, almost hidden away in a corner hallway. It's the actual British flag smuggled out of Singapore by some POWs when the city fell and secretly used in POW funerals during the war in one of the Japanese prison camps. Lord Mountbatten had that same flag flown as he accepted the Japanese surrender of Singapore in 1945. I was overwhelmed by being so close to such an amazing piece of history.
Hi Sinead.. i was stationed at Chelsea Barracks in 1978 and as a new bloke i was at a loose end one Sunday so decided to take a walk to the IWM.. it was great back then . but now it looks Amazing .. must go again soon.. Thanks for showing us round.
My first visit was as a child in the 1970s and i was overawed by the 15inch guns and the spitfire..i have been back many times since..thank you for taking us there..🙂👍❤️
Glad that you enjoyed the video! If you haven't done so already, you can hopefully check out our back catalogue of virtual London tours ruclips.net/user/FreeToursbyFootLondonvideos. There is more where this came from.
Glad you visited here Sinead i went there a few years ago and loved it! it looks like they have added some new exhibits so will have to return sometime! when its quiet!
Sinead, it’s been awhile since I have watched the shows- what have you done!? You look fantastic !! Informative as always and your charm shining bright!
Thank you for showing us this powerful museum. I can't believe you were in New York during 9/11. I was in my 6th grade science class watching it live on the computer. War is so sad.
Thank you Sinead for your RUclips Tour of the Imperial War Museum. In September I am visiting London at the beginning of the of tour sponsored by the National World War II Muesum, "Band of Brothers" England to the Eagles Nest. While in London I will see Churchill's War Room, the Imperial War Museum, and Chartwell. After London the tour will go to Aldbourne, Normandy Netherlands, Belgium, Luxembourg, Germany and Austria. Thanks for the sneak peak at the IWM! I am looking forward to my trip!
I enjoyed your video and subscrbed to view more of your work. I have visited this museum twice while visiting London with the US Navy. I was unable to see everything in 2 visits.I was locked inside on my first visit, as I was in the WI trench display and did not hear the warning about closing. When I was noticed a half hour later, the gentlman was shocked and polite. I plan to visit again and see what I have missed. Thank you for the videos.
As always excellent tour! I was able to here in March. So was curious to see how I did on my own versus with a professional. Of COURSE would have been better with Sinead! This is a great free museum. Two highlights were the explanation of how WW1 started. And the trenches. Also the cafe is good. And if like me you are not on a data plan they have free WiFi.
I toured this museum when I was in London some years ago. Wonderful to see. I also visited the RAF/Battle of Britain museum, the HMS Belfast, the Maritime Museum and visited several air museums including Duxford. So many great places to visit. p.s. I really enjoyed the aviation section of the Science Museum.
Glad that you enjoyed the video, Harold! If you haven't done so already, you can hopefully check out our back catalogue of virtual London tours ruclips.net/user/FreeToursbyFootLondonvideos. There is more where this came from.
Glad that you enjoyed the video! If you haven't done so already, you can hopefully check out our back catalogue of virtual London tours ruclips.net/user/FreeToursbyFootLondonvideos. There is more where this came from.
1 went around it in the late 1970s. Plenty of hardware, but they didn't have the reconstructions back then. Not sure which style I prefer. This portrays a sense of it for those who have not done much reading or other studies. It's a bit primary school level for those who know something about it all.
Glad that you enjoyed the video! If you haven't done so already, you can hopefully check out our back catalogue of virtual London tours ruclips.net/user/FreeToursbyFootLondonvideos. There is more where this came from.
Crazy that so much British History is stored in the least British area of the country. Get these exhibits travelling around the country to the descendants of our heroes.
McGuiness and Paisley came to be known as the Chuckle Brothers. I met Martin McGuiness once in a pub in Ireland when he was out canvassing with a local Sinn Fein candidate. He seemed quite bored and once he recognised my accent struck up a conservation as he knew I couldn't vote in an Irish Election. We mainly talked about the poor performance of the English Cricket side at the time as they were playing the Australians for the Ashes!
