Egyptian Expedition 004: Day 2 – Sir John Soane’s Fascinating Home

I had visited Sir John Soane’s home back in 1991, during the Gulf War. The war began while I was on the flight over to London and I ended up spending it in the UK. The day it ended, I was in York and all of the bells were ringing out. My memories of that war are entirely from the British point of view as all of my conversations about it at the time were with British people and all of the news I saw of it was from the BBC.

That first visit to that fascinating house museum was during a tour of Legal London that was conducted by a retired London policeman named Donald Rumbelow. I was familiar with him because he also wrote one of the better books on the 1888 London murders Jack the Ripper: The Complete Casebook. He also conducted a nighttime tour of the locations involved in that investigation which I joined a few days later. The tour of Sir John Soane’s Museum came about because it was located at Lincoln’s Inn Fields in Holburn.

This time, we visited the house in the evening by candlelight. It was a private tour. We were welcomed in the library and given a drink. I had a glass of wine. Then our group of 18 people was divided into two groups. The group I ended up in was led by the charming fellow with whom I had been chatting while sipping my wine.

The candlelight was in keeping with the period of the house. Sir John Soane was an 18th century brick mason who had a real talent for architectural design. He was sponsored by an aristocrat who recognized his talent and formally educated as an architect. He was so successful that he was able to buy three houses which he demolished and completely rebuild into one home. This allowed him and his family to live well while he also displayed his very large collection of art and antiquities. During his lifetime, his home was designated as a museum by a private act of Parliament in 1833. This went into effect on his death in 1837. One of the stipulations of the Act was that the museum needed to remain as it was upon his death forever, with as little change as possible.

They have managed to add electricity, upgrade the plumbing, and any necessary structural upgrades and repairs. But the rooms themselves and the collections they contain remain as they were when Soane died.

He began with No. 12, between 1792 and 1794. In 1806 he bought No.13 and made it the main portion of the museum (which is mostly located in the former stable block at the back and ended up spreading across the rear of all three houses). Sir John’s family then mainly lived in No. 13 and rented out No. 12. His intent was that the rental income would fund the running of the museum after his death.

He purchased No. 14 in 1823, when he was over 70. He then turned its stable block into a picture gallery, which he linked to No. 13. The front of the house was treated as a separate dwelling and wasn’t internally connected to the other buildings. It was a rental property until he died. At that point, it was bequeathed to his family and wasn’t part of the museum.

No. 13 was where we entered the home and congregated in the library. The tour for our group began in the Dining Room. Over the fireplace on one side was a model of some of the buildings that Sir John had designed along Whitehall. Above that was his portrait. I have a photo of those items as the second one included here. The third included photo is the other side of the dining room with a painting by Sir Joshua Reynolds.

The next room we entered was the domed Breakfast Room. This had a statue of Victory. Behind that was a watercolor painting of the family tomb (4th photo).

Then we entered the Central Dome (photos 5, 6, & 7) where we stayed for quite a while. Photos 6 and 7 include a statue of Apollo. This is actually a plaster cast and not the original. Copy or original, I still liked it. Looking down below (while being careful not to topple any of the sculptures in the process), we could see the alabaster sarcophagus of King Seti I of Egypt (photo 8). We would later have the opportunity to see his tomb in the Valley of the Kings and his mummy in the National Museum of Egyptian Culture in Cairo. By the end of this trip, I felt that I knew Seti almost as well as Tutankhamun.

Seti I’s sarcophagus (covered in hieroglyphs) was discovered in his tomb in 1817 by a fella named Giovanni Battista Belzoni and was offered for sale to the British Museum for the price of £2,000 (roughly £190,000 today). They didn’t want to pay that much for it, so Sir John Soane bought it. It is by far the most expensive piece in his collection.

After this prize arrived at his house in March of 1825, Soane held a three-day party. The basement was lit by over one hundred lamps and candelabra. Guests included Prime Minister Robert Jenkinson (2nd Earl of Liverpool) and his wife, Robert Peel (a later Prime Minister), Prince Augustus Frederick (Duke of Sussex), Samuel Taylor Coleridge (poet), J.M.W. Turner (one of my favorite Impressionist painters), as well as other celebrities of the day and foreign dignitaries.

After passing through the Colonnade, we reached the Picture Room (photo 9). There the walls were covered from top to bottom with paintings. These included four paintings by Canaletto and three paintings by Soane’s friend Turner. There were also all eight of the Hogarth paintings, A Rakes Progress (along the bottom of photo 10). These depicted the folly of a young man from the country, squandering his inheritance in London brothels, and with gambling, and every kind of indulgence. Eventually he is left bankrupt, imprisoned for debt, and ultimately thrown into the mad house (Bedlam). These paintings were purchased by Missus Soane for £370 in 1802.

The Picture Room had a secret that was about to be revealed. Three of the walls were fitted with large, movable doors upon which the paintings we could see were hung. When these doors were opened, there were other paintings and drawings behind them. In one case, there was another room behind the paintings. This was the Recessed Room (photo 13). When we looked down into the basement from there, we saw a room called the Monk’s Parlor (photo 14). This included a pair of beautiful 16th & 17th century Flemish stained-glass windows.

Another bit of cleverness in a few of the rooms was the addition of clear, acrylic chairs to allow people who had issues standing for very long to sit down. These chairs were nearly invisible, allowing people to be able to see through them to whatever was behind them while still helping anyone who was weary of standing.

The last room we visited was the South Drawing Room up on the First Floor at the front of House No.13. This was where we saw family portraits and heard about Sir John Soane’s wife and two sons.

This ended our second and final day in London. The following day we would continue our adventures in Oxford for a couple more days, after which it was on to Cairo.

Next – Arriving in Oxford at The Randolph Hotel