Port Sunlight Museum

“A well-presented and fascinating museum where the main exhibit is the town it’s located in” - VisitEngland Assessor

LOCATION

Port Sunlight, Merseyside

Assessed by
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Our Inspector's view

Port Sunlight is a beautifully preserved ‘model village’. Created by William Hesketh Lever in 1888, it was built to house workers from Lever’s nearby soap factory. The architecture of the village is endlessly fascinating, and is largely unchanged since its construction. The museum details the history of Port Sunlight, William Lever and the Lever company. Free parking across the village, tea room, shop.

Awards, accolades & Welcome Schemes

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Quality Assured Visitor Attraction
Port Sunlight Museum
Port Sunlight Museum and Garden Village, 23 King George's Drive, Port Sunlight, WIRRAL, Merseyside, CH62 5DX

Features

Children
  • Suitable for children of all ages
Facilities
  • Parking onsite
  • Parking nearby
Accessibility
  • Fully accessible
  • Accessible toilets
Opening times
  • Opening Times: 10am - 5pm, Wednesday to Sunday

About the area

Discover Merseyside

A metropolitan county on the River Mersey, with Liverpool as its administrative centre, Merseyside incorporates the towns of Bootle, Birkenhead, St Helena, Wallasey, and Southport. In the 19th century, Liverpool was England’s second greatest port, and the area has been affected by urban deprivation and unemployment. 

When the port of Chester silted up in medieval times, Liverpool took up the slack. The first dock was built in 1715 and the port came to prominence with the slave trade. Following abolition, the port grew to a seven-mile stretch of docks, busy with cargoes of cotton, tobacco and sugar and the huge wave of emigration from Europe to the New World in the 19th and 20th centuries. In its turn, immigration brought an influx of people to Merseyside to join its expanding population, including many from Ireland fleeing the potato famines. In the second half of the 20th century, accessible air travel brought an end to the era of the ocean-going liners. Meanwhile, trade with Europe was picked up by the southeastern ports. Merseyside’s population dwindled, but it remains one of Britain’s most vibrant and interesting areas.

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