Travelled to London from northern ireland last October got a bus to imperial war museum left bus went into museum and had left purse on bus with money oster card bank card wasnt handed in had to get my daughter to come from Oxford st to rescue me ruined trip to museum
The Imperial War Museum is a pile of shit compared to what it was before it fell into Michael Ashcroft's hands and he ruined it (remodeling it and taking out whole floors of the building, losing most of the best exhibits and making a whole floor...the Ashcroft Gallery, a vanity project to display his collection of VCs, this from someone who never served, enjoys non dom status to avoid UK taxes and holds citizenship of three nationalities and is a Peer, which is controversial in itself as he is a tax exile....officially, but not exile at all in reality). I used to live near the Imperial and being an ex soldier from a family of soldiers was a regular visitor. I've seen it before and after. Used to be, top three, now it's not even top ten. The building is of as much interest as the museum itself being as it was the famous Bethlehem Insane asylum (Bedlam) where the wealthy used to pay to ogle the lunatics. There should, I feel, be some mention of, or exhibit dedicated to that, in the museum. God the ghosts that must haunt that place. All those weapons that have been used, particularly the WW1 trench fighting weapons.....brutal. And the tormented ghosts of the inmates. Night At The Museum, would be a horror movie if it were set there.
You are absolutely right. I visited the museum twice. Once in 1982 and in october 2022. I was shocked that last time. The only intersting section was WW1. The rest is amateuristic and woke. I expected to see a lot about the Falklands War which was goin on during my first trip to London, but there was nothing besides a hand full of pictures. No uniforms, no weapons, nothing! Nothing about Korea, as if that never happened. Don’t go there. If you really want to see a good museum you have to go to France, Belgium and the Netherlands.
I visited the IWM a week after it reopened and hated it, money wasted, I preferred the original museum, adding shops and a lot of pieces that had nothing to with the original concept was just plain stupid a total disappointment, the Jagdpanther was removed & WW2 is more or less bypassed....they have a lot of pieces stored in warehouses that never see the light of day.....the RAF museum is far superior and if you fancy taking the time a trip to Bovington Tank Museum near Weymouth will be far more rewarding.
Sorry, I couldn't get past the first big misidentification: that is NOT a German "V-2 rocket". That is a Japanese, Yokosuka MXY-7 Ohka", suicide rocket "plane", from late in the Pacific war. Sometimes called the "Baka" or "fool". Given who and what this channel is suposed to be, that is pitiful. They would resemble each other like a shark would resemble a Manta Ray.
Guapo I can confirm that the information was according to The IWM guide book and Guide stationed directly beside me that I in fact identified it correctly Obviously I am not an expert on any aspect of the Military ,Military Weapons or Warfare but this I am positive has been identified correctly As for who and what The Channel is supposed to be we are guides but also human and we will make occasional mistakes but thankfully we have good people like yourself to correct us but hopefully not criticise our efforts Sinead
This is a really great museum, but I must say that I liked it much, much, much more the way it was laid out in the 1960's to 1970's. There were so many more exhibits and more varied.
In this video, Sinead takes you on a virtual tour of London's Imperial War Museum. NEXT VIDEO: The Churchill War Rooms - ruclips.net/video/c8DggKaPGQ0/видео.html
Want to book Sinead for a private tour? Contact our London Manager, Margaret: FTBFLondon@Gmail.Com.
If you enjoyed this London tour, then please consider leaving Sinead a Tip at www.buymeacoffee.com/sinead (no account needed) or on Paypal at www.paypal.com/paypalme/sineadFTBF.
Read our blog post on the Imperial War Museum - freetoursbyfoot.com/imperial-war-museum/
Wow. what a incredible War museum. 10/10. my sister Ella would love this museum to death.
My grandfather lied about his age when he joined the army aged 14 to escape his strict father. He ended up in the Somme. When they went over the top German guns started firing. His Sargent pushed him into a bomb crater. He stayed there shivering. After the guns had stopped he came up and saw his battalion were all dead.
This story is both inspiring and terrifying
Thank you sincerely for sharing
Sinead
I've been to IWM 3x. My last time in an exhibit of walking through WWI trenches. The second was a simulation of sitting on a Underground platform during a bombing. I have never forgotten the experience. Prince Charles had once said that only 46% of British even know their own history of wars on their soil. When I was here I was gathering information for a book I was writing about 3 children evacuated from London to the Yorkshire Dales. I self-published, but it never made the mainstream. 1500 pages of actual events. Best to you, Sinead. Jane, Philadelphia
Thanks for sharing, Jane! That book sounds absolutely fascinating!
You've given me yet another reason to return for a visit! Thank you again for another lovely walking tour!
