Welcome to King John's Hunting Lodge, Axbridge, Somerset. Housed in in a 15th century merchant's house. The museum is run by The Axbridge and District Museum Trust, a group of dedicated local volunteers and the building is owned by the National Trust

We are now open until the 31st October.

Our opening times are 1:00pm to 4:00pm TUESDAYS to SUNDAYS. We are closed on Mondays.

New for 2024

King John's Hunting Lodge Museum

We have revamped our ground floor space to include a designated Children's area. This space now contains new costumes which allow our small visitors to try clothes of the past. A excellent photo opportunity!

To celebrate the acquisition of our long- case clock exhibits we have produced some Children's clock face colouring sheets.

Other items to look out for this season include:

Our Long-Cased Clocks, which have been purchased with the support of the Axbridge Parochial Charity, The Art Fund and ACE/V&A. We are very grateful for to everyone who helped us secure these truly remarkable examples of the skills, now sadly lost, that used to abound in Axbridge.

A new permanent exhibit on the tragic Basle Air Disaster that affected so many in Axbridge and surrounding villages.

Measuring time in history and Axbridge

King John's Hunting Lodge Museum

Our new temporay exhibition is an extension of our recently acquired Long-Cased Clocks and not only celebrates the lost skills of the past but considers a whole range of time related issues.







Volunteers welcome

Our museum is entirely dependent on volunteer support. We have a friendly and welcoming team and welcome new faces to join us in meeting and greeting visitors. For more details please drop us a line at:kingjohnshuntinglodgemuseum@gmail.com">

King John's Hunting Lodge Museum

About King John's Hunting Lodge

King John's Hunting Lodge is a wool-merchant's house built c.1460 in Axbridge, the smallest town in the English county of Somerset. It is a jettied timber-frame building of three storeys, occupying a corner plot on the town square. The building has served a variety of purposes with shops on the ground floor and workshops and living quarters on the first and second floors. At one time part of the building was occupied by the King's Head Inn; a sculpture of a king's head, which acted as a sign for the pub, is preserved within and a replica is attached to the outside. The lodge was bequeathed to the National Trust in 1971, and repairs were undertaken to reverse significant deterioration to the building. The house is leased by the National Trust to Axbridge and District Museum Trust, who operate it as a local museum which includes exhibits relating to local geology and history from the Neolithic to World War II. It is a Grade II* listed building.


Axbridge & District Museum Trust Aims and Objectives

We seek to collect only material evidence associated with the past, present and future of the people of Axbridge and the surrounding area; to produce well informed displays, exhibitions and educational material. The Museum will acquire items originating from, used in, or with connections with the parishes of Axbridge, Badgworth, Berrow, Brean, Brent Knoll, Burnham Without, Chapel Allerton, Cheddar, Compton Bishop, East Brent, Lympsham, Mark, Shipham, Weare, Wedmore and by agreement with Wells and Mendip Museum, the parish of Rodney Stoke.

King John's Hunting Lodge Museum
King John's Hunting Lodge Museum
King John's Hunting Lodge Museum
King John's Hunting Lodge Museum
King John's Hunting Lodge Museum
King John's Hunting Lodge Museum
King John's Hunting Lodge Museum
King John's Hunting Lodge Museum
King John's Hunting Lodge Museum

2,000+ Items

the number of items in our collection

350+ Items on display

the number of items on display in the museum currently

27 Steps

the number of steps in our original 15th century oak staircase

4,900+ Visitors

the number of visitors we welcome each season

King John's Hunting Lodge Museum

In 1340 the site of the present building was occupied by a building belonging to John Oldeway. It contained shops and was called "the stockhouse". The current building, which was constructed around 1460, was occupied by shops on the ground floor, living areas and workshops on the first floor, and storage and sleeping areas on the second floor. The house is the finest of a number of timber-frame houses in the High Street and The Square. The three-storey building is jettied on two adjacent sides and has three gables on the longer side. On the first and second floors curved brackets can be seen which support the floor above. The structure is based around a single wooden post, known as a king post, at the front corner of the building, which supports the floor boards and the horizontal dragon beams that carry the projection of the upper floors at each level. In the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, the building housed a succession of shops and underwent various changes which contributed to its physical decline. A Miss Ripley bought the building in 1930, and used it to store her collection of antiques until 1968, allowing the public to see her collection once a year. She bequeathed it to the National Trust in 1971, who undertook the works necessary to make it fit for visitors and saved it from probable destruction. In overhauling the structure of the premises, the National Trust restored its medieval character by recreating on the ground floor the appearance of arcaded stalls opening onto the street, and the sixteenth-century decoration of the upstairs windows, although this caused a dilemma as it required the removal of fine 18th-century window..

King John's Hunting Lodge Museum

The origin of the name is unclear as it was not built until long after the reign of King John, who died in 1216. Its present name first appeared in a 1915 publication, The Heart of Mendip by Francis Knight, when it was being run as a saddler's shop. The royal part of the name may have come from the fact that there was a carved king's head on the building, from a time when The King's Head Inn occupied part of the premises, but whether this represented King John or another king is not known. The head was attached to one corner of the exterior, but is now inside the building, and a replica placed on the outside. The property is owned by the National Trust and run as a local history museum by Axbridge and District Museum Trust with support from Somerset County Museums Service. Until 2011 funding was received from Sedgemoor District Council, but this was withdrawn and the museum now relies on donations from visitors and Friends. The museum aims to illustrate the history, geology and community of Axbridge and the surrounding area (the area of the old Axbridge Rural District, which included many neighbouring villages such as Cheddar, Wedmore, Mark and Winscombe). There is a core of long-term and permanent exhibits, reviewed regularly for possible changes, updates, and revised displays and information, and there is a programme of temporary exhibitions to reflect many aspects of local life and heritage. Each room has a specific theme, which includes aspects of local history such as life during World War II, and aspects of law and order. Another exhibition shows local geology and archaeological finds from local caves. The exhibits include a fine flint flake which has been identified from the Neolithic occupation of Ebbor Gorge. The museum also displays paintings of local scenes and objects including a clock made by John Bilbie of the Bilbie family, who lived in Axbridge, and a merchants' table known as a "nail", similar to those outside The Exchange in Bristol which were made with a flat top and raised edges to prevent coins from tumbling onto the pavement.

King John's Hunting Lodge Museum King John's Hunting Lodge Museum