10 Things to do Good for Big Groups in Portsmouth That You Shouldn't Miss

June 4, 2021 Mollie Coke

Portsmouth (/ˈpɔːrtsməθ/ ( listen)) is a port city in Hampshire, England, mainly on Portsea Island, 70 miles (110 km) south-west of London and 19 miles (31 km) south-east of Southampton. It has a total population of 205,400. The city forms part of the South Hampshire built-up area, which also covers Southampton and the towns of Havant, Waterlooville, Eastleigh, Fareham, and Gosport.
Restaurants in Portsmouth

1. The Mary Rose

Main Road Portsmouth Naval Base, Portsmouth PO1 3PY England +44 (0) 23 9281 2931 [email protected] http://www.maryrose.org
Excellent
84%
Good
12%
Satisfactory
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5.0 based on 5,617 reviews

The Mary Rose

The Mary Rose is home to the Mary Rose and the thousands of artefacts that were recovered from the Solent. Built between 1509 and 1511, The Mary Rose was one of the first ships able to fire a broadside, and was a firm favourite of King Henry VIII. After a long and successful career, she sank accidentally during an engagement with the French fleet in 1545. Her rediscovery and raising were seminal events in the history of nautical archaeology. After a 34 year conservation project, the Mary Rose is now fully on display within her purpose-built museum. Please note that The Mary Rose is not included in the Portsmouth Historic Dockyard 11 Attraction Ticket. We currently offer a 10% discount to holders of a valid 11 Attraction Ticket upon its presentation at either our Visitor Centre at the main dockyard entrance (Victory Gate), or at our museum. Tickets purchased before 1st April 2018 will still be accepted until their expiration date.

Reviewed By 910adrianh - Frome, United Kingdom

Have visited this museum twice now and each time have been amazed at the restoration and historical background to life onboard in Tudor times that it provides and demonstrates. Attended a brilliant talk about the threat of French invasion at the time.

2. Supernatural Tours and Events

Excellent
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Good
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5.0 based on 85 reviews

Supernatural Tours and Events

Supernatural Tours and Events provide a range of Supernatural related events across the UK and Ireland including Ghost Hunts, Ghost Tours, Murder Mystery events and other related events. We run public, private and corporate events. Supernatural Tours and Events also operate *Southampton Ghost Tours *Winchester Ghost Tours *New Forest Ghost Tours *Portsmouth Ghost Tours *Windsor Ghost Tours

3. Baffins Pond

104 Tangier Road, Portsmouth PO3 6PG England +44 23 9282 2251 https://www.visitportsmouth.co.uk/things-to-do/baffins-pond-p276431
Excellent
81%
Good
15%
Satisfactory
4%
Poor
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Overall Ratings

5.0 based on 27 reviews

Baffins Pond

4. Other World Escapes - Escape Room Portsmouth

239 - 241 Commercial Road, Portsmouth PO1 4BJ England +44 23 9217 0600 [email protected] http://www.otherworldescapes.com
Excellent
100%
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5.0 based on 201 reviews

Other World Escapes - Escape Room Portsmouth

Here at Other World Escapes, we offer escape rooms and team building exercises to clients throughout Portsmouth and the surrounding areas. We have a real passion for what we do and we feel that this shows in every single one of the escape rooms that we offer from our base in Portsmouth. This is one of the main reasons why we firmly believe that we should be your first and only port of call for escape rooms, escape rooms and team building exercises, anywhere in the Portsmouth area. Other World Escapes make you a HERO in your own ADVENTURE; our Portsmouth-based escape rooms are fun, thrilling and interactive team-based adventures with YOU at the centre. To find out more on our Portsmouth escape rooms, get in touch with us today.

Reviewed By Suziespangle

We visited with friends between Xmas and New Year. We have done several Escape rooms with various companies and the Chip shop was ace! Fun and challenging and very interactive compared to some others we have done! We will def return to do others!

