In a museum in south London sits a walrus that is wrong. He is too smooth. Real walruses have heavy folds of grooved skin — wrinkles upon wrinkles, hanging loose around their bodies. The walrus in the Horniman Museum has none. He is plump, taut, almost balloon-like, as if someone had inflated him. The reason is simple. The Victorian taxidermist who prepared him in the 1880s had never seen a real walrus. Photographs of walruses were rare. Live walruses had not been brought to Europe. The taxidermist worked from a few drawings and the dead skin in front of him. When he saw heavy folds of skin, he assumed they were the way the dead animal had relaxed. He stretched the skin out, smoothed it down, and stuffed it firm. The result was a walrus that looked nothing like a real walrus. The Horniman Walrus first came to London for the 1886 Colonial and Indian Exhibition — a huge display in South Kensington meant to celebrate the British Empire. He was part of the Canada section, alongside moose, mountain goats, and grizzly bears, brought together by the Canadian hunter James Henry Hubbard. The skin had been taken in Hudson Bay, on the territory of Inuit communities. Frederick Horniman, a wealthy tea trader who collected objects from across the Empire, bought the walrus after the exhibition closed. When he opened his museum in Forest Hill in 1901, the walrus was already a favourite. He has been on display ever since, except for one short trip to Margate in 2018. He has his own social media accounts. Visitors take photographs. Children love him. Generations of Londoners have grown up with him. He is technically a mistake. He is also one of the most beloved museum objects in the city. This lesson asks how that happened, what it means, and what a famous Victorian mistake can teach us about museums today.
That knowing what an animal looks like is not as easy as we now think. Today, anyone with a smartphone can watch hundreds of videos of walruses in five minutes. Edward Hart could not. He had to work from a few drawings, written descriptions, and the dead skin in front of him. There were almost certainly Inuit people in the 1880s who knew exactly what a walrus looked like — Inuit communities have hunted walruses for thousands of years and know the animal intimately. But that knowledge was not available to a London taxidermist in 1886. Knowledge that exists in one community does not always travel to another. The Horniman Walrus is a perfect example of what happens when knowledge does not travel — a Victorian craftsman doing his best with what he had, getting the most important detail wrong because no one had told him otherwise. Students should see that 'knowledge' is not a single thing held by all humans equally. It lives in particular places, with particular people, and it moves slowly, often badly, between them. The walrus is wrinkly, but only if someone tells you so.
Because exhibitions like the Colonial and Indian Exhibition shaped how British people thought about the Empire — and how they thought about the rest of the world. Five and a half million people walked through the displays. They saw Indigenous peoples presented as exotic curiosities. They saw the natural resources of distant lands as belongings of the Empire. They saw animals like the walrus presented as 'Canadian' rather than as belonging to the Inuit lands they came from. These ways of seeing did not disappear when the exhibition closed. They became part of how British culture imagined the wider world for generations. Many of the objects in British museums today were collected during this period, often through similar exhibitions or through colonial networks. The Horniman Walrus is one of these objects. He is not just a strange and beloved museum mascot. He is also a record of how Victorian Britain saw its Empire. Both stories are true at once. Students should see that the museums and collections we have today were shaped by the politics of the 1800s, and that being honest about this is part of taking museums seriously. End by asking: 'Does the walrus belong in London?' There is no easy answer. The Horniman Museum has thought carefully about this question and includes information about the walrus's colonial origins in the gallery. The question is real and ongoing.
Because the wealth that bought the objects often came from the same systems that produced the objects. Frederick Horniman's tea wealth and the walrus from a Canadian colonial exhibition are both products of the British Empire. The same patterns appear in many British museums. The British Museum holds many objects bought or taken during the colonial period. The Victoria and Albert Museum, the Pitt Rivers, the Natural History Museum, and many smaller collections all have objects collected through the same networks. Understanding where money came from is part of understanding what museums are. This does not mean every museum object is tainted, or that every collector was a bad person. Frederick Horniman seems to have genuinely loved the things he collected and to have wanted to share them with the public. He was probably a kind man. But he was also part of a system that moved objects from places like Hudson Bay to places like Forest Hill, and the system itself was tied up with imperial power. Students should see that history is not made up of villains and heroes — it is made up of ordinary people working within systems that they may or may not have understood. Frederick Horniman bought a beloved walrus with money made through an exploitative trade. Both things are true. The walrus is still standing.
