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Aberdeen Archives, Gallery and Museums

(collection-level records)
Wikidata identifier:
Q109893034
Also known as:
AAGM Collections, Aberdeen Archives, Gallery and Museums Collections, Aberdeen Art Gallery & Museums
Instance of:
museum service
Museum/collection status:
Recognised collection
Persistent shareable link for this record:
https://museumdata.uk/museums/q109893034/
Object records:
Yes, see object records for this museum

Collection-level records:

  • Collection overview (Collection development policy)

    APPLIED ART – COLLECTION DESCRIPTION

    Ceramics

    European Ceramics

    The European Ceramics collection comprises representative examples from the major continental porcelain factories, such as Meissen, Vienna Porcelain Factory, Tournai and Sevres.

    British Ceramics

    The collection contains 20th and 21st century studio ceramics, including the extensive Sandy Dunbar Studio Ceramics Collection, and we have a group of ceramics designed by artists e.g. work by Scottie Wilson, Eric Ravilious and Bruce McLean. Examples of British 20th century factory wares have been acquired, including pieces designed by Gordon Mitchell Forsyth, Susie Cooper and Clarice Cliff and key factories such as Shelley, Denby and Hornsea. There are representative examples from the major English porcelain factories.

    Scottish Historic Collection

    The Scottish Historic Collection includes examples of transfer print wares, spongeware, hand-painted wares, work from the East Coast (particularly Wemyss) and Glasgow potteries, and Aberdeen’s Seaton Pottery.

    Miscellaneous domestic and commercial wares

    Holdings include miscellaneous domestic and commercial wares of local significance.

    Glass

    Miscellaneous Domestic Glass

    Holdings include examples of commercial glassware such as lemonade and ink bottles, and stained-glass panels.

    British and Continental Glass

    The British and Continental glass collection includes a mixed collection of British and Continental glassware from the 17th century to the present day, illustrating the development of stylistic techniques and decoration. Strengths lie in 18th century British drinking glasses, the Cromar Watt collection of Venetian glassware and the Vaughan collection of Monart and Vasart glass. There are groups of European Art Nouveau and Art Deco glass and key examples of contemporary Scottish glass.

    Metalwork

    Domestic Silver

    The domestic silver collection includes British domestic hollowware and flatware from the 17th century onwards. Particular strengths are North East of Scotland silver and the study collection of Aberdeen silversmiths’ hallmarks.

    20th-21st century Metalwork

    Early 20th century metalwork and enamelling, featuring important work by Arts and Crafts designers.

    Jewellery

    Mixed media group of material including precious metals, resins and plastics, gemstones, cameos, costume and mourning jewellery from 17th century to the present day. We have a strong collection of Victorian local and Scottish jewellery, such as clan badges, granite brooches and Scottish semi-precious gemstone work. There is a small, but significant group of Arts and Crafts jewellery, including enamel and jewellery work by Aberdeen born James Cromar Watt (1862 – 1940). The designer jewellery collection has recent acquisitions of outstanding work by international makers, and we care for silversmith drawings and ephemera.

    Portable Accessories including pill boxes, vinaigrettes, scent bottles, hand mirrors and other accessories.

    Watches

    Holdings include 19th and 20th century pocket watches alongside contemporary timepieces by Gordon Burnett and Marianne Forrest.

    Fashion and Textiles

    Fashion Design

    This collection holds work by designers including Laura Ashley, Marion Donaldson, Kaffe Fassett, Mitzi Lorenz and Bill Gibb. The Bill Gibb Collection is a nationally significant collection of over 100 garments and is complemented by an archive of 2460 fashion sketches, working drawings and notes.

    Historic Costume

    This collection contains historic dress and accessories for adults and children, from the 1770s to present day. It mainly comprises middle class dress, with the emphasis on clothes worn, purchased or retailed in the local area. There is a group of occupational costume relating to local industries and trades, uniforms and regalia from local schools, regiments, societies and clubs, and civic robes. Notable acquisitions include the Peggy Walker Gift, Joan Burnett Collection, Stewart Collection of children’s clothing, and two collections of costume and accessories worn locally by Mrs. F. Farquharson of Invercauld and Mrs. Hamilton of Skene.

    Costume Accessories

    Holdings include footwear, bags, shawls, hats, gloves and stockings.

    Costume Ephemera

    Catalogues, magazines, sewing patterns, postcards and press cuttings are included in the collection, and photographs recording local people in fashionable and occupational dress. We also care for packaging and ephemera connected with local costume, fashion shops, dressmakers, tailors and milliners.

    Historic textiles

    This collection comprises Scottish needlework, needlepoint, lace, samplers and beadwork from the early 19th century onwards. Needlework accessories and tools along with dressmaking and knitting patterns also form part of this collection. Notable acquisitions include The Harrower Bequest of Continental and British Lace dating from mid-17th century, examples of local New Pitsligo lace and the collection of dressmaking tools and teaching aids donated by the Robert Gordon University.

    Miscellaneous Domestic Textiles

    A group of household and domestic textiles and furnishings.

    Contemporary Textiles

    Contemporary textiles by worldwide makers, including banners, tapestries, hangings and quilts.

    Craft

    Historic Asian Craft

    Holdings include the James Cromar Watt bequest of Chinese lacquer, carvings in ivory, semi-precious stone and wood, bronzes, and cloisonné enamel. Japanese netsuke and okimono are also represented.

    Other Craft

    This is a broad mixed media collection which includes leatherwork, papermaking, lapidary, basketry, and woodworking and wood specialities such as marquetry and pyrography. The strength of the collection lies in its high-quality work with a Scottish emphasis.

    Clocks

    Small collection of timepieces including examples of 17th, 18th and 19th century mantle, wall and longcase clocks alongside 20th century clocks.

    Furniture

    This collection includes domestic, ecclesiastical and civic furniture.

    Musical instruments

    Historical organs, violins, pianos and a harp.

    FINE ART – COLLECTION DESCRIPTION

    Paintings

    Paintings range from the 15th century (Sienese artist Vecchietta) to the present day. The collection contains British artworks from the 17th to early 19th century, including paintings by George Jamesone, William Mosman, Allan Ramsay, William Hogarth, Sir David Wilkie and Sir Henry Raeburn. There is wide representation of key 19th and 20th artistic styles and movements in our collection. We hold paintings by the Impressionists, Pre-Raphaelites, Glasgow Boys, Camden Town Group, Scottish Colourists, Edinburgh School, St Ives, Hague School, early British avant-garde artists and the Bloomsbury Group.

    The collection includes works by key contemporary artists such as Peter Howson, Ken Currie, Alison Watt, Julie Roberts and Kevin Harman. We have an outstanding work by Francis Bacon, Pope I – study after Pope Innocent X after Velasquez. There are works by several celebrated local artists including Frances Walker, James Cowie, Joan Eardley and James McBey, and we own the major part of William Dyce’s known oil paintings.

    Drawings and Watercolours

    The majority of this collection dates from the 18th century onwards and it showcases British artists. Amongst the watercolours are works by David Allan, Paul Sandby, JMW Turner, William Blake, Samuel Palmer, Charles Rennie Mackintosh, Eric Ravilious, and more recently John Piper and John Bellany. Pre-Raphaelite works include watercolours by JE Millais and Edward Burne-Jones and a drawing by Simeon Solomon.

    The collection contains drawings by several artists connected to Aberdeen, including artworks by William Dyce, figure studies by John Phillip, landscape drawings by James Giles and some 150 drawings by Joan Eardley. In addition to British works, we care for four exceptional illuminated pages from a Book of Hours, depicting Stations of the Cross. They are thought to be Flemish and created in the 15th century.

    Printed Materials

    The earliest prints are mostly 18th century engravings including portraits, the moral scenes of William Hogarth and early views of Aberdeen. French 19th and early 20th century artworks include prints by Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Henri Matisse, Pablo Picasso, Pierre Bonnard, Marc Chagall and Henri Toulouse-Lautrec. The Etching Revival is represented with work by Francis Seymour-Haden, James Whistler, Walter Sickert and Muirhead Bone. Wood engravings, which saw such popularity in the 1920s and 1930s, are represented with over 250 prints. Printed works include sets of reproductions after works by Picasso and Matisse.

    Modern movements in printmaking, specifically the rise in popularity of the screenprint, are reflected in works by Roy Lichtenstein, Andy Warhol and RB Kitaj. More recently, Rachel Maclean, Chiho Aoshima and Scott Baxter are significant representatives of new techniques regarding digital printing. The Peacock Archive forms a large part of our print collection, and contains etchings, screenprints and woodcuts. Local printmaker and workshop, Peacock, has provided an example of every print produced there since 1987.

