Windermere Steamboat Museum was opened in 1977 on the former Sand and Gravel Wharf on the eastern shore of Windermere, and was based on the collection built up by George Pattinson, a local builder and boat collector. It was operated by the
Windermere Nautical Trust charity. The original Windermere Steamboat Museum had a collection of a number of historically important steamboats, motor boats, yachts, and other important craft. This included the oldest mechanically powered boat in the world, SL
Dolly (c.1850), and some of the finest steam launches from Windermere's long history of steam. Most luxurious was SL
Branksome (1896), with its original velvet seats and marble wash hand basin;
SL Raven (1871) was the cargo ship that took coal and other commodities to the settlements around the lake; and TSSY
Esperance (1869) was the boat that Henry Schneider used to go to work in Barrow via Lakeside. The museum was able to boast that most of the steamboats were floating and still in full working order. In 2007, the museum was closed to the general public when it was taken over by the Lakeland Arts Trust, a local charity (now
Lakeland Arts) which also runs
Abbot Hall Art Gallery,
Blackwell and the
Museum of Lakeland Life & Industry. Eleven of the Pattinson collection of boats were transferred to the Lakeland Arts Trust in 2007 under
Acceptance in lieu arrangements, and the Windermere Nautical Trust, which had built up further collections, merged with Lakeland Arts in 2009. In December 2011, the Lakeland Arts Trust announced that would redevelop the site and create a series of new buildings to house the boats and a conservation workshop where they would be restored and maintained. The museum, designed by Carmody Groarke, reopened under the new name "Windermere Jetty: Museum of Boats, Steam and Stories" in March 2019 with an official opening ceremony held on 8 April 2019 attended by HRH
Prince Charles. It appeared as the venue of
BBC One’s
Antiques Roadshow in February 2021, filmed in 2020. == Collection ==