That museums today are doing real, careful work to tell the full story of their objects — not just the easy parts. Twenty years ago, the walrus was presented mainly as a charming Victorian curiosity. The funny mistake was the headline. Today, the museum tells the harder story alongside the funny one — the colonial exhibition, the tea wealth, the broader question of where museum objects come from. This is how good museum work has changed. Many museums now think hard about what they have, how they got it, and what to say about it. Some objects have been returned. Some have not. Many are being reinterpreted. The Horniman Walrus is part of this larger conversation. He is loved. He is wrong. He came through colonial systems. He has stayed in Forest Hill for 130 years. He will be there when the gallery reopens in 2026. All of these things are true together. Students should see that 'museums' are not finished — they are still being remade, every year, by curators and communities working out what their objects mean now. The walrus has a future as well as a past. End the discovery here. The next school trip will arrive soon.
The Horniman Walrus is a taxidermied Atlantic walrus, prepared in 1886 by the English taxidermist Edward Hart for the Colonial and Indian Exhibition in South Kensington, London. The walrus had been hunted in Hudson Bay, Canada, by the Canadian hunter James Henry Hubbard, on territories of Inuit peoples who have hunted walruses for thousands of years. The taxidermy is famously inaccurate — Hart had never seen a real walrus and did not know that walruses have heavy folds of grooved skin, so he stuffed the skin smooth. The result is a plump, balloon-like walrus that looks nothing like a real one. After the exhibition closed, the walrus was bought by Frederick John Horniman, a wealthy tea trader whose family business sat at the heart of the British Empire's trade networks. When the Horniman Museum opened in Forest Hill, south London, in 1901, the walrus was a favourite from the start. He has been on display almost continuously since then, with a short trip to Margate in 2018 and a current refurbishment of the Natural History Gallery, which reopens in 2026. He has his own social media accounts. Generations of Londoners have grown up with him. He is technically a mistake. He is also one of the most beloved museum objects in the city. The lesson asks what this single Victorian taxidermy can teach us about how knowledge travels, how empires shaped museums, and how a famous mistake can become more meaningful than a correct version would have been.
| Question | What many people assume | What is actually true |
|---|---|---|
| Why is the walrus so smooth? | It is just a strange-looking walrus | The Victorian taxidermist Edward Hart had never seen a real walrus and did not know they have heavy folds of skin, so he stuffed it smooth |
| Where did the walrus come from? | From a zoo or a private collection | He was hunted in Hudson Bay, Canada, in the 1880s, on Inuit traditional territories, and brought to London for the 1886 Colonial and Indian Exhibition |
| Who bought him? | The museum bought him directly | Frederick Horniman, a wealthy tea trader, bought him after the 1886 exhibition closed. The Horniman Museum opened in 1901, with the walrus already in the collection |
| How long has he been on display? | A few decades | He has been on display almost continuously since 1901, with a short trip to Margate in 2018 and a refurbishment break that ends in 2026 |
| Is he just a curiosity? | Yes, just a funny Victorian mistake | He is also a colonial collection, brought to London through the same imperial networks that produced many other British museum objects |
| Should he be returned? | Probably yes (or no, depending on view) | The question is real but complicated. He was not taken from a specific community. The animal is dead. The Horniman Museum has had real discussions about it but has not announced a repatriation |
The Horniman Walrus is just a funny Victorian mistake.
He is a funny mistake AND a colonial collection. The taxidermy was prepared for the 1886 Colonial and Indian Exhibition, displaying the British Empire's natural resources. The walrus was hunted in Hudson Bay on Inuit traditional territories. Both stories are true at once.
Reducing the walrus to a single funny anecdote hides the larger history that brought him to London.