We look forward to seeing you back here, Deborah!
My mum was eight years old when the war started, and my dad a little older, both families lived just up the road from the war museum, Kennington underground station was almost a second home to my mum, and the Oval was my dad's "local", before she was evacuated, when an air raid warning sounded they would run like hell to get in the station, sometimes it would be full, and they would all have to get to the down to the Oval station.
I was born just opposite the war museum, in a building that was originally Lambeth workhouse, and was converted for use as a hospital after they closed them all down.
As kids we spent a lot of time in the museum, i can't tell you how much the place has changed over the years.
Thank you for the visit, i really enjoyed it.
Wow - thank you for sharing that with us!
Hi Sinead during my basic army training we was taken to the imperial war museum just so that we got to know why we decided to serve queen and country (as was in the 1980s), just so we understood what our parents and grandparents had to live through and put up with and to show us why we made the decision to follow in their footsteps so to say
This is amazing Tony thank you for sharing
Sinead
So did I, 1987.
Thanks for bringing the Imperial War Museum to our attention, Sinead. I have a brother who's into the history of war; he'll definitely want to spend a couple hours here during our upcoming trip to London.
We hope he enjoys it!
Thank you so much for the virtual tour. It was fascinating!
You are most welcome :)
Haven't been to the Imperial War Museum for many years. This video had made me want to go again.
Do it, Robbo!
You used to be able to walk through "Old Fred" cockpit back in the day, so many things changed since I was there last .. 1990 used to be a crystalized woman caught in an atomic blast on display there it was gone for years after .. I just got a 1920's guide book from the IWM.. Granddads medals are on display IWM Duxford Airborne Museum..
and the IWM building was Bedlam Hospital
Incredible history, also very sad, terrific tour Sinead !
Thanks Levi
Hope your well ❤
Fun fact you didn't mention. The IWM is in the building of what was previously the Bethlem Royal Hospital
Did I not am planning an asylum
Tour in the future Liam
Sinead
@@Sineadlondontourguide I don't think you did and I watched the whole thing... might have missed it though as I'm a cloth eared clot.
I'll look forward to that one!
Heave a great one Sinead
She did mention it - but it got cut from the final version! Soon, we'll have an option for you to see the uncut footage :)
@@ToursbyFootLondon Ahhhh! That'll explain it!
Bedlam
Thank you Sinead, what a wonderful museum, another one for my list if I am lucky enough to get back to England for a holiday. Much love from New Zealand x
We hope to meet you Karen when you return
Sinead
@@Sineadlondontourguide Thank you Sinead, that would be amazing x
Karen in this museum it mentions a great RAF pilot Colin Gray. No recognition of him being a kiwi. You will also see a Chev truck belonging to the LRDG who had a lot of kiwis also in it but again no recognition.
The thing that struck me was that in general the people who lived through the privations of those wars were the most stoic , sweet , generous and righteous people you could meet . ✌️🕊️
That was a great but sad look around in the museum thank you Sinead for taking us inside.
A good way to describe it. Glad you enjoyed the tour!
Absolutely an amazing place!! So full of knowledge ❤ Thank you
Pleased to see you liked it, Leonora!
My week is made, another brilliant museum tour with the amazing Sinead. Done with compassion and respect, I might add. Brava.
Glad we could make your week, Karen :)
An excellent choice for a tour. I haven't been there since my mum took me in the early seventies. Your video has reminded me a visit is long overdue.
Another hidden gem I must admit
Sinead
Thank you for this amazing tour, Sinead!
A pleasure Maria
Thanks for watching
Sinead
As always a bright spot in my day. Really love when you think outside the box and show new sites. I joined right in the beginning of this channel and look forward to each of your lovely videos. Thank you again❤
Oh I remember one of our consistent loyal followers
Thank you enormously ❤
Thanks Sinead another great tour of this wonderful museum hope we get to visit one day Graeme & Jane (Australia)❤
We hope to meet you both one day
Sinead
Such a fascinating video,yet incredibly sad isn’t it. Thank you for this 🙂.❤️🇨🇦
Sinead, once again you outdid yourself...why should it shock anyone Sinead is simply amazing... have a great weekend my friend, best wishes, Kandy
really great video sinnead,very interesting world war 2 video tour.thank you sinead.another great tour.