    Art photography

    We care for a collection of artist-photographs, including photopieces by Gilbert and George, Martin Parr, Jenny Saville, Francesca Woodman and Jane and Louise Wilson.

    Sculpture and installations

    The sculpture collection primarily spans the 19th to 21st centuries. Sculpture by French artists includes work by Degas, Rodin and Bourdelle, and we have 19th century works by British sculptors James Pittendrigh Macgillivray, the Brodie brothers, Edgar Papworth and Thomas Woolner. The 20th century collection includes Barbara Hepworth, Henry Moore, Sir Jacob Epstein, Ossip Zadkine, Eduardo Paolozzi, Anthony Caro and Gavin Scobie. Artists at the forefront of the Scottish contemporary art scene like Kenny Hunter, Christine Borland, Charles Avery, Henry Coombes and Sara Barker are represented. The collection includes installations such as works by Richard Long, Craig Richardson and Jim Lambie. We also have a collection of plaster casts from prehistory to the 18th century. These include the most complete series of Parthenon sculptures after the British Museum, Celtic crosses, classical sculpture and sculpture of the Italian Renaissance.

    Intangible work and New Media

    This collection has particular emphasis placed on themes that are revelatory of the human condition such as Dalziel and Scullion’s Another Place, Julian Opie’s Sparkly Jeans and Top, Torsten Lauschmann’s Pandora’s Ball, Jacques Coetzera’s Room to Roam, the digital film by Conor Gault titled Le Fabuleux Destin, Rachel Maclean’s The Lion and the Unicorn, Susan Philipsz’s Two Sisters and Tracey Emin’s neon light piece, For You.

    James McBey

    Our McBey collection of paintings, sketches and prints spans the artist’s entire life and career. The collection includes early prints and his first oil painting, plus work from his time as an Official War Artist in the Middle East. His travels to Morocco, London, the USA and visits to Scotland are also represented. We have the world’s largest McBey archive thanks to the generosity of his friend and patron HH Kynett, and above all his wife Marguerite McBey who made several significant donations between 1959 and 2000. In addition to artworks, there are personal photographs, diaries, letters, newspaper cuttings and memorabilia.

    Artist Memorabilia and Archives

    Collection includes objects used or owned by an artist, such as William Hogarth’s paintbox and walking stick and the bowl his pug used to drink from, James McBey’s easel and etching tools, and Ian Hamilton Finlay’s sundial. We care for William Dyce’s letters, George Reid’s correspondence and a significant holding of John Phillip’s writings.

    HISTORY – COLLECTION DESCRIPTION

    Archaeology

    Pre-medieval

    The collections include several Neolithic carved stone balls recovered from across North-east Scotland. There are Neolithic to Bronze Age axes and some Bronze Age weaponry such as swords, daggers and spear heads, much of which was acquired from private collectors. Collected Bronze Age domestic objects include beakers, one highlight being the Scotstown beaker. There is an important collection of flintwork from local excavations, including Mesolithic finds from the Dee valley and later examples dating to the Bronze Age.

    Medieval

    The strength of the collections lies in the substantial body of local medieval material, most of which was excavated in the city from the 1970s onwards. It is composed of pottery, metalwork, glass, wood, bone and leather objects and textiles, and is backed up by a substantial archive. Significant objects include bone dice and gaming pieces, an ice skate made of horse bone dating to the 1300s, and a wooden currach paddle found in the city centre, dating to the 1200s-1300s. There is also a small collection of human remains from local excavations.

    Post Medieval

    Much of the post-medieval archaeology collection is domestic objects (dating from 1600 onwards) found in excavations in the city such as buttons, pipes, glass bottles and pottery. Interesting pieces include a pipe clay wig curler dating to the 1700s found on the site of the Carmelite Friary in Aberdeen, and a bone toothbrush dating to the 1800s found in the city centre.

    Numismatics

    Currency, coins, and banknotes

    The core of the numismatics collection is the two complete medieval coin hoards, and part of a third (amounting to over 3500 coins). As would be expected for this period, the majority were issued in England. These are supplemented by a much smaller collection of Scottish issued coins from the medieval period and around 350 post-1707 machine struck UK coinage and just under 1000 non-UK coins from various periods. The most significant post-Medieval material are the banknotes and cheques issued by NE Scotland banks.

    Medals

    There are around 750 medals including commemorative, prize and military medals, mostly dating from the 1800s to present day but with some as early as the 1600s. Many are locally relevant. These include exhibition medals, City Burgess and other badges. There are examples of foreign medals, notably those belonging to James Maurice Frost who was born in Aberdeen and rose the to rank of Brigadier-General in the Imperial Ottoman Artillery, with the rank of Pasha during the 1880s.

    Maritime History

    Aberdeen Harbour

    Many archaeological objects in the collection reflect trade and industry due to the importance of Aberdeen Harbour as a trading port. For the more modern period there are engineering patterns, diving equipment used in harbour maintenance. Around 90% of material relating to the Harbour is photographs (over 500) and paintings (over 1000).

    Energy industries

    The offshore energy industries are a core part of displays at Aberdeen Maritime Museum, where the public can learn about its history, development and future. The 1300+ collection is strong in regards to contemporary offshore oil and gas technical activities, models of ships and oil platforms, and artworks of life and work offshore. The collection contains objects relating to the Piper Alpha Oil and Gas Platform Disaster of 6th July 1988, including maquettes produced as part of the production of the Piper Alpha Memorial.

    Fishing

    As a primary industry of NE Scotland, fishing is well represented with models, photographs, company records and paintings relating to life and work in small fishing communities, trawling, fish processing, fisheries research and the environmental impact of fishing (around 1500 items). The collection is comprehensive in regards the operation of the fishing fleet, including significant material relating to Richard Irvin showing all aspects of fitting a fishing fleet, and includes models of the prototype fishing vessel that performed anti-mine work in WW1.

    Shipbuilding

    Shipbuilding and its associated activities are strongly represented with a diverse range of objects, concentrated mainly on three shipyards – namely Hall, Hall Russell, Lewis, and a lesser extent Duthie. It contains ships’ plans (over 14000), photographs (over 4000 records), paintings and over 300 models and half-hull models. There are also drawings, workmen’s tools, specification books, shop floor design notebooks and photographs relating to the shipyards. The development of this collection is supported by a catalogue of 3500 ships’ histories, actively researched by our longstanding volunteers and accessible online.

    Shipping

    Records of locally owned ships using Aberdeen’s harbour stretch back almost 1000 years. The physical material in the care of AAGM is mainly drawn from the late 1700s to late 1900s and contains around 1600 items. Most items are from the mid-1800s to mid-1900s, and are particularly related to the North of Scotland Orkney & Shetland Steam Navigation Company which provided the lifeline link to Northern Isles, as well as cruises aboard the first purpose built cruise liner St Sunniva 1. Material related to other operators such as Duthie, Thomson, etc whose vessels operated on the global stage carrying goods and people all around the world are also held.

    Whaling

    Whaling was a very short term industry in Aberdeen compared to Dundee or Peterhead, and the collection is correspondingly small (around 130 items), including ship models, harpoons and scrimshaw. The links between whaling, whalers and the exploration of the Arctic and Antarctic are not so well represented, nor is the economic boost whaling gave to local shipbuilding and from investment in the industry by local businesses.

    Industrial history

    Granite industry

    This important industry, defining the granite city, is preserved in an extensive selection of hand tools, images, catalogues and business records, as well as samples and some small items of cut stone. It is stronger for the monumental industry albeit with few examples of ‘finished’ work or largescale machinery and with limited material directly related to quarrying.

    ManufacturingThe collections record a variety of Aberdeen manufacturers from “Tinny” Robertson’s through to Ogston & Tennant soap manufacturers. The following were major employers historically, and/or have been a focus or interest for previous collections development:

    Chemicals and gas

    An extensive collection over 1700 photographs, working notebooks and plans record the history of Aberdeen Gasworks and the Sandilands Chemical works. There are few objects from the works but there is a representative selection of domestic and commercial gas appliances, with associated literature. There is little contemporary material relating to the small-scale production or use of chemicals and gas in Aberdeen such as cleaning product manufacture, or chemicals for offshore use.

