1. National Football Museum, Manchester

You’ll discover this museum in the uniquely modern Urbis building in
the centre of Manchester. The National Football Museum has proved a
popular attraction since opening last July and its vast collection
includes colourful memorabilia, player profiles, football kits and
photographs chronicling the history of the beautiful game. The Discovery
Zone is a place where children can dress up as footballers themselves;
and in the storytelling corner they can listen to stories of teams’
triumphs.
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Cathedral Gardens, 0161-605 8200, nationalfootballmuseum.com. Open Mon-Sat 10am-5pm, Sun 11am-5pm, admission free
2. Kelvingrove Art Gallery and Museum, Glasgow

This much-loved institution is among the most-visited
museums
in the UK outside of London. With 22 galleries and more than 8,000
objects, Kelvingrove really is the kind of museum in which you can while
away a rainy day. Fine art and armouries aside,
one of the most popular exhibits is the beehive, which is designed to allow the bees in and out of the building.
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Argyle Street, 0141 276 9599, glasgowlife.org.uk/museums/kelvingrove. Open Mon-Thurs, Sat 10am-5pm, Fri and Sun 11am-5pm, admission free
3. National Museum of Scotland, Edinburgh

There are plenty of exhibits designed especially for children at this
museum, a great place to learn about the natural and human world. Some
of the most remarkable objects on display include a gigantic skull (from
a whale named Moby), and that timeless museum classic: a life-sized
cast of a T rex skeleton that’s a whopping 12m long.
• Chambers Street, 0300 123 6789, nms.ac.uk. Open daily 10am-5pm, admission free
4. Monkwearmouth Station Museum, Sunderland

Trains are the name of the game at this fun museum in a grand former
station building. The galleries look at the history of travel, with
fascinating archive footage and photos of journeys past. The subject is
brought to life thanks to a restoration of the original 1860s booking
office and two beautiful old railway wagons that you can go inside.
•
North Bridge Street, 0191 567 7075, twmuseums.org.uk/monkwearmouth-station-museum. Open Mon-Sat 10am-5pm, Sun 2pm-5pm, admission free
5. V&A Museum of Childhood, London

With its adorable collection of teddy bears, a display of Victorian
doll’s houses big enough to outdo most first-time buyers and enough toys
to prompt nostalgia from every generation, this is a museum that should
charm adults as much as kids. Particularly memorable – for anyone with a
penchant for horror – is the macabre collection of china dolls, who
seem to watch you as you wander past. If you’re feeling spooked, go on a
hunt for the Care Bears.
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Cambridge Heath Road, 020-8983 5200, museumofchildhood.org.uk. Open daily 10am-5.45pm
6. Big Pit National Coal Museum, Torfaen

The prospect of going to a coal museum might be met with groans from
your brood, but the Big Pit has the power to entertain as well as
educate. The former coal mine was opened as a museum in 2004 and
features displays that detail the hard work and sacrifice involved in
getting coal from the earth. After taking part in the underground tour –
in which visitors don helmets and cap lamps before being lowered 90m
below the ground for a walk around the mine’s tunnels – you can also
take in exhibitions that depict the story of mining in Wales, in what
used to be the pithead baths.
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Blaenafon, 029-2057 3650, museumwales.ac.uk/bigpit. Open daily 9.30am-4.30pm, underground tours 10am-3pm, admission free, car park £3
7. St Fagans National History Museum, Cardiff

One of Europe’s leading open-air museums, St Fagans has 100 acres of
parkland in which you’ll find more than 40 original buildings from
various historical periods. Among those you can explore are a church, a
farm, a school and a workmen’s institute, which are all regularly
brought to life through workshops and demonstrations of traditional
crafts. When the weather improves, wildlife fans can enjoy the nature
trail through the museum’s wonderful beech woodland.
•
029-2057 3500, museumwales.ac.uk/stfagans. Open daily 10am-5pm, admission free
8. Coventry Transport Museum

You don’t have to a be a gas-guzzling roadhog with a Top Gear tattoo
to get excited about this museum’s collection of vehicles. Not least
because the museum has one of the best collections of bicycles in the
country, featuring classics from the painfully rigid Boneshaker to the
chilled-out Chopper. Of course, motorheads will want to take a look at
the world’s two fastest cars (the Thrust 2 and ThrustSCC), which are on
permanent display.
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Millennium Place, Hales Street, 024-7623 4270, transport-museum.com. Open daily 10am-5pm, admission free
9. Royal Armouries, Leeds

We all know families aren’t averse to an occasional bit of fighting. A
trip to this place, which is brimming with around 70,000 weapons, is
more likely to stop bickering siblings in their tracks than prompt an
all-out war. The thrilling collection is a testament to the creativity
and innovation that has gone into developing tools of combat, and it’s
hard to know whether to be impressed, or terrified. Film fans may also
like to take in a slice of the action at the
Swords of Middle Earth exhibition, which includes four heroic swords inspired by the Lord of the Rings trilogy (runs until 28 July).
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Armouries Drive, 0113 220 1999, royalarmouries.org. Open daily 10am-5pm, admission free
10. Yorkshire Sculpture Park, Wakefield

A bit like an art gallery you can shout in (though maybe don’t do it
too much), the Yorkshire Sculpture Park is a magnificent open-air
gallery surrounded by lush countryside. Founded in 1977, and the first
of its kind in the UK, the 500-acre park features artworks by
Henry Moore,
Barbara Hepworth and
Eduardo Paolozzi. Check the weather before you go – you might need wellies.
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West Bretton, 01924 832631, ysp.co.uk. Open daily 10am-6pm, admission free, car parking from £2.50