5. The Portsmouth Distillery

Fort Cumberland Fort Cumberland Road Coastguard Casemate, Fort Cumberland, Portsmouth PO4 9LD England +44 23 9273 3339 http://www.theportsmouthdistillery.com/
Excellent
97%
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5.0 based on 35 reviews

The Portsmouth Distillery

Reviewed By CarolN1740

Was a great visit....didn’t even know there was a distillery in Portsmouth.....the staff were great and it was very informative about the distillery and about Fort Cumberland..... they are all very passionate obout the Gin and Rum they make and you get to taste all of it and a complimentary drink at the end.... well worth a visit....

6. Exciting Escapes

48 London Road, Portsmouth PO2 0LN England +44 23 9266 6831 [email protected] http://www.excitingescapes.co.uk
Excellent
93%
Good
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5.0 based on 433 reviews

Exciting Escapes

An Escape Room is an hour-long adventure with your friends, your family or perhaps your work-mates. It’s a bit like the Crystal Maze from TV, or a real-life version of an online Room Escape game. You play as a team and have to find clues, solve puzzles, and complete challenges to finish your mission in 60 minutes!

Reviewed By serenawright2020 - Ely, United Kingdom

We've been to a *lot* of Escape Rooms, and Exciting Escapes in Portsmouth is still one of our favourites! The staff team are helpful and friendly, and they have done everything they can to be warm and welcoming while observing social distancing! The rooms are cleaned and reset between every adventure, so it's all COVID secure. Remember to bring a mask as, like all escape rooms now, you need to wear it during the game (so you're not excitedly huffing over every discovery, which I am prone to do). We've now completed three 'escapes' here - seven of us tackled 'The Voices We Hear...' for our school-friends Christmas reunion '19 (this is hands-down THE most wonderfully terrifying immersive escape room I've ever done! If you like to be scared, this is the one for you!), the 'Millennium Meltdown' two-player (also December - we went back the next day!), and 'Dark Deeds and Groceries' (end of August '20), which is a 3-6 player but we tackled as a pair. Obviously I wouldn't want to give anything away, but there is a great mix of tasks suited to different aptitudes - keen observation and logical deduction, some maths, colour matching, and some really nice interactive touches - and you really feel like you're in a 1920s green-grocers, or saving the world on New Year's Eve 1999! Unlike some escape rooms I've visited, this is all about observation and logic - everything makes sense. Anyone who finds themselves in Portsmouth and at a loose end for an hour should book up immediately!

7. The D-Day Story

Clarence Esplanade, Portsmouth PO5 3NT England +44 23 9288 2555 [email protected] http://www.theddaystory.com
Excellent
60%
Good
30%
Satisfactory
7%
Poor
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4.5 based on 946 reviews

The D-Day Story

The D-Day Story tells of the people behind the events of D-Day and the Battle of Normandy. It holds over 10,000 items – preserving, researching and acquiring objects to share with the public through exhibitions, workshops and other activities. The museum is fully accredited, meeting nationally agreed standards for UK museums. Following a £5 million transformation project, it has moved from being an military-focused museum to one that tells the personal stories behind the epic day. The museum is also home to the Overlord Embroidery, which tells the story of the operation across 34 hand-stitched panels stretching for a total of 83 metres. The D-Day Story is one of six museums run by Portsmouth Museums, part of Portsmouth City Council. Responsibility for the museums service falls under the remit of the council’s cabinet member for Culture, Leisure and Sport.