Thank you for the wonderful video. I was fortunate enough to be able to visit the museum on a trip to London several years ago. The museum is a treasure. The most amazing thing I came across is easily missed, almost hidden away in a corner hallway. It's the actual British flag smuggled out of Singapore by some POWs when the city fell and secretly used in POW funerals during the war in one of the Japanese prison camps. Lord Mountbatten had that same flag flown as he accepted the Japanese surrender of Singapore in 1945. I was overwhelmed by being so close to such an amazing piece of history.
That's amazing! Thank you for sharing with us.
Sinead you are a woman after my own heart this tour is right up my alley thank you sooo much
Ah bless you Glenn thanks as always
Sinead
Definitely want to visit this when I get to London and the War Rooms. Thank you very much!
You are most welcome, Leonard!
Another great tour, and thanks very much Sinead -you could read out the train timetable and make it sound great !
Hi Sinead.. i was stationed at Chelsea Barracks in 1978 and as a new bloke i was at a loose end one Sunday so decided to take a walk to the IWM.. it was great back then . but now it looks Amazing .. must go again soon.. Thanks for showing us round.
Thanks for sharing, Jay! Glad you liked it :)
My first visit was as a child in the 1970s and i was overawed by the 15inch guns and the spitfire..i have been back many times since..thank you for taking us there..🙂👍❤️
Glad we could bring you back again, Michael!
Another amazing narration by Sinead, this place is definitely on our schedule in May 2024
Glad you liked this one! There is SO much more we couldn't even show - you will have a great time!
Sinead and war musuems, 😍😍😍 am i in heaven??
You must be!
Fascinating …great snapshot well done 😊
Glad that you enjoyed the video! If you haven't done so already, you can hopefully check out our back catalogue of virtual London tours ruclips.net/user/FreeToursbyFootLondonvideos. There is more where this came from.
Glad you visited here Sinead i went there a few years ago and loved it! it looks like they have added some new exhibits so will have to return sometime! when its quiet!
Definitely worth doing, Beverley!
Honestly, you are a wonderful tour guide, and the most beautiful thing is walking, sport and saving money💞💝
We second that Hanna
Sinead
Another great video sinead !!
Glad you liked it!
It's been awhile since I've seen you. Good to see you survived the Coronation. Enjoy your summer and take us with you.
Heading down again tomorrow Tom for The Trooping the Colour
I may as well pay rent there 🤣
@@Sineadlondontourguide isn't today Garter day @ Windsor?
@@tommcdonald1873 it was Tom yesterday
Should have been there will apply for tickets next year
Now this is somewhere I wouldn't want to miss.
It's so underrated!
Wonderful place to visit. Highly recommended
Agreed, Stephen!
I really enjoyed this video@you have a lovely channel.Have a lovely weekend debs xx....
We are glad you're enjoying our work, Debs! x
@@ToursbyFootLondon my pleasure you have a lovely channel debs xx
Sinead, it’s been awhile since I have watched the shows- what have you done!? You look fantastic !! Informative as always and your charm shining bright!
Greg your always a pleasure
Sinead
My late father worked in the cinema in the museum in the late 1960s/early 1970s, my sister and I spent most of our school holidays there
Thanks for sharing, Tony!
Thank you for showing us this powerful museum. I can't believe you were in New York during 9/11. I was in my 6th grade science class watching it live on the computer. War is so sad.
Terrifying time New Yorker resilience is astounding though
Sinead
Thank you Sinead for your RUclips Tour of the Imperial War Museum. In September I am visiting London at the beginning of the of tour sponsored by the National World War II Muesum, "Band of Brothers" England to the Eagles Nest. While in London I will see Churchill's War Room, the Imperial War Museum, and Chartwell. After London the tour will go to Aldbourne, Normandy Netherlands, Belgium, Luxembourg, Germany and Austria. Thanks for the sneak peak at the IWM! I am looking forward to my trip!
Wow - that trip sounds amazing! We hope you have a great time :)
Fabulous Sinead
😊🏴☠️
Glad you liked this one, Alan :)
Thank u Sinead , grate tour and very interesting , iv never seen them butterfly bombs b4
That was a new one for us, too!