    Craft Trades

    This collection for traditional skilled trades is focussed on woodworking, plumbing, and shoemaking with hand tools, examples of work and supporting photographs, oral histories and ephemera (over 700 items).

    Engineering

    Over 4400 engineering drawings, plans, catalogues, images as well as some of the smaller items such as tools represent the civil, mechanical and electrical trades over the past two hundred years. Firms represented include William McKinnon, George Cassie, and JM Henderson.

    Papermaking

    Stoneywood, Aberdeen was the last of the many papermills in the city. This and other Aberdeen mills are strongly represented with photographs and plans of works and machinery, images of workers (and some oral testimonies) to papermaking frames, samples of raw and finished materials, ephemera, to transport tokens and items associated with workers welfare (over 500 items).

    Printing

    Around 150 printing items ranging in date from 1700s to late 1900s. Star items are a 1700s hand press and the last hot-type edition of The Press and Journal.

    Textile industry

    Crombie Grandholm Mills is represented by noteworthy samples of fabrics supplied to the allied forces in the First World War, fabrics that went into the fashion trade in the 1900s and barrows used in the mill. This material is currently on loan. There is a significant collection associated with Richards’ Broadford Works, including oral histories, samples and associated photographs showing the processes.

    Transportation and Storage

    There are around 150 items relating to Gandar Dower and the early development of the Airport at Dyce, and 1800 items, mostly ephemeral and archival, relating to railway travel in the 1800s and early 1900s. There are around 65 objects from Aberdeen Corporation Tramways Department. The collection includes around 145 items relating to the Post Office, centred on the material from the Crown Street Head Office and covering the 1800s and 1900s. It includes ephemera, signage, scales and many of the areas of the public interface with the postal service.

    Retail, accommodation and food services

    There are around 600 items relating to local shops, hotels, restaurants and pubs, predominantly from the late 1800s to about 1980, in addition to a largely complete interior of Davidson & Kay chemists amounting to around 3000 items. It includes ephemera, signage, some fixtures and fittings and moveable display accessories.

    Professional, scientific, and technical

    Photography

    There is a good balance of professional and amateur equipment but weak pre-1880s and post-1960s items. Highlight of the collection is a major archive of 2300+ George Washington Wilson photographs and ephemera, and the large collection of glass and film negatives, slides and photographs depicting life in work in the city.

    Medicine and Healthcare

    The 10,000+ medical collection reflects medical science and practise in hospital, community and domestic settings. The Kenneth A. Webster Nursing Collection focusses on professionals other than medical doctors and encompasses the whole of NE Scotland. The George Shepherd Pharmaceutical Collection contains the contents of Davidson & Kay, Aberdeen chemists.

    Metrology

    There are 240 metrology items, including the city’s official weights and measures from the 1800s and early 1900s. It also includes examples of working measures associated with various trades and activities in Aberdeen such as pharmaceuticals. The collection is weak post-1945.

    Social History

    Personal and Family Life

    Collection comprises mainly personal items used by individuals. There are numerous personal photographs and papers, letters, diaries and memorabilia as well as personal accessories for writing, grooming, toiletries and cosmetics and the consumption of alcohol (e.g. hip flask) and tobacco.

    Domestic life

    The domestic life collections include a broad range of fittings and appliances for the domestic supply of services such as heating, lighting, water, sewage and drainage. Domestic appliances used for cleaning and maintenance and cooking are complemented by material relating to the preparation, serving and storing of food, including recipe and cookery books (800+ records).

    Home entertainment is represented with over 100 items including radios, televisions and video players, phonographs and personal computers. There is a particularly strong collection of mid-1900s valve radios and related ephemera such instruction manuals and magazines. Archival or ephemeral material held includes legal documents, accounts, rent books and loose family photographs, mostly as part of larger collections relating to local individuals.

    Leisure and recreation

    Collecting hobbies such as scrap books, cigarette cards, philately and postcards are represented, alongside a range of dolls, toys and games from the early 1800s to early 2000s. The health and sporting pursuits of many Aberdonians were fostered by local companies such as Pirie’s at Stoneywood and the collections contain good examples of trophies and other memorabilia associated with such organisations. There are examples of sporting equipment and related ephemera, mostly golfing and fishing, and some objects relating to His Majesty’s Theatre and the Music Hall.

     

    Faith groups

    This collection is dominated by local Christian churches, and is further represented by 28 items of church silver. There are 480 communion tokens (late 1600s to late 1800s) from churches and congregations in NE Scotland and the Highlands, with a number issued across Scotland by a denomination. Also examples of Maundy money (from the 1600s) and modern Maundy Money purses. Buddhist robes and related items were gifted in 2015 but broader representation remains a priority.

    Civic and community life

    Around 2500 items represent community organisations such as education providers, friendly societies, local government and emergency services. Organised labour is represented by an important collection of Trade Union banners associated with the Aberdeen trades including shipbuilders and boilermakers, bakers, Papermakers friendly society, carpenters etc. as well as the Offshore Industry Liaison Committee (now the Rail Maritime and Transport Union).

    Wartime

    Around 700 locally significant objects reflect mostly civilian life during wartime, including ration books, gas masks and ephemera. Military experience is centred on around 150 military medals. This is strongest for the Second World War, but covers the late 1800s to mid 1900s.

    Source: Collection development policy

    Date: 2023

    Licence: CC BY-NC

Aberdeenshire Museums Discovery Centre

Wikidata identifier:
Q113553430
Also known as:
Mintlaw Discovery Centre, The Discovery Centre
Instance of:
museum
Museum/collection status:
Accredited Museum
Accreditation number:
2197
Persistent shareable link for this record:
https://museumdata.uk/museums/q113553430/
Collection level records:
Yes, see Aberdeenshire Museums Service

Aberdeenshire Museums Service

(collection-level records)
Wikidata identifier:
Q81165693
Instance of:
regional archive
Persistent shareable link for this record:
https://museumdata.uk/museums/q81165693/

Collection-level records:

  • Collection history (Collection development policy)

    The collections in the care of Aberdeenshire Council’s Museums Service are an amalgam of several independent collections, the earliest dating back to 1828 in the case of the collection once resident in Banff Museum. Consisting of some of the finest archaeological objects in Scotland, including the Iron Age Deskford Carnyx and the Gaulcross Hoard of Pictish silver, the collection was complemented by donations of arms and armour from the Duke of Fife and the natural history collection of noted Scottish naturalist Thomas Edward, who was also the former curator of Banff Museum.

    Adam Arbuthnot, a merchant from Peterhead, began collecting archaeology, numismatics and objects from world cultures in the first half of the 19th century, and James Kerr of Inverurie was an avid collector of archaeology and ephemera.

    Aberdeenshire Council’s Museums Service also holds a collection of agricultural material purchased in 1994 by Banff & Buchan District Council from Adamston, Huntly, and collected by the late Hew McCall-Smith. This was supplemented by the purchase and relocation of Hareshowe Croft in 1990, to form the core collection located at Aden Country Park, Aberdeenshire. The collection was awarded Recognised Collection of National Significance status in 2008.

    The enthusiasm of Aberdeenshire collectors has resulted in an eclectic and diverse collection that encompasses the length and breadth of the history of north-east Scotland, including farming, fishing, whaling, archaeology and the county’s unique contribution to cultural and economic development world-wide.

    In 1975, all museums were transferred to local authority control, and in 1996 became the responsibility of Aberdeenshire Council. Live Life Aberdeenshire (LLA), the Council’s new and innovative way of delivering high quality cultural and sports services, including museums, was created in 2019. All reserve collections have been relocated to Aberdeenshire Council’s Museums Service Headquarters in Mintlaw since 2004, allowing ease of access by staff and communities alike.

    The collections have been available to the communities in which they were collected since their creation and have long been appreciated and accessed by those communities, an ethos which Aberdeenshire Council’s Museums Service is committed to uphold.

    Source: Collection development policy

    Date: 2020

    Licence: CC BY-NC

  • Collection overview (Collection development policy)

    Fine and Applied Art

    For ease of consideration the Art collection has been divided into sub-headings:

    a) Fine Art – includes paintings (oils and watercolours), drawings (pencil, ink, charcoal and pastel) and prints.

    b) Applied Art – includes sculpture, silver, glass, ceramics, furniture, horology, metalwork and some miscellaneous domestic and religious material.

    Fine Art

    The core of the Fine Art collection largely comprises the former burgh collections. While there are four pre-19th-century portraits, the greatest concentration is on 19th– and early 20th-century Scottish painting, particularly portraits, maritime paintings and a few landscapes, and some contemporary 20th– and early 21st-century material by Aberdeenshire artists.

