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The Red Lodge Museum

Museum/art Gallery

About the venue

The Red Lodge is a historic Elizabethan house, tucked away near to the buzz of the busy shopping areas of Park Steet and the Christmas Steps.

A visit is the perfect way to add a splash of history and culture to a day in the city centre. The Red Lodge has been restored several times throughout its 400 year history. Originally a lodge to the Great House (which once stood on the site of the present Colston Hall), where Queen Elizabeth I once stayed, the Red Lodge is often described as Bristol's hidden treasure and houses the Great Oak Room, one of the finest rooms in the West Country. As you step up the winding staircase and enter through the porch of the Great Oak Room, you will marvel at the magnificent oak panelling, the plasterwork ceiling and the magnificent carved stone chimneypiece. Downstairs, the Reception Room, Print Room and staircase are all fine examples of Georgian architecture. The Red Lodge has had several uses, and was once used as a reform school for girls set up by Mary Carpenter. A room in the Lodge is dedicated to her memory. The walled garden is one of The Red Lodge's best features and is an excellent example of a re-created Elizabethan-style knot garden with herbaceous borders. About the house The Red Lodge is open Wednesday, Thursday, Saturday and Sunday (and bank holiday Mondays) from 10:30am to 4pm from Easter to the end of October. Entry to the museum is completely FREE. Note that group visits should be booked in advance. There are seven rooms over two floors that tell the history of the house, from its Tudor origins to its role as a Victorian girls reform school. Tudor rooms: • Great oak room. • Small oak room. • Bedroom. Georgian rooms: • Print room. • Parlour. • Reception room. Exhibition room: • Contains a small display on the Red Lodge Girls Reform School. The Knot Garden: • The walled garden at the Red Lodge is an excellent example of a re-created Elizabethan-style knot garden with herbaceous borders. All the plants grown here could have been found in English gardens by 1630.

Location

Nearest motorway-
Nearest junction-
Nearest station-
Nearest airport-

Parking

On-site parking-
Parking nearbyNo

Meeting rooms

In the table below, you can hover over the underlined room names to see a photo of that room.

Room name
Capacity (people)
Theatre
Classroom
Boardroom
Cabaret
Banquet
Ushape
Rec.
Dimensions(H/L/W/A)

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