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    Cutty Sark
    Cutty Sark Open daily 10am - 5pm Last entry 4.15pm Adult: £22 | Child: £11 Members go free
    Free National Maritime Museum
    National Maritime Museum Open daily 10am-5pm Last entry 4.15pm Free entry Booking recommended
    Free Queen's House
    Queen's House Open daily 10am - 5pm Last entry 4.15pm Free entry Booking recommended
    Royal Observatory
    Royal Observatory Open daily 10am-7.45pm Last entry 7pm Adult: £24 | Child: £12 Members go free
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    World Ocean Day A family-friendly celebration of our ocean at the National Maritime Museum
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    350 years of Royal Observatory Greenwich Celebrate the anniversary of one of the most important scientific sites in the world
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    Cutty Sark Rig Climb Experience life at sea and climb the rigging of one of London's true icons
  • Stories
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    Turning our view of the world inside out: introducing the new Ocean Map The National Maritime Museum's Ocean Map reminds us just how much of the Earth is covered by water – and how important the ocean is to our planet
    Turner's 'The Battle of Trafalgar': a maligned masterpiece? J.M.W. Turner's vast naval scene is a treasure of the Royal Museums Greenwich collection, but why was it so controversial when it was unveiled in 1824?
    Nina Baker: one of the first women navigation officers in the Merchant Navy Learn about Dr Nina Baker’s struggle to become one of the first women navigation officers in the British Merchant Navy
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    Collections Online Search our online database and explore our objects, paintings, archives and library collections from home
    The Prince Philip Maritime Collections Centre Come behind the scenes at our state-of-the-art conservation studio
    Caird Library Visit the world's largest maritime library and archive collection at the National Maritime Museum
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Museum blog

Go behind the scenes with our expert curators, astronomers, conservators and library & archive team

21 Jul 2016
The ‘Armada’ portrait and Elizabethan propaganda
What was the legacy of the defeat of the Spanish Armada and Elizabeth I's famous Tilbury speech, and what can the Armada Portrait tell us about it?
27 May 2016
Who won the Battle of Jutland?
Curator Andrew Choong tries to make sense of the First World War's greatest sea battle.
12 May 2016
Passenger Lists to North America
Our Librarian Penny Allen gives advice on researching passenger information using the museums library and archive.
11 Mar 2016
Mapping untold stories: women in the London chart trade
Thanks to the work of librarians and curators at the Osher Map Library in Maine, USA, we now know a lot more about the range of women’s involvement in the map trade. Their work highlights the variety of roles women occupied, working as surveyors, compilers, engravers, publishers, and sellers. Looking at the chart trade in earlier nineteenth-century London similarly reveals women were involved in a number of ways, all integral to the provision of navigational information to seagoing vessels. Our Curator of Cartography, Megan Barford, reveals the vital role women played in aiding navigation at sea.
29 Feb 2016
Stripes and the Sea: the History of the Breton Top
Maritime history has always influenced fashion - and no object more so than the Breton Top. But where did the history of the famous stripes begin?
12 Feb 2016
The sex life of Samuel Pepys
Curator Kristian Martin looks at the notorious sex life of the famous diarist Samuel Pepys.
08 Feb 2016
Queer histories in the Navy
As part of LGBT History Month author and LGBT/gender historian, Jo Stanley, discusses queer history in the navy.
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