    Oil Paintings

    This group comprises portraits (mainly of former Provosts), maritime paintings, landscapes, still life and some genre paintings. Important names in this group include Sir David Wilkie, Robert Brough, Joseph Farquharson, James Giles, George Sherwood Hunter, R. Gemmell Hutchison, Norman Macbeth, John Phillip, Sir George Reid and George Fiddes Watt. Aberdeenshire Council’s Museums Service holds the only collection in public hands in Northern Scotland of works by the Peterhead artist James Forbes, the teacher of John Phillip. Several contemporary paintings by Aberdeenshire artists were acquired pre-2015.

    Watercolours and Drawings

    This is a small group, the most significant of which are the 18th-century portraits by James Ferguson, and the series of watercolours of Peterhead painted in 1795 by Montague Beattie. There is a small number of contemporary watercolours and drawings by Aberdeenshire artists.

    Prints

    This group falls into two distinct sections. One group is of 19th-century prints, largely landscape views, nearly all of which are of Aberdeenshire scenes. The other group is a larger collection of late 20th-century prints, mostly by contemporary artists from the North East.

    Applied Art

    The Applied Art collection covers a wide variety of objects and materials, of which the silver sub-collection (especially that of Banff) is of national importance.

    Silver

    This group of artefacts includes material produced in , Peterhead, Ballater and Stonehaven. The collection of silver is the largest in . Half of the known Banff silversmiths are represented in the collection. There is an important series of silver prize trophies associated with the mid-19th-century Volunteer movement in Aberdeenshire.

    Sculpture and Ceramics

    There is a small number of sculptures and ceramics, some of which are by contemporary Aberdeenshire artists.

    Furniture and Horology

    This is a small collection, the most significant items being several 17th-century chairs, the chair of Inverurie poet William Thom, and a few longcase clocks.

    Metalwork

    This group of material includes brass, copper, pewter and plated wares. It incorporates secular and religious material such as presentation gifts and trophies and community plate, mostly of local manufacture and association.

    Natural Sciences

    For ease of consideration the National Sciences Collection has been divided into sub-headings: the collection is composed of Vertebrate Zoology, Invertebrate Zoology, Botany and Geology.

    Vertebrate Zoology

    Taxidermy and Skeletal Material

    This collection consists largely of British birds, mammals, some reptiles and fish, with some foreign species. Much of the material represents what survives of 19th-century collections. Some 20th-century specimens have been acquired for display purposes.

    Bird’s Eggs

    This is a small collection, largely of British birds, with some exotic species (e.g., ostrich). Legislation now prohibits the collecting of eggs of British birds; this collection will not expand in the future.

    Invertebrate Zoology

    This is the largest collection in Aberdeenshire Council’s Museums Service comprising several thousand specimens from various sources. The two principal components are mollusc shells and insects.

    The mollusc shell collection is largely of foreign species; much comes from historical collections, and there is an extensive and high-quality late 20th century collection. The historical collections reflect scientific collecting during the 19th-century period of “Scots abroad”, while the modern collection has good accompanying data.

    The insect collection derives from historical collections; no recent additions have been made to this section.

    Botany

    The botanical collection mainly consists of a small herbarium of Arctic plants collected by Captain Francis Rawdon Moira Crozier who accompanied Sir John Franklin on his last expedition, and a small miscellany of algae, plant specimens etc., collected in the 19th century. There is a small collection of seeds, nuts and dried plant material collected in the 19th century.

    Geology

    The collections of rocks, minerals and fossils are variable in quality.

    Rocks

    The rock collection consists of a few hundred specimens from Aberdeenshire, Britain and Europe. There is patchy coverage of local rock types, though there is a representative collection of granites.

    Minerals

    This collection contains a fairly representative group of minerals, suitable for display, education and research.

    Fossils

    The fossil collection includes representative specimens of the major fossil groups and has important Old Red Sandstone fish material. Much of the material, however, is not of display quality, although the Old Red Sandstone fish material has been the subject of research work in the past.

    Human History

    For ease of consideration the Human History Collection has been divided into the following sub-headings:

    Farming; Social History; Archives; Costume and Textiles; Archaeology; Numismatics; Ethnography; Arms and Armour; Photography

    Farming

    The agricultural collections of the Aberdeenshire Farming Museum were awarded Recognised Collection of National Significance, designated by Museums Galleries Scotland, in 2008.

    The collection is based on the original agricultural collection amassed at Adamston, Huntly by the late Hew McCall-Smith and purchased by Banff & Buchan District Council in 1984. The original collection was augmented by further acquisitions by the former North East Scotland Agricultural Heritage Centre (NESAHC), including the relocation to of the Hareshowe croft in 1990. The NESAHC collections were supplemented in 1996 by the agricultural collection of North East Scotland Museums Service (NESMS).

    The collection presents an extensive view of farming and country life in North East Scotland over the last two to three hundred years, with a strong focus on the 19th and 20th centuries. The collection includes some important items such as the early wooden ox plough from the NESMS collection. The range of larger agricultural implements demonstrates the importance of the local burgh foundries to farming in Aberdeenshire.

    Archives relating to this collection include some rural farming business material such as Barclay, Ross & Hutchison of Turriff. There is a good, though incomplete, run of the Transactions of the (Royal) Highland & Agricultural Society of Scotland from 1872 to 1968, as well as Clydesdale stud books and catalogues of important breeders and their herds of Aberdeen Angus cattle.

    Social History

    The social history collection covers a wide range of material including bicycles, prams, shop fittings, industrial machinery, ship models, medical, musical and scientific instruments, commemorative and ornamental items, toys and games, weights and measures, photographic and textile equipment, and everyday domestic material.

    Much of the material has a specific association with Aberdeenshire, such as civic regalia and weights and measures. In particular, the maritime collections relate to the herring fishing, the whaling trade and harbour development.

    Archaeology

    The archaeology collection comprises material from North East Scotland, with a small collection of Egyptian and classical Greek material. The material from the North East is generally confined to individual items from Aberdeenshire.

    In the past, individual finds came to the collection mainly by donation. The Scottish Archaeological Finds Allocation Panel (SAFAP) has allocated copious items to the collection in recent years.

    The collection is strongest in Neolithic and Bronze Age material, with a large collection of flints of various ages, a significant collection of beakers and cinerary urns, and an important collection of carved stone balls. The most important parts of the archaeology collection comprise the Neolithic Ardiffery jet necklace (part of the Ardiffery/Greenbrae assemblage), the Iron Age Deskford carnyx, and the Pictish Gaulcross silver hoard (the latter two, on temporary loan to National Museums Scotland, are of national importance). The medieval period has been augmented by several excavation assemblages.

    Arms and Armour

    This is a varied collection of British and foreign firearms, swords and daggers, shot and powder flasks, and some armour. There are two significant sub-collections: (a) the arms and armour donated by the Duke of Fife; and (b) the Anderson Bey collection of North African and Afghan militaria formerly held by .

    Costume and Textiles

    This collection comprises costume, textiles and accessories. The collection comprises mainly ladies’ costume with some notable 19th-century dresses, including a fair sample for the period 1850 to 1920, and for the 1960s and 1970s. There are also several banners, most notably the banner of the Banff Hammermen.

    Numismatics and Paranumismatics

    The core of this collection is the Arbuthnot Coin and Medal Collection. This is a representative collection which includes Greek, Roman, English, Scottish, and British coins, and 18th– and 19th-century commemorative medals, together with associated archive material related to its acquisition by Adam Arbuthnot. There is a more general collection which includes trade and church tokens, as well as miscellaneous material including beggars’ badges. The church tokens form a representative collection across Scotland.

    The core of the commemorative medal collection is the Arbuthnot collection. There is a collection of military medals representing the Boer War, the First and Second World Wars, as well as a Waterloo Medal.

    Photography

    This collection holds over 17,000 catalogued images, as glass negatives, lantern slides, original photographs, postcards and flexible sheet negatives. Over half of this material relates to the Peterhead area.

    The glass negatives primarily derive from the Shivas collection (959 images) of Peterhead and provide a record of the area between about 1860 and the 1950s. Original photographs and postcards provide a record up to the 1960s, supplemented by flexible negatives. The Broughall collection comprises 2,200 35mm and medium format negatives from the Peterhead area during the last two decades of the 20th century. The Morrison collection comprises 670 glass negatives and 45 black and white prints of farming scenes in the Foveran area between 1890 and 1920.