Edward Hart was a bad taxidermist.
Hart was a skilled and respected craftsman. The walrus's eyes, tusks, posture, and overall finish are well prepared. He simply did not know that walruses have heavy folds of skin, because he had never seen a live walrus and there were no good photographs to work from. He did the best he could with the information available.
Calling Victorian craftsmen incompetent misses the deeper point about how knowledge travels — or doesn't.
The walrus has nothing to do with empire — he is just a museum object.
He was bought with tea wealth, hunted on Inuit territories, displayed at a Colonial and Indian Exhibition, and brought to London through imperial trade networks. He is a small but real example of how the British Empire shaped British museums. Many other museum objects came through similar paths.
Treating colonial collections as politically neutral hides the system that produced them.
All colonial museum objects should be returned to their original countries.
Each object is a separate question. Some, like the Benin Bronzes, were taken violently from specific communities and have clear paths home. Others, like the Horniman Walrus, are more complicated — he was not taken from a specific family, the animal is dead, and there is no obvious place to return him to. Repatriation is real and important work, but each case has to be considered carefully.
Treating all colonial objects the same way ignores the real differences between them and the real complexity of the work.
Treat the walrus with the affection that real visitors have for him, AND with honesty about his history. Both matter. The lesson should not be a takedown of a beloved London object. It should also not be a straightforward celebration that ignores the colonial story. The walrus is a case where 'love' and 'reckoning' have to sit side by side. Be careful with the colonial material. The 1886 Colonial and Indian Exhibition was a real and important event. Do not dismiss it as quaint. Five and a half million people visited. The exhibition shaped how Victorian Britain saw the Empire. At the same time, do not lecture. Students need facts, not moral instructions. Be respectful of Inuit peoples. The walrus came from Inuit traditional territories. Inuit communities have lived in the Arctic for thousands of years and have deep, sophisticated knowledge of walruses, ice, and Arctic ecosystems. Their knowledge was not asked for in 1886. Mention this honestly. Do not romanticise Inuit communities or speak for them. Be careful with the science. Real walruses are wrinkly. The Horniman Walrus is not. This is genuinely scientifically wrong. Teach the science honestly. At the same time, do not make the walrus seem like a failure — he is a successful piece of Victorian craft, just not an accurate biological specimen. Be honest about Frederick Horniman. He was a philanthropist who gave a great deal of money and a great collection to the public. His wealth came from the tea trade, which was deeply tied to imperial systems and to exploitative labour. He was a complicated person, like most people. Mention this without making him a villain or a hero. Be careful with the repatriation question. It is real and ongoing. The Horniman Museum returned the Benin Bronzes in 2022, after careful consultation. The walrus is a different case. There is no easy answer. Make sure students understand that 'should it be returned' is a real question with no single right answer — and that the museum itself has thought about it. Be respectful of London students who love the walrus. He is a real part of many people's childhoods. The lesson should not feel like an attack on something they love. Affection for a museum object is real. So is the harder history. Both can be true. Avoid heavy-handed framings. The walrus is not a metaphor for everything wrong with Britain. He is one specific object with one specific history, and the lesson is about that specific object. Finally, end the lesson on the present. The Horniman is reopening in 2026. The walrus is coming back to the gallery. The story continues.
Answer each question in one or two sentences. Use what you have learned about the Horniman Walrus.
What is the Horniman Walrus, and why does he look so different from a real walrus?
Where did the walrus come from, and how did he get to London?
What was the 1886 Colonial and Indian Exhibition, and why does it matter?
Why is the Horniman Walrus loved by so many people in London?
What does the walrus teach us about how knowledge travels — or fails to travel?
These questions have no single right answer. Talk in pairs or small groups, then share your ideas with the class.
The Horniman Walrus is a famous mistake that has become beloved. Can you think of other examples — in art, science, design, or daily life — where a mistake became more loved than a correct version would have been?
Should the Horniman Walrus stay in London, or should he go back to Canada?
Many objects in British museums came through colonial networks. What do you think museums should do today about the objects they hold?
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