Elmbridge Museum
About:
Elmbridge Museum serves as a vibrant custodian of local heritage across the borough of Elmbridge — not merely as a traditional museum with one fixed gallery, but as a flexible, outreach-centric institution engaging the community far and wide.
With a collection of over 40,000 objects spanning some 15,000 years of local history, Elmbridge Museum encompasses archaeology, social history, natural history, costume, photography and more. These range from ancient flints found on local heaths to artefacts from the Tudor age and personal items from the 20th century — each piece contributing a thread to the evolving story of Elmbridge.
Rather than being confined to a single permanent display space, Elmbridge Museum operates as an outreach museum. Its displays rotate among multiple sites around the borough — such as local libraries, leisure centres and the Civic Centre in Esher — bringing heritage directly into neighbourhoods and making it accessible to a broader audience.
In addition to exhibitions, the Museum runs a diverse learning and engagement programme. Families, school groups and community organisations can participate in workshops, heritage-themed events, and “discovery box” loans — which include real (or replica) historic objects for hands-on learning. For younger visitors, the “Museum Explorers” activities and half-term sessions offer chances to discover local history in creative and interactive ways.
The Museum also supports local studies and research: volunteers help maintain an archive, and the public can request access to materials or expert help delving into the borough’s past.
Importantly, Elmbridge Museum reflects a dynamic understanding of what a museum can be — not a static repository but a living, community-rooted project. Its evolving exhibitions, outreach across the borough, digital resources, and emphasis on making heritage accessible underline a commitment to preserving the past while engaging present and future generations.