Ipswich Museums
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From mammoths to masterpieces, we’re wild for history, buzzing about art, and all about adventure! Explore Christchurch Mansion and (in 2026) Ipswich Museum & Ipswich Art Gallery. 🖼️🦣
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Like an organic transformer!
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The scales cover their body and form living armour that can withstand a lion’s bite. When threatened, it'll roll into a tight ball and release a foul spray from a gland near the tail.

If you could adopt one pangolin feature, would you choose the armour, the tongue, or the roll into a ball defence?
Side view of the full pangolin mount on an oval wooden base with an enlarged background detail of the engraved plaque behind it. The specimen’s scaled body and long snout are visible, with yellowed claws resting on the base. The engraved text on the wood reads: “THE SHORT TAILED PANGOLIN. MANIS PINTADAC YLA. (CUVIER.) CENTRAL INDIA.”
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Did you know that pangolins are the only mammals with scales? They're solitary and mostly nocturnal, with some climbing trees whilst others stay on the ground. They dig into ant and termite mounds and use their tongue (that can reach up to 28 inches!) to feed.
Close-up of a taxidermy pangolin on a wooden base against a white background. The head and forelimbs fill the frame, showing overlapping brown keratin scales with fine ridges, a small dark eye, and long curved claws on the front feet. The shadow falls behind the mount, emphasising the texture of the scales and claws.
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A doll with no face, on purpose. This Ukrainian motanka was handmade in Ipswich with cotton, beads and dry wheat. Motanky were made as protective talismans or toys and kept faceless so a single soul couldn’t be attached.

Objects of care can be small and powerful. Do you have a good‑luck charm?
A handmade Ukrainian motanka doll photographed against a pale background. The doll is faceless, with embroidered red and black bands crossing the face. It wears a feathered red headdress, layered red bead necklaces and hoop earrings. The blouse has cream sleeves with red and black embroidery. A red overskirt ties with ribbon over a cream underskirt that shows a bold red, black and cream geometric panel at the front. Materials include cotton fabric and thread, beads, plastic flowers and a dry‑wheat filler. The figure stands upright on a flat surface.
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Come see them up close and learn more about the artform in Colour Shape Pattern, and discover how these everyday objects combined artistry and storytelling in just a few brushstrokes.

🗓️ 24 May 2025 – 22 February 2026
👉 Plan your visit: ipswich.cimuseums.org.uk/colour-shape-pattern
Colour Shape Pattern | Ipswich Museums
From bold splashes to delicate design, celebrate contemporary artworks at Christchurch Mansion.
ipswich.cimuseums.org.uk
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These tiles once lined the walls and fireplaces of homes that could afford such luxuries. Each square may be only a few inches across, but their impact was much larger — adding both warmth and worldly charm to 18th-century interiors.
Blue and white ceramic tile showing a running hare with upright ears, surrounded by small floral motifs.
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These blue and white delft tiles are more than decoration: they’re snapshots of 17th- and 18th-century taste, trade, and storytelling. Imported from the Netherlands, delftware tiles were popular for their gleaming tin-glazed surfaces and crisp cobalt designs.
Delft tile with a landscape scene of three figures crossing a bridge under a tree, buildings and a boat in the background. All are hand-painted in blue on a white background. Delft tile showing a fisherman on a riverbank, with sailing boat, ducks and a distant town.
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What do you remember about timing calls to evening rates or negotiating phone time at home?
The same ivory Trimphone shown with the handset off the hook, revealing the cradle and rotary dial. The long coiled cord snakes to a grey inline connector marked “British Telecom,” attached to a straight line cord. Background is neutral tissue, suggesting a collections photography set-up. Circa 1980–1999.
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Before mobiles, the household Trimphone ruled the hallway. Lighter, a long cord you could sneak round a door, and that famous electronic “warble”. Ours keeps the rotary dial and a mid‑cable connector stamped “British Telecom”, which is a nod to the days of renting your phone.
Ivory-coloured plastic Trimphone with the handset resting on the cradle. Rotary dial with clear finger wheel, translucent number ring and numbers 1–0 visible. Long coiled handset cord tangles across the frame and meets a grey inline plastic connector stamped “British Telecom.” The base has a clear plastic rest and a wall cable extending out of shot. Circa 1980–1999.
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Guess the spot: George Frost’s Ipswich Docks, c.1800. Low sheds, masts and figures on the quay before the wet dock opened in 1842. On today’s Waterfront, would you place this near St Peter’s Dock, the Old Custom House or Stoke Bridge? Why?
Graphite drawing of Ipswich Docks around 1800. Small sailing vessels and masts rise behind low waterside sheds. Figures work on the quay. In the foreground a couple walk along the shoreline. The sky is lightly clouded. The paper shows faint marks consistent with a watermark, but the mark is not identified.
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Whole streets grew out of that industry, along with tight‑knit working lives around the kilns. These bricks built terraces, schools, chapels, and factories across Ipswich. If your home has old brick, it may well have started life on ground like this.
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Whole families could be tied to the yard’s rhythm: men at the clamp or kiln, women and children turning, stacking, and barrowing when work was available. In this part of town, the Dales and Grove brickyards even ran a narrow‑gauge line to Westerfield Station to move bricks and coal.
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You can see the tall chimney on the left and stacks of drying bricks laid out on tables. Sites like this sat close to good clay and transport, with long days shaping, turning, and firing. It was tough, skilled work. Pay was often by the piece, so a quick hand meant a better week.
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Smoke, clay, and steady graft. This 1909 photograph shows the Brickfields in Ipswich, where thousands of handmade and machine-pressed bricks fed a town that was growing street by street.
Black and white photograph of Ipswich brickfields, c.1909. In the foreground are stacked bricks and low drying tables. To the left stand long sheds and a tall chimney rising above the works. The ground is rough with patches of clay and timber props. No people are visible, but the scene suggests active industrial work and large-scale brick production.
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Years below ground compressed the grain, leaving them dark and dense. Quiet tech that kept buildings and boats together.