Reviewed By GeorginaS152 - Windsor, United Kingdom

What a thrill to discover on Trip Adviser the D-Day Story Museum at Portsmouth, but only AFTER our return from the D-Day 75th anniversary cruise aboard CMV’s bijou cruise ship, Marco Polo, with a surprise 24-hour adventure tacked on the end! If we’d only known about this superbly-curated museum in advance, it would have been a ‘must do’. It offers such excellent local background and research, up-to-the minute presentation and, a particular “must-see” the stunning Overlord Embroidery designed by Sandra Lawrence and worked on by 25 embroiderers for four years at the Royal School of Needlework. When we’re back in Portsmouth again in September for a round British Isles cruise on another little ship, Astoria, our top priority is to view the 34 hand-stitched panels of stunning embroidery depicting the story of the D-Day Landings of 1944 at the Museum. The DDay voyage aboard Marco Polo covered a circular route of 880 nautical miles over 7 days and moored at 4 ports thus: Portsmouth -> Antwerp -> Honfleur -> Rouen -> Portsmouth The cruise itinerary was divided between days spent at sea with many on-board activities, and shore days, when passengers were bussed to the nearby D-Day centres of interest thus: 2 June - Marco Polo sailed out of Portsmouth 3 + 4 June in Antwerp with a range of tours to suit all tastes, from small group walking/beer-tasting tours; city tours at Brussels + Ghent + canal trip; an all-day tour of seven and a half hours to Ypres, including a visit to Tyne Cot Cemetery and ending with the moving ceremony of Last Post and Reveille at the Menin Gate Memorial at 8 pm. This famous ceremony has been held each evening without fail since 1926 by volunteers from the local Fire Brigade, except during the German occupation in WWII. 5 June - at Honfleur with tours of the stylish coastal resort of Deauville; the British D-Day beaches and cemeteries at Bayeux; and Ranville cemeteries, and the Pegasus bridge and memorial dedicated to the 6th British Airborne Division, the first liberators who parachuted into Normandy on the night of 5/6 June. 6 June - cruising at sea with talks and films before the poignant service on deck at 11 am, then a sail-by of the D Day beaches before entering the Seine and mooring at Rouen - our final port in France. 6/7 June - Rouen: tours to see Monet’s Garden, a huge tourist attraction but lots of footwork - comfy shoes essential! Or a coach to Paris with a tour and a riverboat ride on the Seine. A long coach tour to the D-Day beaches where the American troops had landed; the vast American cemetery overlooking Omaha Beach with the graves of 10,000 American soldiers, killed during the Normandy invasion and subsequent military operations in WWII. All went according to plan until the weather abruptly changed!Tours returning to the ship from Paris, were delayed in heavy traffic. As a result, the ship lost its 8 pm departure slot and eventually sailed out 12 hours later. The good news was that Marco Polo didn’t have to struggle through the Channel in noisy darkness, battered by storm and swell. Instead, departing mid-morning, we sailed briskly in the sunshine through a smoother sea, ‘tho’ quite a few passengers suffered mild sea-sickness. The Captain notified all cabins by letter of the changed arrangements for a revised docking time of 9.30 pm on Saturday in Portsmouth. He told us that if people found the late arrival inconvenient, they were welcome to stay an extra night on board in the same cabin and disembark early on Sunday morning! Drinks packages were extended, we enjoyed the same high quality menus provided with the usual faultless service. The change of arrival time was a sudden shock but the Marco Polo customer care was asseamless and impeccable as ever. We finally disembarked on Sunday morning into a calm and sunny day. What an adventure we’d had, following in the tracks of thousands who’d gone before! The high spot had been the Commemoration service beautifully led by the Cruise Director on deck. He began with an amazing surprise: he read out a beautiful letter just received on board from HM the Queen. Such pride and joy, and not a few tears it created. The muster took some time as all veterans and ex-military had gathered with friends, family and interested observers for whom WWII is an intrinsic part of their own history. Passengers lined the decks above and all blended their own voices with the ship’s company. The most touching moments, which brought many to tears, were when the veterans themselves spoke those words we hear every November after the Last Post has been played followed by the 2 minute silence. A veteran spoke the Exhortation from Laurence Binyon’s “For The Fallen”(1914) “They shall grow not old, as we that are left grow old, Age shall not weary them, nor the years condemn. At the going down of the sun, and in the morning, We will remember them.” After the wreaths were laid came the Kohima Epitaph, carved on the memorial of the 2nd British Division in the cemetery of Kohima in North-East India. A second veteran repeated it firmly and proudly, so that all could hear: “When you go home, tell them of us and say, For your tomorrow, we gave our today.” The wreaths were laid - one in the sea because it was bio-degradable, and two in the swimming pool, which were not. When the service ended, the emotion turned from memories to laughter and pride that another remembrance had been achieved. In her Christmas Day speech last year, HM the Queen said: “We cannot grieve if we did not love.” So true! The abiding feeling after a solemn, thought-provoking service like this one is that of a job well done, a life well-lived, whether brief or long, people remembered with honour, respect and - above all - love. The D-Day story again well told, both on board ship and at the wonderful D-Day Museum, Portsmouth.