Hi, awesome live video tour. I enjoyed it how are you? I'm doing well. Have a great day 😊
Very well Michelle lovely to hear from you as always
Sinead
I enjoyed your video and subscrbed to view more of your work. I have visited this museum twice while visiting London with the US Navy. I was unable to see everything in 2 visits.I was locked inside on my first visit, as I was in the WI trench display and did not hear the warning about closing. When I was noticed a half hour later, the gentlman was shocked and polite. I plan to visit again and see what I have missed. Thank you for the videos.
Welcome to the channel, Richard :)
As always excellent tour! I was able to here in March. So was curious to see how I did on my own versus with a professional. Of COURSE would have been better with Sinead! This is a great free museum. Two highlights were the explanation of how WW1 started. And the trenches. Also the cafe is good. And if like me you are not on a data plan they have free WiFi.
Thank you lovely delighted you enjoyed it
Sinead
Hi Sinead,
This video is going to be a good one 👍
Did it live up to your expectations? :)
I toured this museum when I was in London some years ago. Wonderful to see. I also visited the RAF/Battle of Britain museum, the HMS Belfast, the Maritime Museum and visited several air museums including Duxford. So many great places to visit. p.s. I really enjoyed the aviation section of the Science Museum.
Sounds like it was a great trip!
That is my Harrier hanging up in there.
The IWM should acquire, from Uruguay, the Reichsadler that was recently recovered from the wreck of the Graf Spee.
Thanks for the Video 👍😀
Glad that you enjoyed the video, Harold! If you haven't done so already, you can hopefully check out our back catalogue of virtual London tours ruclips.net/user/FreeToursbyFootLondonvideos. There is more where this came from.
Great video. Thanks
Our pleasure, Doreen!
looks fantastic
Agreed!
It is an amazing museum to visit.
Agreed, Paul!
This was a great tour. I was in the army in the USA. I was wondering if you are going to do anymore on the cemetery?
Oh yes, more cemeteries to come!
Would it be practical to do both the LIWM and HMS Belfast in the same day? If not, which would you recommend as the better choice?
Plenty of time for both
IWM allow for 3 hours in the morning and HMS in the afternoon x
Fab stuff !
Glad that you enjoyed the video! If you haven't done so already, you can hopefully check out our back catalogue of virtual London tours ruclips.net/user/FreeToursbyFootLondonvideos. There is more where this came from.
1 went around it in the late 1970s. Plenty of hardware, but they didn't have the reconstructions back then. Not sure which style I prefer. This portrays a sense of it for those who have not done much reading or other studies. It's a bit primary school level for those who know something about it all.
Fair comments, Andrew. Thank you for sharing!
Thank you I will never make it to this museum but you have given me a great idea as to what it would be like thank you. 🇺🇸
So glad we could share it with you :)
That was good. Just up my alley…
Glad to hear it, Chuck :)
hi Sinead air combat duties are known as sorties
Thanks for this Tony
Sinead
Why would a Kamakazi need a life raft?
When I used to live in london I always visited the imperial war museum
We are lucky to have so many great museums on our doorstep!
They have Panther and Tiger tank ?
Yes they have both :)
My great uncle Fred died in battle of the Somme
And sadly the freedoms and way of life your great uncle fought for are fast disappearing.
Battle of The Somme one of the deadliest battles in British history and all of human history
@@Sineadlondontourguide yes and sadly there are still soldiers missing in action from the battle field
Very Intresting
Glad you thought so, Steve :)
Is it true that the imperial war museum was before the bethlam?
It certainly is on the same site as Bedlam
The former central administration block of the hospital became home to the Imperial War Museum.
Thanks!
James thank you sincerely this is so generous x
OUTSTANDING 🤔😔😊👍
Glad that you enjoyed the video! If you haven't done so already, you can hopefully check out our back catalogue of virtual London tours ruclips.net/user/FreeToursbyFootLondonvideos. There is more where this came from.
Looking more Lovelier than ever
How lovely of you
Thank you
Sinead
Luv to see the school kids with pencil pen and paper
I was there many moons ago
Time for a revisit?
Crazy that so much British History is stored in the least British area of the country. Get these exhibits travelling around the country to the descendants of our heroes.
Fair comment, Ian!
I worked there
Hey Sinead!
Hey lovely 👋
McGuiness and Paisley came to be known as the Chuckle Brothers. I met Martin McGuiness once in a pub in Ireland when he was out canvassing with a local Sinn Fein candidate. He seemed quite bored and once he recognised my accent struck up a conservation as he knew I couldn't vote in an Irish Election. We mainly talked about the poor performance of the English Cricket side at the time as they were playing the Australians for the Ashes!
