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National Railway Museum
This is a small museum of railway memorabilia, including
the skull of an elephant killed when it collided with a mail train
in Bengal, in 1894. But the principal glory of the National Railway
Museum is the open-air display of old steam locomotives and rolling
stock. Particularly interesting are the ‘special’ carriages
belonging to British and Indian grandees, such as the Viceregal
dining car, the Maharaja of Mysore's personal train, which comprised
both sleeping and day compartments, and the Gaekwar of Baroda’s
Saloon, with its ornate gold and enamel ceiling. Also on display
is the last steam engine to see service on the Indian railways –
as recently as 1995 – and the first electric-powered engine
to do so – as long ago as the 1930s.
Crafts Museum
Crafts Museum is located near Purana Quilla on the Bhairon
Road. You can include a visit to Crafts Museum on your tour of Purana
Quilla. The Museum was designed by Charles Correa and is quite popular
among the lovers of Indian art and craft. The Crafts Museum displays
various objects from different parts of India. The Tribal and Rural
Craft Gallery is a treasure house of beautiful crafted objects from
Karnataka, Madhya Pradesh, Orissa and Nagaland. The Crafts Museum
also has a village complex dedicated to the architecture of village
houses.
Gandhi
Memorial Museum
Adjacent to Raj Ghat is the Gandhi Memorial Musuem, where
the visitor can see a fascinating display of photographs illustrating
the Mahatma’s life and death. There is a large collection
of Gandhi memorabilia, from toothpicks to spinning wheels, via the
clothes he was supposedly wearing at his assassination. Among the
bons mots about Gandhi, which are inscribed on the walls, is G.B.
Shaw’s reflection that the Mahatma’s murder ‘shows
how dangerous it is to be too good.’
National Gallery of Modern Art
The National Gallery of Modern Art contains a large collection
of 20th-century Indian art. There are examples of the work of the
painters of the Bengali Renaissance and of the poet and artist,
Tagore.The highlight is the room devoted to the pictures of female
Indian artist Amrita Sher-Gil (1913-1941), whose portraits –
more successful than her genre scenes – are painted with the
confident bravura of the youthful Augustus John. The galleries recently
have been reorganized to accommodate a program of biannual exhibitions
designed to bring a larger proportion of the 15,000-piece collection
before the public. The museum is in Jaipur House – by any
yardstick, a grandee’s townhouse – formerly the Delhi
residence of the Maharaja of Jaipur.
National Science Centre
National Science Centre located at Pragati Maidan, near Gate No.
1 is dedicated to inculcate awareness about science and technology.
Those interested in astronomy can head to Nehru Planetarium, which
is located in Teen Murti House. The planetarium holds special film
shows on the solar system in English and Hindi. Apart from the above
mentioned museums, Delhi has a number of other museums that you
can visit on your tour of Delhi. Some of the museums that you may
like to travel to include Indira Gandhi Memorial Museum, Sanskriti
Museum of Indian Terracottta, National Philatelic Museum and Doll
Museum.
Tibet House Museum
The Tibet House Museum on Lodi Road has a fine collection
of tankhas, jewellery and ritual objects. En route to Old Delhi
are the Shankar's Dolls Museum of Archeology related to the Mughal
era, and the Museum of Arms and Weapons which traces the development
of arms from the Mughal age to the First World War.
Shankar's
International Dolls Museum Delhi
The International Dolls Museum is exactly what its name
implies, it is a museum devoted to a display of dolls from all over
India and abroad. On view are dolls dressed in national costumes,
each exquisitely Grafted and embellished.There are indigenous rural
dolls made by local craftsmen, sophisticated dolls machine made
at factories, in fact a magical collection that will delight children
as well as enthrall the adult.
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