8. Staunton Farm

Middle Park Way Havant, Portsmouth PO9 5HB England +44 23 9245 3405 [email protected] http://www.hants.gov.uk/staunton
Excellent
50%
Good
36%
Satisfactory
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Overall Ratings

4.5 based on 379 reviews

Staunton Farm

At Staunton there are 1,000 acres of landscaped parkland, with a lake, follies and ancient woodland to explore. With friendly animals to meet on the ornamental farm, beautiful gardens and glasshouses to discover,there really is something for everyone.

Reviewed By 589gareths - Havant, United Kingdom

Being locals who only live a few mins down the road we love this place, always something to see and do the goats are so funny in the little paddock

9. Portsmouth Historic Dockyard

Visitor Centre, Victory Gate, HM Naval Base, Portsmouth PO1 3LJ England +44 23 9283 9766 [email protected] http://www.historicdockyard.co.uk/
Excellent
76%
Good
19%
Satisfactory
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Poor
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4.5 based on 7,987 reviews

Portsmouth Historic Dockyard

Featuring world famous ships HMS Victory and HMS Warrior 1860. Plus visit HMS Alliance, the only remaining WW2 era British ocean going submarine, and the M33, the sole remaining British veteran of the bloody Dardanelles Campaign of 1915-1916. Also including the National Museum Royal Navy Portsmouth, Action Stations, the Harbour Tours, andd the Jutland Exhibition, there's plenty to see and do. Portsmouth Historic Dockyard is a great day out for all the family. Situated within a working Naval Base, Portsmouth Historic Dockyard is the only place in the world to see the Royal Navy past, present and future - a must see for anyone visiting the south of England.

Reviewed By Flantheman2334 - Gosport, United Kingdom

Individually, all of the attractions in the dockyard are not particularly cheap. However, if you buy an annual "All in" ticket, then the full price is £31 online. This covers Entry to HMS Warrior, HMS Victory, National Museum of the Royal Navy Portsmouth, Action Stations, HMS M.33, Harbour Tours, Boathouse 4, Dockyard Apprentice, Royal Navy Submarine Museum and Explosion Museum of Naval Firepower !!! And for a year!" Excellent value. The Mary Rose is an additional £18, which makes it by far the most expensive.

10. HMS Warrior 1860

Victory Gate, Historic Dockyard, Portsmouth PO1 3QX England +44 23 9283 9766 [email protected] http://www.hmswarrior.org
Excellent
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Good
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Satisfactory
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4.5 based on 2,444 reviews

HMS Warrior 1860

As you arrive at Portsmouth Historic Dockyard, the stunning sleek, black lines of Britain's first iron-hulled, armoured warship, take your breath away. Warrior, launched in 1860, was the pride of Queen Victoria's fleet. Powered by steam and sail, she was the largest, fastest and most powerful ship of her day and had a profound effect on naval architecture. Warrior was, in her time, the ultimate deterrent. Yet within a few years she was obsolete. Restored and back at home in Portsmouth, Warrior now serves as a ship museum, monument, visitor attraction, private venue and more.

Reviewed By meganp913 - Dursley, United Kingdom

I visited with my young daughter and this was our first stop of the day. She really is still today an amazing ship. We spent a great deal of time looking around and found the volunteers on board most helpful and friendly. I highly recommend visiting the gentleman who does the knots at the front of the gun deck, he was brilliant and my daughter loved watching him work. We will certainly be coming back to visit again.

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