A conversation as old as time, Marcus..!!
Have you done the Army Museum?
Not yet :)
Lest we forget.🇺🇸🇦🇺🇬🇧🇳🇿
My Mum lived thru2 world wars i was born in 1944 she told me about 40 days & nights of bombing inLondon
♥
I really wish I would have made the time to visit when I was in London last summer. Looks like I need another trip!
Tell our government this they don’t like our history.
They're about to go on holiday so probably aren't watching..! ;)
1:15
Travelled to London from northern ireland last October got a bus to imperial war museum left bus went into museum and had left purse on bus with money oster card bank card wasnt handed in had to get my daughter to come from Oxford st to rescue me ruined trip to museum
Oh wow - what a palaver, Christine! What a rubbish way too pend you holiday :(
Okara tu caj maren bagejaka
The Imperial War Museum is a pile of shit compared to what it was before it fell into Michael Ashcroft's hands and he ruined it (remodeling it and taking out whole floors of the building, losing most of the best exhibits and making a whole floor...the Ashcroft Gallery, a vanity project to display his collection of VCs, this from someone who never served, enjoys non dom status to avoid UK taxes and holds citizenship of three nationalities and is a Peer, which is controversial in itself as he is a tax exile....officially, but not exile at all in reality). I used to live near the Imperial and being an ex soldier from a family of soldiers was a regular visitor. I've seen it before and after. Used to be, top three, now it's not even top ten. The building is of as much interest as the museum itself being as it was the famous Bethlehem Insane asylum (Bedlam) where the wealthy used to pay to ogle the lunatics. There should, I feel, be some mention of, or exhibit dedicated to that, in the museum. God the ghosts that must haunt that place. All those weapons that have been used, particularly the WW1 trench fighting weapons.....brutal. And the tormented ghosts of the inmates. Night At The Museum, would be a horror movie if it were set there.
You are absolutely right. I visited the museum twice. Once in 1982 and in october 2022. I was shocked that last time. The only intersting section was WW1. The rest is amateuristic and woke. I expected to see a lot about the Falklands War which was goin on during my first trip to London, but there was nothing besides a hand full of pictures. No uniforms, no weapons, nothing! Nothing about Korea, as if that never happened. Don’t go there. If you really want to see a good museum you have to go to France, Belgium and the Netherlands.
Thanks for sharing your thoughts, Tim! Definitely something to ruminate on.
I used to love visiting this museum before the refurbishment a decade ago. There was so much to see and learn about. It feels shockingly empty now.
Great video, but it is a Humber, not a Hummer. One was British and the other not.
Thanks for the correction, Michael!
This was a psychiatric hospital before it was a museum.
You are right, Rachel!
I visited the IWM a week after it reopened and hated it, money wasted, I preferred the original museum, adding shops and a lot of pieces that had nothing to with the original concept was just plain stupid a total disappointment, the Jagdpanther was removed & WW2 is more or less bypassed....they have a lot of pieces stored in warehouses that never see the light of day.....the RAF museum is far superior and if you fancy taking the time a trip to Bovington Tank Museum near Weymouth will be far more rewarding.
We'll have to put those two onto our list!
Sorry, I couldn't get past the first big misidentification: that is NOT a German "V-2 rocket". That is a Japanese, Yokosuka MXY-7 Ohka", suicide rocket "plane", from late in the Pacific war. Sometimes called the "Baka" or "fool". Given who and what this channel is suposed to be, that is pitiful. They would resemble each other like a shark would resemble a Manta Ray.
No, Sinéad is correct. The V2 is standing behind the MXY-7. It is green in colour.
Guapo I can confirm that the information was according to The IWM guide book and Guide stationed directly beside me that I in fact identified it correctly
Obviously I am not an expert on any aspect of the Military ,Military Weapons or Warfare but this I am positive has been identified correctly
As for who and what The Channel is supposed to be we are guides but also human and we will make occasional mistakes but thankfully we have good people like yourself to correct us but hopefully not criticise our efforts
Sinead
This is a really great museum, but I must say that I liked it much, much, much more the way it was laid out in the 1960's to 1970's. There were so many more exhibits and more varied.
You are not alone have heard this so many times
Sinead
im sure you are following me about I was there last week lol
Thanks!