Heritage

Steeped in history, explore market towns surrounded by open countryside, famous for inspiring artists like John Constable and Thomas Gainsborough. The heart of Suffolk has some of the most important and unique listed buildings in the UK and you can marvel at the grandeur and craftsmanship of the country houses, relax in their gardens, and soak up their history. 

Country Houses

Crow’s Hall and Garden 

Crow’s Hall is a brick-built, moated, medieval manor house. Unlike many other country estates, it has never been formally designed and is an unusual survival of a small, early country house landscape.  

The layout and planting of Crow’s Hall island gardens are the work of award-winning, Suffolk garden designer, Xa Tollemache. The grounds include the main moat and two further moats, and their owner-led house and garden tours are a unique opportunity to discover more. 

Helmingham Hall and Gardens 

At Helmingham Hall and Gardens near Stowmarket, you can see for yourself the splendour of the magnificent house and landscaping, reflecting its 500 years history and evolution at the hands of the many generations of the Tollemarche family who continue to make it their home. 

Perhaps not surprisingly, its incredible history includes painter, John Constable, who’s brother was steward of the Tollemache woodlands. Constable lived for some time at Helmingham Rectory and painted a number of versions of A Dell in Helmingham Park, and the oak tree it includes with its singular curved trunk, still stands. 

Kentwell Hall

Kentwell Hall near Sudbury, is one of the finest moated Tudor houses in England, set in over 25 acres of gardens and parkland, with numerous historic buildings.  Explore its chequered history and rescue in 1971 by the Phillips family, who embarked on a labour of love to bring it back to life.  Experience for yourself their unique living history re-creations, inviting visitors to fully immerse themselves in the sights, sounds and smells of the past. 

Melford Hall

Explore the 300 year history of Melford Hall, near Sudbury, from the days when it was home to Benedictine Monks. Discover the royal connections and its journey to become the family residence it remains today, including stories about their famous cousin Beatrix Potter and the inspiration for some of her best loved characters. 

Museums

Food Museum

The Food Museum, based in Stowmarket, is the UK’s only museum dedicated to food. It connects visitors with where food comes from and the impact of our choices: past, present, and future. Cooking demonstrations, exhibitions, events and festivals all feature here, with a year-round programme based on the heritage of food and the communities who produce it. 

HMS Ganges

Over 160,000 boys passed through the gates of Royal Navy Training Establishment HMS Ganges in Shotley Gate and the museum is dedicated to their experience. Entirely volunteer run, with many former Ganges boys amongst them, all full of stories and anecdotes, the museum is a unique opportunity to learn about their experience.

Laxfield District Museum

The museum’s collection includes early twentieth century shop interiors together with window displays, artefacts, costumes; information on domesticity, farming and rural life in Suffolk and local ‘field finds’, including fossils.  One unusual display not to miss is a complete Victorian privy. 

Little Hall

Little Hall Museum is in the historic wool town of Lavenham and the former home of twins Robert and Thomas Gayer-Anderson, prolific collectors of historical artefacts from around the world. It is a 14th-century hall house and one of the oldest in the area, well worth a visit to explore their intriguing story and eclectic restoration. 

Mid Suffolk Light Railway

For something a little different, visit The Mid Suffolk Light Railway and discover some of the fascinating stories from its Victorian origins through to its Edwardian heyday. Its ongoing revival as a museum helps to protect the unique part of our English railway history.  Visit on a steam day to experience travel from generations past and stay for a drink in their railway carriage bar or café. 

Add a walk to your visit… https://www.discoversuffolk.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/Wetheringsett-cum-Brockford-1.pdf 

Munnings Art Museum

Sir Alfred Munnings was born in the heart of Suffolk and became known as one of England’s finest painters of horses, as well as a vociferous critic of modernism. His former home in Dedham, Castle House and gardens, is the place to explore the life and work of this prolific East Anglian artist in the building he called ‘the house of my dreams’. 

Red Feather Club

The Red Feather Club is a museum operated by the 95th Bomb Group Heritage Association in faithfully restored buildings on one of the communal sites of the 95th. The only Eighth Air Force Bomb Group to receive the Distinguished Unit Citation three time, it commemorates the vital contribution they made to the war effort. 

The 95th flew 334 missions between May 1943 and May 1945 and was the first American Bomb Group to perform a daylight raid on Berlin. They claimed 425 enemy aircraft destroyed, the highest number by any USAAF Bomb Group in WW2. 

The Guildhall

The Guildhallin Lavenham is a spectacular timber framed, medieval building in the heart of one of England’s oldest villages, rubbing shoulders with many other medieval buildings reflecting its wealthy, wool trading history. Its past functions have embraced workhouse, prison and social club, and it now stands as a local history museum open to visitors. 

Wattisham Station Heritage Museum 

This museum in Wattisham houses an extensive photographic record, models, artefacts and memorabilia depicting the history and squadrons based at the station from 1937 to the present day. Planes on display include Meteor WD686, Hunter XG194 and the Phantom XT914. 

Woolpit Museum

On the upper floor of an early 16th century cottage is Suffolk’s smallest museum with temporary exhibitions alongside two permanent displays. The first shows the famous Woolpit Brickmaking Works presented as a 3D model of the site as it was in its later days, with a collection of bricks, tiles, photos and various tools used in the trade. The second display is a reconstruction of a Victorian kitchen with artefacts, which might have been used in everyday life up to the 1920s.