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Alderney Society Museum

The Channel Islands


This well-cared for museum, run by volunteers, does a fine job of telling the story of Alderney – from original Neolithic settlements going back 10,000 years through to the island's role in Roman trade, centuries of enmity with France and the resulting Victorian fort-building. Special attention is paid to the traumatic WWII period, when the vast majority of islanders were evacuated, and it gives a human face to the German invaders, with photos of off-duty soldiers collecting shellfish.


Ïã¸ÛÁùºÏ²Ê¼´Ê±¿ª½±'s must-see attractions

Nearby The Channel Islands attractions

1. St Anne Church

0.1 MILES

Surrounded by moss-covered, centuries-old gravestones, this handsome Victorian-era church was designed by George Gilbert Scott, a prolific 19th-century…

2. Watermill

0.56 MILES

Alderney has had a watermill on this very spot, near Fort Tourgis, since the 14th century. The current watermill building is over 200 years old, with an…

3. Fort Tourgis

0.67 MILES

Picturesquely covered in creeping vines, this 19th-century fort wouldn't look out of place in some Victorian romance novel, if it weren't for the barred…

4. Braye Bay

0.68 MILES

This is Alderney's largest bay and one of the island's most attractive beaches – white sand, calm and clear blue waters, and plenty of room to lay your…

5. Lager Sylt Memorial

0.85 MILES

Some 500m down a country lane behind the airport, this faded plaque and a pair of concrete gates mark the entrance to the former SS Lager Sylt – the only…

6. Bibette Head

1.45 MILES

Gaping bunkers, personnel shelters and armoured cupola for machine guns that made up the German Strongpoint Biberkopf sit at the end of the Bibette Head…

7. Hammond Memorial

1.52 MILES

With five main plaques in Russian, Hebrew, Polish, French and Spanish, this sombre memorial commemorates the slaves and forced labourers, brought to…

8. Saye Bay

1.56 MILES

This long, dune-backed beach is ideal for rockpooling, swimming and sunbathing.