01/06/2026
Looking for your next summer read? June's book recommendation is from Alette - Britain’s Canals: Exploring Their Architectural and Engineering Wonders by Anthony Burton and Derek Pratt
"This book is about the architecture and engineering of British canals, with beautiful illustrations.
Read about the challenges canal builders faced and how they met them through design innovations.
The book covers locks and staircase locks, lock cottages, basins, yards and warehouses, pumping stations, bridges, junctions, aqueducts and tollhouses.
And of course, tunnels, including the Regent’s Canal Islington tunnel through which our seasonal tunnel trips run. A fascinating book."
📖 Pick up your copy of Britain’s Canals next time you visit our museum bookshop!
24/05/2026
We are so happy to be included in this map ❤️
There is plenty for children and families to see and do at the London Canal Museum. Our visitors tell us that they love how many of our exhibits can be touched, explored, and played with and how our small, family-friendly size makes for a relaxing, stress-free visit.
So, plan your trip with us to:
- take a trip back through time by dressing up in traditional canal children's clothes,
- explore our narrow boat Coronis and see how a family would have lived, and use our play food to lay out a delicious meal for your family,
- jump aboard our blue tractor and see what they were used for on the canals,
- peer down our ice well, and see if you can guess how deep it is,
- spend some time with Henrietta the horse and look at the sort of goods that were transported by the canals,
- play in our ice cream parlour and serve up some pompom ice creams after taking your family’s order and
- explore our shop, which has a gorgeous range of affordable, child-friendly products to take home as a reminder of your visit.
https://www.canalmuseum.org.uk/
To celebrate Local & Community History Month, we're drawing attention to local museums on our London Children’s Map!
Today, the spotlight’s on the London Canal Museum, where you can peer into a Victorian ice well that once stored ice imported from Norway!
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19/05/2026
Did you live on Battlebridge Basin — or do you still? If so, we'd love to hear from you.
Later this year, the London Canal Museum is planning a temporary exhibition tracing the history of the basin and its transition from industrial use to where people live and work. If you have lived here at any point from the 1970s onwards, your memories are part of that record.
We are looking for people willing to share anecdotes, sit for a recorded interview, or let us digitise photographs or personal ephemera from their time on the water. Families who raised children here, long-term residents who've watched the basin change, people who moved on years ago — all welcome.
If this is you, or you know someone who fits, please get in touch with Jane at [email protected].
18/05/2026
It's International Museum Day! 🏛️
We are usually closed on a Monday, but you can still look beneath the surface. Most museums were built to be galleries - ours was built to be a giant Victorian 'refrigerator'.
Beneath our ground floor lie two massive ice wells that once held tonnes of ice shipped from Norway. While physical access to the wells is reserved for our special 'Ice Weekend', you can still explore their history digitally today.
Use our digital guide to learn the story of the ice trade, then follow the link to our website to access our live, controllable 'well-cam'. Peer into the darkness of the ice wells and discover the engineering that kept London cool in the 1800s.
🔗 https://f.mtr.cool/pxwwfcpskg
16/05/2026
It's 🎭
Carlo Gatti helped bring affordable ice cream to Victorian London — but ice cream and the ice trade were only half the story.
When his Hungerford Market café was demolished in 1862 to make way for Charing Cross Station, Gatti received £7,750 in compensation. He and his family put it back into London's entertainment scene, opening Gatti's Palace of Varieties — also known as 'Gatti's over the Water' — and 'Gatti's in the Arches' under the railway in the vaults of Villiers Street.
The Gatti venues offered something relatively new for working and lower-middle-class Londoners: a respectable, family-friendly night out. George Leybourne — the original 'Champagne Charlie' — was among the celebrated performers who appeared on his stages.
Each year, we honour this legacy with our own Music Hall performance at the museum, featuring the New Players' Theatre Company. Tickets for Gatti's Music Hall on 21st November 2026 are available now: canalmuseum.org.uk/whatson/music-hall.htm
12/05/2026
Half-term is two weeks away. If you're planning an activity for the Tuesday, here's one worth booking early.
On 26th May, the London Canal Museum is running a Family Fun Day themed around Nature Crowns. It starts on the water, families board Long Tom, our canal boat, for a trip along Regent's Canal to St Pancras Lock and back. The Regent's Canal is a designated Site of Metropolitan Importance for Nature Conservation, so there's plenty to spot along the banks: coots, moorhens, and the occasional kingfisher.
Your ticket includes:
• A trip on Long Tom to St Pancras Lock
• A craft workshop to build your own Nature Crown, inspired by what you spot on the water 👑
• Access to our interactive Family Fun Trail
• Dressing up and play opportunities, including in our ice cream parlour
Our school holiday boat trips are very popular, and spaces are strictly limited.
Children £5.50 · Adults (16+) £10.50
🎟️ All the details and booking: canalmuseum.org.uk/whatson/family-fun-days.htm
12/05/2026
Today is the feast day of St Pancras — the second of three Catholic saints known collectively as the 'Ice Saints', whose mid-May dates were traditionally associated with one last cold snap before summer arrives.
It's an oddly fitting day for a museum originally built for the storage of ice.
Carlo Gatti came to London in 1847, built a trade importing natural ice from Norway, and stored it in the wells beneath what is now our museum's building on Battlebridge Basin, King's Cross. That ice supplied fishmongers, hospitals, and a city only just beginning to understand refrigeration.
Those wells are still standing. They're the only Victorian ice wells open to the public anywhere in the UK — and they open for guided tours just once a year, on Ice Sunday in July as part of our annual Ice Weekend.
Find details and tickets at canalmuseum.org.uk
Image of St Pancras © St Pancras Old Church
11/05/2026
It's . If you are exploring the Regent’s Canal for , you will see these brick slopes every few hundred metres.
They were not built for people, and they are almost unique to this specific canal. Can you identify what these ramps were built for?
🔍A clue: In the Victorian era, the towpath could be a frightening place. Nearby railway engines produced sudden steam, smoke, and sparks that could easily spook a working animal.
Tell us your guesses below!
07/05/2026
As it is Local and Community History Month, we are looking back at the people who shaped the King's Cross and Clerkenwell we know today. Have you ever wondered why the area around Clerkenwell became known as 'Little Italy'?
In the 1840s, a wave of Italian-speaking immigrants settled in the area. Among them was a Swiss-Italian entrepreneur named Carlo Gatti. Originally from the Blenio Valley, he arrived in London in 1847 from Paris, where he had lived since 1839 and started a family.
Gatti built a massive ice importation business, bringing natural ice from Norway to London by ship and canal barge from 1857 onwards. He stored this ice in two large underground wells at Battlebridge Basin, measuring 32-34 feet across and 42 feet deep. You are actually standing over them when you visit the London Canal Museum!
He relied heavily on his community, employing workers from his home region to load his distinctive yellow and brown ice carts and sell his famous 'penny ices' ice creams to everyday Londoners. Visit us this May to step inside his original Victorian ice warehouse and learn more about the people of the canals and ice trade.