Sunday, 9 February 2020

221b BAKER STREET..... HOME OF SHERLOCK HOLMES



Last week I paid a visit to 221b Baker Street, the home of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's famous
fictional Detective Sherlock Holmes. And I was pleasantly surprised by the rooms in what is now
a museum, which first opened in 1990.
The house is actually sandwiched in between numbers 237 to 247 Baker Street and so it
required special permission by Westminster Council to be numbered 221b.

The house was first built in 1815 and for many years it was a Boarding house right up to 1936.
And it's creaky wooden floors can testify to it's age. But the museum is incredibly popular particularly
among foreign tourists and has quite a following among Japanese followers of Sherlock Holmes.
And although I didn't have long to wait to get in after buying my ticket from the splendid souvenir
shop, I then waited briefly in a small queue. And if you've ever passed the museum in
Baker Street in the high Summer you'll often see a queue stretching right down to the end of the
block.
I did want to take some photos of the souvenir shop but was told that I couldn't but that it would
be okay to take pictures in the museum. Well I was pleased the assistant told me that before I splashed
out £15 to visit the museum. Photography rules in London House tourist hotspots do seem to
fluctuate.
But once in, a pleasant young girl decked out in Victorian costume took us around the rooms very
briefly while giving us a bit of history on the culture of the world's greatest Detective. Then we were
free to meander around.
The main rooms are the Study and living room of Dr Watson and Mr Holmes as well as their
bedrooms. We also had a wander around Mrs Hudson's room, their well known Landlady.
And on the top floors we saw the wax model displays, a sort of who's who in the novels
rogue gallery.

For more information on the museum visit their official website.

THE SHERLOCK HOLMES MUSEUM BAKER STREET
Above is the main Study Room, the focal point of the museum.
It actually reminded me of a cluttered old antique shop in
Portobello Road. But it still had that olde worlde charm.
Below is Doctor Watson's desk with his many books, a copy of
The Times newspaper as well as some medical paraphernalia.

Below left is a rather stern looking Policemen all decked out
in a vintage Policeman's uniform from the Victorian period.
His main job is to listen out for a bell which then tells him to let
new visitors in the queue to enter the house. And he's always
the first person to ask about purchasing a museum ticket.


And below right is our very enthusiastic museum guide who gave
us an introduction to the rooms before we freely explored the house.

Above on a table in the study is Mr Holme's distinctive deerstalker hat,
a magnifying glass and that famous pipe. And could that bowler hat
belong to Doctor Watson?

Below is an interesting video of the house that was sanctioned
by the museum's official website.
I see that Doctor Watson makes an appearance. 

Above and below is Sherlock Holmes's bedroom.

Our ever helpful guide informed us that all these pictures on Mr Holmes's
bedroom wall were all murderers and serial killers from
those great novels.


Above and below is Doctor Watson's Room. 


Below is Mrs Hudson's Room


The top floor of the house has two rooms that feature wax models.

Above left is Mr Holmes's nemesis the evil Professor Moriarty.
A man that was once a mathematics professor but turned
into a master criminal.

And above right is King of the blackmailers Charles Augustus
Milverton getting his comeuppance after one blackmail too many.
His story featured in the Arthur Conan Doyle book The Adventures
of Charles Augustus Milverton.

I like the odd expression of the wax dummy on the right (below).
It reminds me of my own expression of disbelief when watching
the News on the BBC.



Above; A few shots taken at the front of the house while visitors
waited to enter the museum.

Above is the statue of Sherlock Holmes that is situated right outside
Baker Street Underground Station. The green dome of
Madam Tussauds can be seen in the distance.
 


11 comments:

  1. That was interesting and I was thinking it strange to have a museum devoted to a fictional character, but then I thought of Harry Potter and I expect there were others in the past. I checked and it is a private museum, presumably run for profit. But oh, the Victorian clutter. How could people have lived like that!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. The White House(USA)could soon be considered an museum. These even a fictional president character lock up inside. Plaque outside showing where democracy died.

      Delete
    2. Neil, Very witty. So the Impeachment failed. That must have added to your current woes.

      Delete
  2. Andrew, It is odd how all this could come about over a popular fictional character that
    never physically existed.

    Yet when I visited a similar house, the home of Charles Dickens, well he was a real person
    and he actually lived in that house. But you're right about the Harry Potter followers. They
    will literally visit anywhere in the U.K where parts of the films were shot.

    In the Conan Doyle books, Holmes's housekeeper/landlady was known to be fussy about Watson's
    and Holmes's untidiness. But after seeing that video above I was disappointed that neither
    Holmes or Watson was there to greet me on the day of my visit.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Any depiction or display of Holmes heroin addiction? Watson's hypodermic?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Neil, There was no obvious signs of his addictions that I could see.
      The video showed a few more close up details of various artifacts.

      Mind you, our Queen at the time, Queen Vicky was partial to a few
      illegal substances back then.

      Delete
    2. Neil, I only just noticed something rather strange looking on Holmes's bedside table.
      I wonder what it is.

      Delete
    3. Queen Victoria used to smoke marijuana for her, er, "lady's problems". It certainly wasn't illegal at the time, any more than opium was. The Victorians were mostly far less prudish than we are today.

      Delete
    4. Yes you're right. Our Monarch at the time was partial to what now might be called illegal substances, as I mentioned to Neil.
      Strange though how we seem to think that our British prudishness stems from the Victorian days.

      Good blog post you did on 'The Big Bang Theory.' What a shame that British tv comedy has all but vanished thanks to the BBC and their pc agenda.
      You just know that they're turning down new comedy writers because it doesn't fit in with their agenda.
      You wonder why they still claim to have a Comedy Department.
      Dee.

      Delete
  4. Remarkable museum. When I saw your picture of the violin, I instantly recalled Nigel Bruce complaining in "The Hound of the Baskervilles" how Holmes should have brought out his violin, to which Holmes did and started playing to tease him.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Ken, I think they must of put a new violin there in the main front living room as the violin in
      the video looks quite old.

      Yes I always preferred the pairing of Nigel Bruce and Basil Rathbone. Although when Rathbone
      delivers his lines at the speed of an express train, it often makes me laugh.
      But I think that the Museum have done a good job. It certainly has it's fans, which are even
      more visible in the Summer.

      Dee.

      Delete

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