Discover the best top things to do in Belfast City Region, United Kingdom including Ulster Transport Museum, Cultra Manor, North Down Museum, Irish Linen Centre and Lisburn Museum, Somme Heritage Centre, Museum at the Mill, The Ropewalk Maritime Heritage Visitor Centre, The White House.
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5.0 based on 5 reviews
The Ulster Transport Museum is part of National Museums NI. Explore one of the most comprehensive transport collections in Europe. You’ll find majestic locomotives, horse-drawn carriages, vintage motorbikes & cars.
I remember being here as a kid with my father and loving it and I wanted my kids to know all about the history of transport- it wasn’t always segways and microscooters. We had fun and maintained our distance from the others who were visiting. Disappointed that the air section was closed but understand why- it’s impossible to distance there. Great, fun day out and excellent value for money!
4.5 based on 71 reviews
This museum contains a popular Titanic exhibit featuring drawings by Thomas Andrew, the ship's designer and former Belfast resident.
4.5 based on 111 reviews
North Down Museum tells the story of the North Down area from the Bronze Age to the present day through a series of rooms, each dedicated to a particular era of history. Key artifacts on display include the Bronze Age Ballycroghan Swords, the Bangor Bell from the hugely important Bangor Abbey settlement, and the Raven Maps, the only complete folio of Plantation era maps in Ireland. North Down Museum is situated at the rear of the Town Hall, Bangor Castle, on Castle Park Avenue. The Castle, built for the Hon. R.E. Ward in 1852, had a courtyard and stables and the Museum has developed around these. North Down Museum is a FREE attraction in the heart of Bangor. Here you can also rest and enjoy a meal or snack in Coffee Cure, the Museum café.
The museum is very engaging.As a military buff the screen showing the dead of WW1 including several sets of brothers was moving.The Viking long house and monks cell are great.The staff are all lovely.Friendly.Heplful.Charming.The cafe was superb.Again the service was great and good value.
4.5 based on 133 reviews
Explore Ireland’s industrial heritage in the Irish Linen Centre & Lisburn Museum’s award-winning exhibition ‘Flax to Fabric: the Story of Irish Linen’. Trace the history of linen production in Ulster, from the earliest times to the present, and see live spinning and weaving demonstrations. Visitors can also learn about the early development of Lisburn in the Museum’s ‘Making of a Town: 17th Century Lisburn’ exhibition. The Museum offers free tours of historic Lisburn and Castle Gardens, as well as a range of free educational workshops for groups, including WWII, Ancient Egypt and Science Week. Contact reception for bookings. Please note: the Assembly Rooms and Old Market House galleries are currently closed while the building undergoes extensive renovation. They will re-open for your enjoyment in early 2014.
Just loved this place . History of linen Industry in Northern Ireland .so interesting and informative. Spinning and weaving demos by lovely people who have an excellent knowledge and love of the subject. Fascinating !
4.5 based on 171 reviews
Somme Museum The Somme Museum opened in 1994, it examines Ireland's role in the First World War, with special reference to local cross-community involvement in the three volunteer Divisions raised in Ireland: the 10th and 16th (Irish) Divisions, and the 36th (Ulster) Division. The Museum is fully registered and accredited and houses an extensive collection of material from the Great War period which is displayed on a rotational basis. The collection includes uniforms, medals, weapons and personal items which tell the stories of those who served, fought and experienced the First World War. Visitors to the Museum have an opportunity to experience the sights and sounds of the First World War as they make their way from the Home Rule Crisis to the Recruiting Office and on to the trenches of the Western Front. Audio visual displays and experienced and knowledgeable guides bring the experience to life.
Great spot that accurately describes the conditions, the weather and the lives of so many who left their families and homes and did not return had to endure in the trenches and blood soaked killing fields of the front line during the Battle of the Somme and other local engagements. First time I noticed my great grandfathers name engraved on a wooden plinth dedicated to both himself and others from the Donegal Rd area of Belfast. My grandmother, bless her remembered him leaving and never coming home, killed on 1st July 1916. RIP
4.0 based on 7 reviews
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