• 10.00am - 5.30pm
  • FREE
  • Chelsea, London
  • 10.00am - 5.30pm
  • FREE
  • Chelsea, London

Support us

Detail from a painting of the Battle of Isandlwana, 1879
Support

Support the National Army Museum today

The National Army Museum is a charity and relies on your support. Every gift enables us to continue our work in safeguarding our Army’s history and heritage. You can help us in our mission to engage and inspire everyone with the stories of our soldiers.

Make a donation

The National Army Museum depends on the generosity of its supporters. Any donation, no matter the size, is a meaningful contribution to our ongoing work and is gratefully received.

How your support helps

From research through to acquisitions, conservation, education and exhibitions, your donation can fund a wide-ranging body of vital work at the Museum.

  • £5,000 would allow us to preserve 50 historic items of clothing, like the Duke of Wellington’s cloak and Queen Elizabeth II’s WRAC uniform.
  • £10,000 could cover the digitisation of key source material, ensuring its preservation and increasing public access to our archives.
  • £35,000 could let us bring history to life for young people through re-enactment performances of key stories and battles.
  • £50,000 could support us in purchasing a rare medal group, allowing new stories of courage and sacrifice to be told in our galleries.
  • £100,000 could sponsor an innovative exhibition which reaches new audiences across the UK and around the world.

These are only a few examples of the work that your donation could support. For more information on how your level of support can help us in our mission, please get in touch.

Contact us

For more information on making a donation, or to discuss ways in which you would like to support the National Army Museum, please contact our Development team.

Christine Bernáth, Head of Development
Email: cbernath@nam.ac.uk
Call: 020 7881 2467

Fundraising Regulator

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"First time @NAM_London today. Thoroughly enjoyed it. Thought the presentation & interpretation made the subject accessible..."