Seen trenails locally?
Two short, dark wooden trenails displayed horizontally on a small green-painted wooden stand with four upright supports and a square base, photographed against a white background.
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They look like two short logs, but they’re trenails: wooden pegs that fasten heavy timbers without iron. An old label notes they were buried after a destructive event in Oct 1896 and uncovered in 1949 excavations.
Front view of the same pair of trenails on the green wooden stand with a small aged paper label attached to the base, text partially faded and unreadable.
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The final Peep into the Past tours of 2025 are here! If you haven’t joined the Friends of Ipswich Museums yet, now’s your chance to uncover the fascinating layers of Christchurch Mansion before the season ends.

Free and open to all — come take a last look before winter draws in.
Promotional poster for Peep into the Past free guided tours, set in an ornate historical study or drawing room. Foreground shows a large globe, a bust, and various decorative objects on a desk. In the background, a mannequin dressed in Georgian-style clothing stands near a fireplace with an elaborate red and gold surround. Framed portraits, statues, and pale blue-grey wall panelling complete the scene. Tours run from April to October, held Saturday–Sunday at 11 am and 2 pm, and Tuesday–Wednesday at 11 am.
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It is an abugida, so each character shows a consonant with its vowel. Children learning Amharic would chant the rows until sound and sign matched.

What was the first thing you remember reading on your own?
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International Translation Day invites us to think about how writing carries voice. This teaching scroll uses the Ge’ez script, the historic script of Ethiopia and Eritrea.
Two aged scrolls display neatly arranged rows of text written in Ge'ez, an ancient Ethiopian script. The parchment has a yellowish-brown tone, suggesting significant age and historical value.
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Want to discover how colour, shape and pattern have been used across time to inspire, impress and influence? Come explore the Colour Shape Pattern exhibition at Christchurch Mansion, open now through 22 February 2026.

👉 Plan your visit: ipswich.cimuseums.org.uk/colour-shape-pattern
Colour Shape Pattern | Ipswich Museums
From bold splashes to delicate design, celebrate contemporary artworks at Christchurch Mansion.
ipswich.cimuseums.org.uk
ipswichmuseums.bsky.social
If you look closely, you can still see signs of its handmade origins: overlapping joins, subtle colour shifts, and centuries of wear. It would have cost a pretty penny—more than many earned in a year—but it made a clear statement: wealth, taste, and fashion lived here.
Close-up of ornate historic wallpaper. The pattern features large, dark brown floral and foliage motifs over a pale green and muted blue background. Subtle butterfly and leaf designs are interspersed within the background, and some wear and creases are visible, revealing the wallpaper’s age and layered texture.
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Velvet walls? Not quite, but Christchurch Mansion’s Green Room comes close.

What you’re looking at is flock wallpaper, the 18th-century equivalent of high-end interior design. Flock wallpaper was made by glueing wool or silk fibres (called 'flock') onto paper to mimic expensive woven fabrics.
Corner of a historic room with ornate decor. A light brown panelled door is framed by a pale green doorframe, set into wallpaper with a dark damask pattern. On the left, an antique wooden cabinet with decorative marquetry stands beneath a framed oval portrait of a woman in 18th-century attire. To the right, a large ceramic bowl with blue floral motifs sits atop a richly decorated table with a green marble top and gilded accents.
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It is the PAXS type, with the word for peace set around a cross, and it names the moneyer Lifwine. Conquest turns into administration, and administration turns into coins in pockets.
Reverse of the same silver penny with a cross and PAXS type design in the quarters and legend naming the moneyer Lifwine; beaded border visible. Photographed on a white background.
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On this date in 1066 William of Normandy landed in England. Our object link is a silver penny of William I, minted in Ipswich between 1083 and 1086.
Obverse of a small medieval silver penny of William I showing a crowned bust facing, with pellets and a beaded border. Coin photographed on a white background.
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27 September 1822: Champollion announced the decipherment of hieroglyphs. Our local echo is a stack of 46 glass lantern slides of Egyptian inscriptions and early alphabets, probably made for a Mr HL Clodd’s lecture on the evolution of the alphabet.

What first got you curious about ancient writing?
Wooden storage rack filled with stacked glass lantern slides. Two slides are shown in front: the upper slide displays three pottery vessels and a spout; the lower slide shows the same comparative writing chart with hieroglyphic, hieratic and Phoenician signs. Neutral studio background. Black and white glass lantern slide showing a comparative chart of writing signs. Columns label Egyptian hieroglyphic, Egyptian hieratic and Phoenician alphabet with related Greek and Hebrew letters to the right. Each row pairs a pictorial sign with simplified alphabetic forms inside a circular projection frame.