    There are also two large collections from the Banff area: the Bodie collection of late 19th- and early 20th-century glass plates (1,500 – 2,000) which include rare glass plate negatives by Banff photographer George Bremner, and the Ritchie collection of early- to mid-20th-century roll film negatives with an excess of 500 glass negatives totalling approx. 8,500 images. Both collections are in the process of being catalogued to item level.

    There is a need to maintain dialogue regarding the collecting of photographs with Aberdeenshire Libraries, Aberdeen City & Shire Archives, and various community heritage groups.

    Ethnography

    The Ethnography collection is based on the Arbuthnot collection and on other 19th-century collections. The most significant section in the collection is the Inuit material, brought back by whaling ships in the 19th century; other items come from Africa, the Americas, Australasia and China.

    Source: Collection development policy

    Date: 2020

    Licence: CC BY-NC

Abingdon County Hall Museum

(collection-level records)
Wikidata identifier:
Q4667824
Instance of:
local museum; local authority museum
Museum/collection status:
Accredited Museum
Accreditation number:
1153
Persistent shareable link for this record:
https://museumdata.uk/museums/q4667824/

Collection-level records:

  • Collection history (Collection development policy)

    In February 1919 the Borough Finance Committee received letters from three Abingdon men, Mr John West, Dr Paulin Martin and Mr Thomas Townsend, offering their collections to the town as a nucleus of a museum. In February 1920 a Museum Committee was appointed. The collections were catalogued by Mr Bayzand and his assistant from the Geology Department at Oxford University. The extent of the collections was recorded as follows:

    • Geology: 20 cases
    • Minerals: 5 cases
    • Recent shells: 5 cases
    • Recent corals: 1 case
    • Antiquities: 14 cases
    • Zoological: 5 human skeletons found in excavating the basement of a local inn (no longer in the collection)
    • Miscellaneous rocks and building stone

    In 1927 the museum was established in the newly refurbished County Hall.

    Source: Collection development policy

    Date: 2021

    Licence: CC BY-NC

  • Collection overview (Collection development policy)

    Archaeology Collection

    Archaeological finds from the Abingdon area are of national interest with outstanding prehistoric and Saxon material. The Bronze Age Barrows at Barrow Hills on the outskirts of Abingdon and Radley was extensively excavated in the 1920s by E.T. Leeds, and these finds are part of the Ashmolean Collections. Abingdon ware is a recognised form of early pottery. Later excavations in the Vineyard area of the Town Centre found evidence of continuous settlement from 700BC to the present day.

    All existing archaeology collections relate specifically to the town of Abingdon within the historic Borough boundaries, and most were collected prior to the 1980 Service Level Agreement with The Oxfordshire Museums Service. The Archaeology collections cover a broad time span from the Palaeolithic to circa 1540 when Abingdon Abbey was demolished.

    The County Museums Service is now the official repository for archaeological material and archives relating to the post 1974 county boundaries for Oxfordshire. Most of these collections are acquired by Oxfordshire following assessment and excavation in advance of development. Individual finds are either donated by landowners or acquired through the Treasure process.

    History Collections

    The first Social History items were donated to Abingdon Borough Council in 1919. When Abingdon Museum was proposed, some years later these collections were formally donated to the Museum. The Working Life and Personal / Domestic Life collections have been built up sporadically over almost 100 years.

    Apart from the Founding Collections, donations from members of the public or local companies make up the majority of the present collection. Abingdon Museum’s Collections provide an important focal point for the town’s cultural history, which illustrate the lives of ordinary people in Abingdon over the last 450 years.

    Specific collections of note

    Working Life

    The 20th century Working Life collections relating to the MG car factory, Pavlova leather works and Morland Brewery are particularly strong.

    Personal Life

    These collections include numerous toys and games, and a fully equipped Victorian doll’s house.

    Textiles and Costume

    A limited amount of textiles and mainly Victorian costume, including baby gowns, have been collected. The costumes of most note are:

    • WWI leather flying helmet and boots
    • Agricultural smocks
    • Hidden items found in local buildings including 18th century baby’s cap and pocket and in a separate find of a pair of shoes
    • 18th century shoes and pattens

    Decorative Arts and Crafts

    As part of the Founding Collections, there are a number of beadwork items including Native American Indian moccasins.

    Fine Art

    The collection includes paintings, prints and drawings that are either by Abingdon artists or are of scenes in Abingdon. The most notable paintings are:

    • Indian scenes and local Abingdon views by Oswald Couldrey (1882 – 1958) who attended Abingdon School, served in the Indian Education Service and then retired to Abingdon
    • Sketches and portraits by William Waite
    • Oil paintings of two local landscapes by W.T. Blandford-Fletcher
    • The collection also includes a number of naive works, notably portraits of a shepherd and his wife

    Image Collection

    The collections include a large number of images in the form of framed and loose photographic prints, mounted photos, prints, etchings, and drawings that have been arranged by subject matter.

    Whilst copies of many of the photographs are also held in the Oxfordshire County History Centre, it is our aim to make these images easily accessible.

    Natural Sciences

    The Founding Collections given to the Borough of Abingdon included natural science, especially a significant collection of fossils collected locally, and a limited number of non-local modern natural history specimens, minerals and shells. Most of these collections have never been accessioned as Museum Collections, and remain in the care of Abingdon-on-Thames Town Council. However, a review of the fossil collections took place from 2014 onwards, with specialist assistance from university researchers. The resulting information was used to catalogue the fossils on the museum’s ehive database.

    Many of the non-local natural history specimens do not fall within the current collecting policy and the shell samples which were stuck to cardboard display boards are now very damaged. It is proposed that these specimens will not be formally accessioned but will be reviewed, with assistance from appropriate specialists, in line with the current Acquisitions and Disposal Policy.

    Handling Collections

    The Museum also holds some items that are acquired and maintained solely for handling and other educational purposes. These objects are not specifically collected for their Abingdon provenance and are not subject to this policy. Their management follows best practise for the documentation and care of collections as is appropriate in respect of a collection of this nature.

    Source: Collection development policy

    Date: 2021

    Licence: CC BY-NC

Achadh an Droighinn/Auchindrain

Wikidata identifier:
Q113363911
Also known as:
Auchindrain Township, Auchindrain Trust, Urras Achadh an Droighinn, auchindrain.org.uk, Auchindrain Museum
Instance of:
museum; independent museum
Museum/collection status:
Accredited Museum; Recognised collection
Accreditation number:
1263
Persistent shareable link for this record:
https://museumdata.uk/museums/q113363911/
Collection level records:
Not yet. If you represent this organisation and can provide collection-level information, please contact us.

Aldeburgh Museum

(collection-level records)
Wikidata identifier:
Q103038475
Instance of:
museum; independent museum
Museum/collection status:
Accredited Museum
Accreditation number:
813
Persistent shareable link for this record:
https://museumdata.uk/museums/q103038475/

Collection-level records:

  • Collection history (Collection development policy)

    The museum was established in 1973 as an independent charitable trust (The Aldeburgh Museum Collection Trust) with its purpose as stated above. It has been a nationally registered museum (No. 813) since 1988. The museum was awarded Full Accreditation status in 2007.

    The charity was changed to a CIO in 2016.

    Source: Collection development policy

    Date: 2023

    Licence: CC BY-NC

  • Collection overview (Collection development policy)

    The collections consist of some 6,500 items relating mainly to local history, including a large collection of photographs, paintings, books, and maps. It includes many items of natural history and archaeology. Artefacts range from local prehistoric finds (mammoth remains; Neolithic flints), while most of the collection covers the period since the early settlements of the area, starting with Roman and then Anglo-Saxon settlements around the Alde and Ore estuary. The greater part of the collection relates to the development of the town of Aldeburgh, and its commercial, corporate, and social history.

    Source: Collection development policy

    Date: 2023

    Licence: CC BY-NC

American Museum and Gardens

(collection-level records)
Wikidata identifier:
Q465746
Also known as:
American Museum in Britain, American Museum & Gardens
Instance of:
museum; independent museum
Museum/collection status:
Accredited Museum
Accreditation number:
340
Persistent shareable link for this record:
https://museumdata.uk/museums/q465746/

Collection-level records:

  • Collection history (Collection development policy)

    The American Museum & Gardens was founded by partners in both work and life, John Judkyn and Dallas Pratt. They were inspired to create a museum in the UK that replicated the experience provided by open-air and decorative arts museum in America, such as Colonial Williamsburg, the Shelburne Museum, Historic Deerfield, and Winterthur Museum, Garden and Library. In creating their own museum in the UK they wanted to showcase American decorative arts, challenge stereotypes and improve Anglo-American relationships.

