‘Giving Ryde’s Past to the Future’

Historic Ryde Society Quiz Night Thursday 18 December 2025 at Yelf's Hotel, at 7p.m. for 7.30pm.    The Museum of Ryde will be closed from 20th December 2025 to the 17th February 2026.

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The confectionery room makeover begins!

Jerry and Michael have been doing a sterling job over the summer, tidying, cleaning, scraping walls and removing old plaster, and the confectionery room is looking greatly different to how it looked before. There is still a great deal of work to be done, which will progress over the winter months. As the Centre moves to winter opening hours in November, there will be opportunities for volunteers to come and help with various tasks during times when the Centre is closed. If there’s anyone out there who’d like to become involved with anything, please shout! The more volunteers we have, the sooner the wonderful Ice Well can be opened for public viewing. Return to Homepage.

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The Ice Well

The Ice Well The Newchurch Poor Rate Books, which are held in the County Record Office at Hillside, Newport, list the owners and tenants, rates, etc., of buildings and businesses from the early 1830s. The Arcade is rated as 14 separate retail units, a Large Room (now The Lanes), a Gas House, Wine vaults and Ice Well. This ice well served Charles Dixon in 1836, who ran The Soup Room from Number 8. (Turtle soup sold at 15 shillings (75p) a quart.) Another Union Street fishmonger leased the well for several years. The well later became an opportunity for Henry Knight and his family to attend to the increasingly popular demand for confectionery in early Victorian Ryde. In October 2012, the ice well was revealed in all its glory, having been bricked up and forgotten for the last fifty or so years. In remarkable condition, and with amazing brickwork, the well has been cleared of over 10000 litres of PH 7, so long-standing, stagnant water. A large pile of wood, rubbish and silt has been removed, as well as a large amount of metalwork. So far parts belonging to a Victorian range, tools and pipes have been identified. More images on the Ryde District Heritage Centre Gallery page. Recent research on ice wells has revealed the exciting fact that

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