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The Canal Museum
The Canal Museum, Stoke Bruerne logo

The Canal Museum, Stoke Bruerne

The Canal Museum, the first of its kind in the country, is located in the pretty canal village of Stoke Bruerne along the Grand Union Canal. A historic Grade II listed corn mill, it offers three floors of rich waterway heritage and panoramic views.

Things to see and do

Immerse yourselves in the treasure trove that is our museum, full of interactive displays and collections to bring to life what it was like to live and work on Britain's canals. Take a stroll along the towpath near Blisworth Tunnel, and the Woodland Walk, with its wire sculptures.

Enjoy watching the wildlife, do some pond dipping, and see colourful narrowboats. With two pubs, and places to stop and grab a coffee, Stoke Bruerne is an ideal spot to spend a few hours.

Inside the museum

Immerse yourself in the sights, smells and sounds of life on the canals in former times, dress up in boaters’ costume and have a go at creating your own roses and castles, the iconic decoration only seen on the English canals.

Visit the museum narrow boat ‘Sculptor’, moored up outside. Built in 1935 for the Grand Union Canal Carrying Company, Sculptor started life carrying general cargo, such as cotton, wheat and coal. During World War 2, she was in action in London as a fireboat, putting out fires. Before she retired in 1984, Sculptor was still in use as a maintenance boat.

a colourful canal boat inside with other canal boat heritage objects

Outside the museum

The museum is set in the picturesque village of Stoke Bruerne containing a flight of locks, a blacksmith’s forge, and the 200 year old southern portal of the almost two mile long Blisworth Canal Tunnel. Can you spot the site and entrance into a filled in boat dock, the stables where the boat horses used to rest and, the hut where the leggers used to wait to walk or ‘leg’ the boats through the tunnel?

A short walk down the lock flight will take you to a nature reserve which once contained a brickworks and, where there was once an old dock for boats to load the bricks used to build the canal and tunnel. A bit further on is a dipping platform.

While you are here, why not hop on one of the two passenger boats for a trip into the mouth of the tunnel and back.

Inside The Canal Museum

Designated museum collection

Designated for its national importance by Arts Council England. Most of our museum collection is housed within the National Waterway Museums at Ellesmere Port and Gloucester Docks. However, you can also find important, treasured items here at the Canal Museum as well as at Anderton Boat Lift Visitor Centre and Standedge Tunnel Visitor Centre.

The collection forms the most comprehensive collection of artefacts that tell the story of Britain’s canals and navigable rivers over the last 300 hundred years. The collection consists of over 12,000 objects – including 68 historic boats and the national waterways archive.

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Travelers Choice 2023
photo of a location on the canals
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