    Dallas and John had a substantial network of friends who worked as curators and directors of significant collections in the US, were antique dealers, and collectors of art and antiquities. Using these contacts, they sought advice on how to obtain the best collection of American decorative arts possible with their available funds. In 1958 they began collecting in earnest and using their own money they travelled America seeking out the best examples to furnish their museum. By 1961 they had acquired 2,410 items for the collection, most of which was purchased by them, but a small proportion was donated by friends and supporters. The majority of these items collected were used in the initial displays when the Museum opened in July 1961.

    In 1966, prompted by the tragic untimely death of John Judkyn 3 years earlier, the John Judkyn Memorial was established in his memory as an affiliated organisation to the Museum. Its purpose was to develop the educational side of the Museum that John had valued and provided education and outreach programmes, as well as travelling exhibitions. It’s statement of purpose was: “to encourage an interest in America through the medium of original artefacts brought from the United States and circulated throughout Great Britain as exhibitions shown in museums and art galleries and as visual aids to education in schools”. Items from the American Museum’s collection were transferred to the JJM and new items were also acquired for the JJM collection. These items were much broader in scope than the original American Museum collection and included many 20h century items. In 2001, the collections at the American Museum and the John Judkyn Memorial were combined under the governance of the American Museum. The 2,777 items held by the John Judkyn Memorial are now considered part of the American Museum’s collection.

    Source: Collection development policy

    Date: 2023

    Licence: CC BY-NC

  • Collection overview (Collection development policy)

    There are approximately 12,275 items in the American Museum’s collection. Less than 1% of these are on long-term loan, and of those loan items, most are from American museums.

    The American Museum is the only museum in Great Britain to display American domestic interiors from the 17th to 19th centuries. Period room settings incorporate architectural salvage (rescued from historic American houses that were being demolished), furniture and furnishings. The decorative art collections are mostly American in origin, but pieces from other countries are occasionally used when appropriate. The period room settings are supplemented by additional galleries depicting the diverse cultures, histories and decorative arts of America. The collections and displays demonstrate the developments in American decorative arts over the centuries.

    The addition of the John Judkyn Memorial collection to the American Museum broadened the scope of the collection and included more items from the 19h and 20h centuries and items that provided a more extensive insight into American social and material culture.

    Significant holdings include:

    Quilt and textile collection

    Ranging from the 18th to mid-20th centuries, the American Museum’s collection of over 250 quilts is acclaimed as the finest of its type in Europe and the equal of many premier collections in the United States. In addition to the quilts are woven coverlets, Navajo and southwest weavings, hooked rugs and samplers. The Hannah Taylor sampler (1959.180) has been described as the most striking and well-preserved Newport sampler of the 18 century and is one of two items that the founders stipulated never leave the Museum.

    Folk art collection

    The Museum holds an extensive collection of American folk art, which includes naive’ paintings and sculptures, weathervanes and whirligigs, shop signs, decoys etc. as well as textiles, such as quilts and rugs.

    Shaker collection

    The Shaker collection – of outstanding quality – was sourced for the Museum by Edward Deming Andrews and his wife Faith Andrews. They were instrumental in acquiring the finest examples of Shaker furniture for collectors during the mid-20th century. The Shaker candle stand (1959.75) is considered the finest of its kind by collectors of Shaker furniture and is one of two items that our founders stipulated should never leave the Museum on loan.

    Dallas Pratt Collections

    Renaissance Maps: Dallas Pratt began collecting historical maps as a teenager. In 1988, Dr. Pratt gifted his 200 maps to the Museum – one of the finest Renaissance map collections in Europe. These maps show the changes in cartography during the ‘Age of Discovery’ and document early European exploration and understanding of America. Although most of the maps are printed examples from the 16th century, the collection also includes significant manuscript drawings from as early as the 12d century.

    Compassionate Eye: Another passion of Pratt’s was animal welfare and in 1994 his collection of over 100 animal prints – collectively known as the Compassionate Eye Collection – was donated to the Museum. This collection includes significant late 19th and early 20h century artists and depicts American landscapes and animals.

    Indigenous North American material culture

    A popular collection at the Museum and one that is central to one of the most asked for school programmes. Most pieces from the collection are 19th and 20th century. There are a few items that are older. The Museum is actively seeking to acquire contemporary pieces to add to this collection.

    New Mexico Religious Art

    The Museum holds a small but significant collection of santos, 2D and 3D Christian iconography produced by itinerant artists in the American southwest. Key artists working in the 18h and 19h centuries are represented by work in the collection.

    Source: Collection development policy

    Date: 2023

    Licence: CC BY-NC

Amgueddfa Cymru – Museum Wales

(collection-level records)
Wikidata identifier:
Q2046319
Also known as:
Amgueddfa Cymru, National Museum of Wales, Amgueddfa Cymru – National Museum Wales, National Museum Wales, Museum Wales, National Museums and Galleries of Wales
Instance of:
Welsh Government sponsored body; museum service
Persistent shareable link for this record:
https://museumdata.uk/museums/q2046319/
Object records:
Yes, see object records for this museum

Collection-level records:

  • Collection history (Collection development policy)

    The National Museum of Wales was founded by Royal Charter in 1907. The first collections were those of the Cardiff Municipal Museum (originally founded in 1868) which were transferred to the new National Museum in 1912. The Cardiff Museum held some significant collections, particularly the Menelaus collection of contemporary European art and the Pyke Thompson collection of art and European porcelain. The collection also contained a set of casts of early medieval Welsh stonework and other archaeology, art, social and natural history items.

    Since its foundation the Museum has been active and innovative in collecting and in developing its collections as well as creating a portfolio of museum sites across Wales in which to display and make its collections accessible. The original Museum comprised six collecting departments: Antiquities and History; Geology and Mineralogy; Botany; Zoology; Art; Industries. Collecting aimed to be encyclopaedic in its nature during these years with early significant collections acquired through donation, bequest and loan. Some exceptional collections began as loans to the Museum, including the internationally important collection of impressionist art and sculpture lent, and later bequeathed, by sisters Gwendoline and Margaret Davies. Other collections include the John Dillwyn Llewelyn collection of early photographs and the Rippon collection of insects, shells and minerals acquired in 1918. In 1930 the Museum of Antiquities, Caerleon, and its important Roman collections were transferred to the Museum by the Monmouthshire Antiquarian Association.

    The 1940s and 50s were an exceptional period of growth with the Museum accepting some major donations and bequests. Significant was the donation in 1946 by the Earl of Plymouth of St Fagans Castle, its gardens and parkland, for the creation of an open-air Museum. The Llyn Cerrig Bach hoard of Iron Age metalwork was recovered and donated during construction of a wartime airfield on Anglesey. Major bequests including Sir William Goscombe John’s collection of paintings, drawings and sculpture and the Melvill-Tomlin collection of molluscs, associated library and papers. In 1958, the Museum also established its archive of oral testimonies, traditions and dialects based at St Fagans.

    The 1960s saw the re-erection of several historic buildings at St Fagans, including the farmhouse from Kennixton, Gower. Since then collections have been developed through Museum research projects. Amongst these are the significant Neanderthal fossils from excavations at Pontnewydd Cave and finds from the discovery and excavation of a new Viking Age site on Llanbedrgoch, Anglesey and the Bangor University insect collection. Natural Science collections have developed in areas including marine and off-shore habitat mapping. Research into the Welsh Lower Palaeozoic palaeontology and the hard rocks has also resulted in new items being accessioned into the Museum collections.

    In 1984 the Museum was lent the Derek Williams collection of twentieth century art and money from his estate was used to establish a trust for its continued development and enhancement. This has resulted in the acquisition of significant new art works into the Museum and the development and strengthening of the contemporary art collections.

    Other key acquisitions have been purchased following their designation as Treasure Trove (since 1996) or Treasure. These include the Civil War coin hoard from Tregwynt, Pembrokeshire and the Burton hoard of Bronze Age metalwork.

    In 1999 the Big Pit colliery and its associated collections were transferred into the care of the Museum. This has enabled the existing industrial collections of small coal mining items to be placed back into their original context in displays at the Big Pit.

