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  2. Cromwell Museum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cromwell_Museum

    Oliver Cromwell was born in Huntingdon in 1599 and lived there for more than half his life. The museum is located in the former grammar school building in which Cromwell received his early education. Founded in 1962, the museum contains significant artefacts, paintings and printed material relating to The Protectorate. [1]

  3. Museum shop - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Museum_shop

    The gift shop of the Musée de La Poste. A museum shop or museum store is a gift shop in a museum. Typical offerings include reproductions of works in the museum, picture postcards, books related to the museum's collections, and various kinds of souvenirs. Art museums often include clothing and decorative objects inspired by or copying artwork. [1]

  4. Oliver Cromwell's head - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oliver_Cromwell's_head

    Cromwell's head remained on a spike above Westminster Hall until at least 1684, not counting a temporary removal for roof maintenance in 1681. [3] Although no firm evidence has been established for the whereabouts of the head from 1684 to 1710, [4] the circumstances in which Cromwell's head came into private ownership are rumoured to be tied with a great storm towards the end of James II's ...

  5. Robert Walker (painter) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Walker_(painter)

    Robert Walker self-portrait, painted c. 1645-50. Robert Walker (1599–1658) was an English portrait painter, notable for his portraits of the "Lord Protector" Oliver Cromwell and other distinguished parliamentarians of the period.

  6. Portrait of a Lady, probably a Member of the Cromwell Family

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portrait_of_a_Lady...

    In Thomas Cromwell's family Strong identified two women who might have been around the right age to be the sitter: Frances Murfyn (c. 1520 – c. 1543), the wife of Sir Richard Cromwell, [17] and a lady of the highest social standing: Elizabeth Seymour (c. 1518 – 1568), who married, successively, Sir Anthony Ughtred (d. 1534), Gregory ...

  7. Frank H. Cromwell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frank_H._Cromwell

    Cromwell was born April 22, 1878, on a farm at 39th and Harrison in Kansas City, Missouri, to Eliza (née Hilton) and Benjamin H. Cromwell. [1] [2] At the age of 14, his father died. Cromwell attended two years of school at Central High School. [2] He later took a course at Central Business College. [2]

  8. Commonwealth of England - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Commonwealth_of_England

    Throughout 1653, Cromwell and the Army slowly dismantled the machinery of the Commonwealth state. The English Council of State, which had assumed the executive function formerly held by the King and his Privy Council, was forcibly dissolved by Cromwell on 20 April, and in its place a new council, filled with Cromwell's own chosen men, was ...

  9. List of museums in Connecticut - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_museums_in_Connecticut

    The museum's collection of buildings includes a carriage house, Americana Museum, miniature lighthouse and windmill, a clocktower museum, trolley station, chapel, and blacksmith shop. The park also has the last remaining highway toll booth in Connecticut from the Merritt Parkway. Brayton Grist Mill: Pomfret: Windham: Mill