Museum of the Home

The Museum of the Home, formerly the Geffrye Museum,[1] is a museum in the Geffrye Almshouses on Kingsland Road in Shoreditch, London. It explores home and home life from 1600 to the present day with a series of period room displays.[2]

Museum of the Home
Museum façade
Location of the Museum of the Home in London
Established1914 (1914)
LocationGeffrye Almshouses
136 Kingsland Road
London, E2
United Kingdom
Coordinates51.531742°N 0.076630°W / 51.531742; -0.076630
Visitors120,000 (annually)
DirectorSonia Solicari
Public transit access Hoxton
WebsiteMuseum of the Home

The museum is housed in 18th-century Grade I-listed almshouses, formerly belonging to the Ironmongers' Company.[3] These were built in 1714 thanks to a bequest by Sir Robert Geffrye, a former Lord Mayor of London and Master of the Ironmongers' Company.[4]

Several structures connected with the Museum are listed on the National Heritage List for England. The main museum building is Grade I listed and the niche in the northwest corner of the forecourt of the Museum is listed Grade II*.[5][6] The forecourt wall, gates and railings to the Museum are Grade II* listed, and the two K6 telephone boxes on the Kingsland Road outside the Museum are listed Grade II.[7][8][9]

In January 2018, the museum closed for a two-year £18m development project, and is due to reopen in 2020.[10] Until this closure, the main permanent displays were a series of room settings furnished and decorated to show the main living spaces and elements of domestic life through the centuries, reflecting changes in society, behaviour, style and taste.[11] The museum's change of name was announced in 2019.[12]

Slave Trader Statue Controversy

Following on from the Black Lives Matter protests around the country, and removal of slave trader statues of Edward Colston in Bristol, and the Statue of Robert Milligan in Tower Hamlets, the museum came under pressure to remove their own statue of the slave trader Robert Geffrye which is placed in pride of place above the main doors in their gardens. Over 4000 people signed a public petition calling on them to remove the statue.

In July 2020 the museum controversially decided to ignore the results of a public consultation that they had commissioned. In their public statement, the museum said "Overall, the response was in favour of removing the statue." however "Board of Trustees decided not to remove the statue."


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References

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