Exhibit | The Museum of London: The Crime Museum Uncovered

Some exhibits honor the heights of human history. Others celebrate beautiful creations men and women from around the world create. The current special attraction at the Museum of London explores the darker side of human nature.

Now underway, The Crime Museum Uncovered features the first ever assemblage of artifacts from the London Metropolitan Police Crime Museum (also known as The Black Museum). 

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The exhibition includes two centuries worth of macabre and often gruesome items from the police vaults. There are no re-creations or replicas. The objects were actually used in a crime, applied in solving a crime or directly connected to criminals or police.

The presentation is organized in historical order, including the age when England still hanged its serious offenders. Multiple cast death masks mark the final expressions of murderers who met their end at the end of a rope. Displays move through the ages from serial killer Dr Crippen to the reign of Kray Brothers, from the Great Train Robbery to the terrorist Underground attacks of 7/7.

The Metropolitan Police Service assisted in the curating and presentation of the exhibit, so it never surrenders to exploitation or sensationalism. As much as documentation many of the UK’s most famous criminals, the exhibit explores how solving crimes evolved into the 21st century.

Scheduled to close on April 10th, any visitor has to wonder if the minds behind the museum might look for ways to extend the exhibit’s run. It was a packed house on the afternoon this reporter visited. The flow of the morbidly fascinated is closely monitored to manage the constant crowd eager to get inside and see the wages of sin.

With business booming, it might be wise to keep the criminal classes employed in gallery work because crime seems to be paying well for the Museum of London. You can see why in the gallery below.

All photos by John Scott Lewinski, courtesy of the Museum of London.
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