Twinings Museum
The Twinings Museum is a small museum adjacent to Twinings Shop at 216, The Strand, London, England.
Twinings is thought to be the oldest company in London to have traded continuously on the same site with the same family since its foundation. It was founded by Thomas Twining (1675-1741) who bought an old coffee house in 1706. He daringly introduced tea — then an exotic drink enjoyed by the wealthy — and in 1717 opened the Golden Lyon to sell tea and coffee.
In 1787, his grandson Richard Twining built the handsome doorway, which incorporates two Chinese figures to acknowledge the fact that tea-drinking began in China. At the back of the long narrow shop is the small museum, which tells the story of the Twining family and displays tea-related paraphernalia collected over 300 years.
Among the exhibits are a copy of Queen Victoria's Royal Warrant from 1837, old advertisements and a selection of tea caddies. There's also a non-descript wooden box labelled TIP, which is an acronym for 'to insure promptness'; patrons of coffee/tea houses would drop a penny into the box to encourage quick service — the origin of the term 'tip'.