    Collecting for the Museum is increasingly being undertaken by our visitors and members of the public. Some of these come through new discoveries from across Wales, for example, a new species of Jurassic dinosaur Dracoraptor hanigani discovered near Penarth in 2014. A changed remit for St Fagans National History Museum now focuses collecting around new collaborative projects with communities and other third sector organisations. One aim of such projects is to improve the social history collections in specific areas. For example a project with MenCap Cymru is resulting in the recording and acquisition of new items concerning the history of some of the former mental health hospitals across Wales.

    Source: Collection development policy

    Date: 2016

    Licence: CC BY-NC

  • Collection overview (Collection development policy)

    Amgueddfa Cymru – National Museum Wales is the national repository of three-dimensional material relating to Wales’s natural and created heritage and culture, and of international material that helps to define Wales’s place in the world. It is the leading museum body in Wales; the collections, numbering in excess of 4 million specimens or groups, and the academic standards and scholarship of the staff have a national and international reputation.

    The breadth and quality of many of our collections in the humanities and sciences alike make us unique amongst U.K. national museums. Amgueddfa Cymru – National Museum Wales differs from the other national museums and galleries in the U.K. by the range of our disciplines – wider than any apart perhaps from the Museums and Galleries of Northern Ireland – and by the number of different sites operated. Amgueddfa Cymru – National Museum Wales fulfils for Wales the functions of all the London-based National Museums and Galleries, and hold the collections in trust for the people of Wales.

    Art

    The Art collection comprises works of fine and applied art from antiquity to the present. The emphasis on art from Wales is complemented by strong holdings of other British art and certain aspects of European art, with some wider international representation.

    The particular strengths of this collection are:

    • Outstanding French Realist, Impressionist and Post-Impressionist paintings, and sculpture by Rodin and his contemporaries.
    • Other European oil paintings from the Renaissance to the 20th century (relatively small in number but most of very high quality).
    • British art of the 18th , 19th and 20th centuries.
    • The ‘New Sculpture’ of the late 19th century.
    • Contemporary art.
    • A comprehensive collection of art by Welsh artists from the 18th century to the present, including substantial bodies of work by Richard Wilson, Thomas Jones, John Gibson, Penry Williams, Augustus John, Gwen John, David Jones and Ceri Richards.
    • Graham Sutherland’s personal collection.
    • Work by John Piper.
    • Portraits of Welsh sitters in various media.
    • Welsh topographical and landscape art.
    • A large and wide-ranging collection of works of art on paper.
    • Historic photography, including portraiture, and collects lens-based contemporary art.
    • Pottery and porcelain made in the south Wales factories between the 1760s and the 1920s.
    • Eighteenth century continental porcelain and English-made wares from the late medieval period to the present.
    • English silver from the Renaissance to the mid-19th century, including major pieces for Welsh patrons.
    • A growing collection of modern and contemporary applied art, especially ceramics and silver.

    Social and Cultural History

    The Social and cultural history collections range from re-erected historic buildings to oral testimony recorded in the field. Historically the Museum focused on collecting examples of architecture from Wales that represented domestic building types and constructional techniques. Welsh Vernacular furniture, furnishings, items relating to domestic life, commerce, medicine, law and order, and textile collections dating from the 16th century to present all form a significant collection.

    Specific collection strengths are:

    • Historical buildings: 2 in situ buildings – one of which is a Grade 1 listed building – and over 60 buildings which have been dismantled and re-erected on site. This includes a good collection of farmhouses and cottages, small rural industrial/craft buildings and barns. Also good representative examples of regional (domestic) building types and constructional techniques.
    • Commerce: mainly business and trade materials.
    • Collections relating to medicine, law and order and ecclesiastical items.
    • Vernacular furniture: the finest collection in the UK, as well as a notable collection of horological items.
    • Costume and textile collections, dating from the 16th century to the present day, including both fashionable and everyday wear, occupational clothing and accessories of all types.
    • Domestic Life: a comprehensive collection of cooking, dairying equipment, household appliances, tableware, ornaments and furnishing fabrics.
    • Agriculture: agricultural tools, vehicles and machinery dating from the late 18th century to the mid-1950s, either of Welsh manufacture or with strong links to Wales.
    • Craft collections representing the working life of rural and semi-industrial Wales, e.g. woodworking, leatherwork, metalworking crafts, basket making.
    • Textile crafts such as quilting, embroidery, lacemaking, tailoring and products of the woollen industry in Wales.
    • Cultural life collections, relating to music, folklore and customs, cultural, educational and social institutions, popular culture, sports and children’s toys and games.
    • Archival collections which include the definitive archive of Welsh oral traditions and dialects, fieldwork films, manuscripts relating to Welsh ethnology, a photographic archive and oral history projects both internally and externally generated.

    Industry

    The industry collections include in situ listed buildings and industrial sites comprising a colliery, a slate quarry workshop complex and a woollen mill. These significant sites are accompanied by associated collections that detail their history, operation and production. The collection also contains significant items associated with the coal and other heavy industries of Wales. More recently collecting has focused on contemporary Welsh industry particularly the automotive, toy and computer manufacturing areas.

    Collection strengths are:

    • Listed coal mine within the World Heritage Site of Blaenafon.
    • Comprehensive and internationally important collections of coal mine lighting, hand tools, roof supports, drams, rescue equipment and trade union objects.
    • Comprehensive range of models depicting coal mining techniques and equipment, iron and steel plant.
    • Wide range of documents covering most aspects of colliery operation and administration, and union material.
    • Metalliferous industry hand tools, process samples and products.
    • Welsh-made bricks, tiles and refractories.
    • Prime movers, particularly oil and gas engines.
    • Welsh-made automotive industry products.
    • Products of Welsh light industry especially from the toy industry.
    • Near-complete range of Welsh-made computers.
    • Listed slate quarry workshop complex at Llanberis including original in situ engineering equipment, working water and Pelton wheels, and large collection of foundry patterns.
    • Original engineer’s house and furnished re-erected quarrymens’ houses.
    • Restored and fully operational table incline.
    • Slate hand working tools, early twentieth century mechanised extractors, wagons, locomotives and products.
    • Drawings and sketches of quarrymen at work by M.E.Thompson.
    • Listed woollen mill buildings at Cambrian Mills, Drefach-Felindre including original machinery and other machinery from woollen mills across Wales.
    • Welsh-made flat textiles, samples and flannel quilts, 18th century to the present.
    • Collection of documents, notably metalliferous and modern industry company brochures, company newspapers, share certificates and civil engineering documents.
    • Archives pertaining to Cambrian Mills.
    • Books, journals and Parliamentary Papers; notably a near-complete set of Mines & Quarries Inspectorate publications, early gas and electricity industry journals, and technical works on prime movers
    • Large and nationally important collection of Welsh photographs relating to the industries, engineering and industrial archaeology of Wales.

    Transport

    The transport collection contains over 150 models of vessels that were used off the coasts of Wales and 250 ship portraits. It includes the oldest surviving Welsh-owned car, a 1900 Benz, examples of the Gilbern, the only car made in Wales, a Cambrian Railways coach and a Cardiff horse tram. There is also an extensive collection of 7mm scale railway models, illustrating both pre-grouping and pre-nationalisation railways in Wales.

    Collection strengths are:

    • Welsh railway carriages.
    • Working replica of the world’s first railway locomotive (Penydarren 1804).
    • Tramplates and early railway track components.
    • Working small boats from around the Welsh coast.
    • Hand tools and personal ephemera pertaining to land and maritime transport.
    • Nationally important collection collections of Ship models and ship portraits.
    • Documents and books particularly railway and maritime, notably a complete run of Lloyd’s Register of Shipping from the mid1830s to the present.
    • Large and nationally important collection of transport photographs.

    Archaeology

    The archaeological collections form the primary ‘first-hand’ evidence on which all interpretations of our material past are based. The collections focus upon Wales’ prehistory and early history, with many originating from archaeological excavations undertaken across Wales. Significant items have been acquired through the Treasure Trove and Treasure processes, particularly Bronze Age metalwork and medieval jewellery.

