Jewish Museum London

Address

Raymond Burton House, 129-131 Albert Street
London
London
NW1 7NB
United Kingdom

Phone

+44 20 7284 7384

History

The Jewish Museum was founded in 1932 by Professor Cecil Roth, Alfred Rubens and Wilfred Samuel. Originally located in Woburn House in Bloomsbury, it moved to an elegant early Victorian listed building in Camden Town in 1994. The London Museum of Jewish Life was founded in 1983 as the Museum of the Jewish East End with the aim of rescuing and preserving the disappearing heritage of London’s East End – the heartland of Jewish settlement in Britain. While the East End has remained an important focus, the museum expanded to reflect the diverse roots and social history of Jewish people across London, including the experiences of refugees from Nazism. It also developed an acclaimed programme of Holocaust and anti-racist education.

In 1995 the two museums were amalgamated. Between 1995 and 2007 the combined Jewish Museum ran on two sites, but with a long term aim to find the means to combine the two collections, activities and displays within a single site.

Following years of planning and fundraising the museum bought a former piano factory behind the Camden Town site and raised the required funds to combine and remodel the buildings. The new Museum opened to the public on 17 March 2010.

In 2015 the Jewish Museum London partnered with the Jewish Military Museum. The partnership has seen the Jewish Museum London assume care and responsibility for the Jewish Military Museum’s entire collection, research archive and its learning programme. Key objects from the Jewish Military Museum are now on display and integrated into the existing permanent galleries.

Archival and Other Holdings

The Museum collects objects, documents, photographs and oral testimonies in order to record and preserve the experiences of refugees from Nazism and Holocaust survivors. One of our most important collections relates to Leon Greenman, OBE, an English-born Auschwitz survivor who devoted his life to speaking about his experiences and campaigning against racism until his death in 2008.

Finding Aids, Guides, and Publication

Opening Times

Sunday: 10 a.m. - 5 p.m.

Thursday: 10 a.m. - 5 p.m.

Accessibility

  • Accessible lift serving all floors of the Jewish Museum London
  • Accessible lavatories are available on most floors
  • A wheelchair which can be booked for use within the museum
  • Services available for visitors with hearing impairments
  • Access for assistance dogs is allowed in all areas of the gallery.

More information: see here

Public Areas

There is full physical access to all public areas (including galleries, education spaces, shop, café and auditorium.

If you can help improve this information please contact us at feedback@ehri-project.eu.