    Collection strengths are:

    • Palaeolithic artefacts, Pleistocene fauna and hominid finds, from Welsh caves, including Pontnewydd Cave and Paviland Cave.
    • Assemblages of finds from excavations of Welsh Mesolithic and Neolithic settlement sites, Neolithic megalithic tombs and the axe-factories of Graig Lwyd and Mynydd Rhiw.
    • Important Bronze Age burial assemblages, early copper, lead and gold mining finds and associated products, particularly the rich collections of adornments, weapons and tools.
    • Excavated collections from Iron Age hillforts and defended enclosures from Wales.
    • La Tène or ‘Celtic’ art, including the Llyn Fawr hoard, the Llyn Cerrig Bach votive lake assemblage, the Capel Garmon firedog and the Cerrig-y-Drudion crown.
    • Internationally important collections of Roman military material from the fortresses of Isca (Caerleon) and its environs and Usk.
    • Collections of finds from excavations of Roman auxiliary forts of Segontium (Caernarfon), Brecon, Gelligaer, Caersws, Neath and Loughor.
    • Finds from Roman civilian sites, such as Llantwit Major villa, Whitton farmstead and Caerwent – the most important Roman town in Wales.
    • Roman industrial and mining sites in Wales, including Holt, the works depot of the Twentieth legion, and Dolaucothi, the only known Roman gold-mine in Britain.
    • Early medieval inscribed stones and stone sculpture, including casts.
    • Collections from three early medieval sites of international significance, Dinas Powys, Llangors crannog and Llanbedrgoch.
    • The early medieval population assemblage of human remains from Llandough.
    • Collections from medieval sites, in particular the significant Welsh castles and abbeys.
    • The Magor Pill 13th-century boat.
    • Stone sculpture including surviving elements from the chapter house door, Strata.
    • A collection of medieval and later gold and silver jewellery and individual items of iconic or national significance.

    Numismatics

    The numismatic collection has been developed through purchase and the acquisition of coin hoards through the Treasure Trove and Treasure processes.

    Collection strengths are:

    • A general collection of coins from the Greeks to present day. Some areas of national/international importance, resulting from hoards and from focused collecting.
    • English and British Isles coinage, especially Saxon, Norman and later medieval coins from Welsh and other mints in western Britain.
    • Roman Welsh coinage, notably the Rogiet hoard.
    • Coins minted in Wales from the time of Charles I and the Tregwynt Civil War coin hoard.
    • Welsh tokens, banknotes and paranumismatica.
    • Medals – notably those commemorating acts of civil gallantry – especially those relating to Wales or to the exploits of Welsh people.

    Geology

    Amgueddfa Cymru is the main repository for fossils from Wales; these are augmented by research collections from other parts of the UK, and from worldwide sources. The collection is therefore of international status and significance, and is one of the major palaeontological holdings in the UK.

    The Museum holds the most comprehensive mineral and rock collections relating to the geology of Wales.

    Collection strengths are:

    • Palaeozoic invertebrates, especially trilobites, brachiopods and bivalves.
    • Carboniferous (Coal Measures) plants.
    • Jurassic ammonites.
    • A definitive and comprehensive collection of Welsh minerals.
    • Reference material from almost all mine sites in Wales.
    • Welsh gold, Welsh millerite (World-class); British fluorite and World cassiterite.
    • A significant collection of native silver specimens from the Kongsberg Mines in Norway.
    • A significant collection of British minerals, including some derived from heritage collections, and a research collection of Leicestershire material.
    • The Welsh Reference Rock Collection, (consisting of hand specimens and petrological thin sections) acquired dominantly by field collection during the 20th Century.
    • Welsh research petrology collections, derived from Ph.D. theses and published papers.
    • Welsh Coal Collection; collected during the 20th Century from working collieries.
    • Welsh slate collection.
    • Shallow borehole collection from South Wales, with associated logs and maps.

    Zoology

    Collection strengths are:

    • Coleoptera, particularly Tomlin and Gardner bequests).
    • Diptera (agricultural, host associations and Palaearctic coverage).
    • Hemiptera (agricultural host associations and Palaearctic coverage).
    • Lepidoptera (British and world-wide butterflies, British moths).
    • Foreign collection comprehensive in coverage of insect families.
    • Mollusca, particularly the World Mollusca in the Melvill-Tomlin collection and its associated library.
    • Mollusca from Britain and Wales, giving an almost complete coverage of the British fauna.
    • Non-marine and land Mollusca especially African and the Palaearctic.
    • Bivalve Mollusca from the Indian Ocean and world-wide localities.
    • Cephalopods.
    • World-wide Quaternary Mollusca.
    • British and Welsh spiders.
    • All British woodlice species.
    • Soil mites from Wales and beyond.
    • Extensive collections of benthic invertebrates from British waters, and especially Irish Sea.
    • Extensive collections of Polychaeta from British and world-wide localities.
    • Collections of parasitic worms of marine fish.
    • Mounted specimens of most British mammals and many British birds.
    • Cabinet specimens of birds, birds’ eggs and mammals.

    Botany

    Collection strengths are:

    • A large collection of flowering plants, mainly from Europe, including the largest collection of Welsh plants in existence, with associated collection of fruits and seeds.
    • A fern collection of international scope.
    • A small collection of glass microscope slides showing mainly sectioned plant material.
    • Large bryophyte collections with special reference to Britain, but of international scope.
    • Extensive lichen collection, mainly British, with special reference to Wales.
    • Large collection of timber and wood sections from all parts of the world.
    • Collection of economically-important plant products, including food-stuffs, textiles and pharmaceuticals.
    • Large collection of samples and mounted slides of Quaternary palynological samples.
    • Hyde collection of modern palynological samples, acquired from the Asthma and Allergy Unit of Sully Hospital.
    • Large collection of prints and drawings mainly 18th and 19th century, charting the development of botanical illustration.
    • Large archival collection of transparencies and glass negatives of plants and landscapes, botanists, and diagrams from publications.
    • World-wide collection of postage stamps trade cards on botanical themes.
    • A unique collection of botanically accurate wax models of flowers, fungi and other plants.
    • Blaschka glass models of invertebrates.

    Library

    The Library holds an archive of rare and historical texts as well as books that support the work of all the curatorial Departments. Particular collection strengths are in the disciplines of Mollusca, Roman archaeology, Flora, Architecture, and Social/Industrial History.

    Source: Collection development policy

    Date: 2016

    Licence: CC BY-NC

Anaesthesia Heritage Centre

(collection-level records)
Wikidata identifier:
Q111983567
Also known as:
Anaesthesia Museum
Instance of:
medical museum; independent museum
Museum/collection status:
Accredited Museum
Accreditation number:
2
Persistent shareable link for this record:
https://museumdata.uk/museums/q111983567/

Collection-level records:

  • Collection history (Collection development policy)

    The Anaesthesia Museum owes its establishment to the donation by A. Charles King of his collection of historic anaesthetic apparatus to the Association of Anaesthetists of Great Britain and Ireland (now Association of Anaesthetists) in 1953.

    Since then, significant donors and collections have included the personal collections of eminent anaesthetists, most notably;

    • Dr David Zuck
      • Donation in 1987
      • 139 objects
      • Collection includes early dropper bottles and facepieces and equipment late 1930s-1960s.
    • Dr Thomas Boulton
      • Donation in 1988
      • President of the Association of Anaesthetists from 1984 to 1986
      • Collection includes some important equipment (Oxford Vaporizer and EM) developed in response to the needs of doctors during the Second World War and just after.
    • Brigadier Ivan Houghton (Royal Army Medical Corps)
      • Donation date unknown
      • Houghton developed the Triservice Anaesthetic Apparatus (1980s), which could be easily carried by Field Surgical Troops. It was taken up by the Army, Navy and RAF around the world, and was the only anaesthetic apparatus to be used on land in the Falklands Conflict.
      • Donation includes some research/trial components for the Triservice Apparatus and other equipment made or modified by British Army Unit 43 Command Workshops during the 1970s.

    Other notable donors are hospital anaesthetic departments, the largest or most significant collections have been donated by;

    • Addenbrookes Hospital
      • Donated in 2000
      • 405 items donated.
    • Great Ormond Street Hospital
      • Donated in 2014
      • Includes larger observation and monitoring equipment.
    • Nuffield Department of Anaesthetics, Oxford
      • Donated in 2007
      • 204 objects including equipment developed and manufactured by the department itself, including 1940s anaesthetic apparatus and a complete 1980s anaesthetic machine.

    Disposals

    A collection of controlled drugs were disposed of (by transfer) to the Royal Pharmaceutical society in 2019 as the museum did not hold a Controlled Drugs License.

    Source: Collection development policy

    Date: 2024

    Licence: CC BY-NC

  • Collection overview (Collection development policy)

    The collection, and continued development of the collection, supports the museum’s statement of purpose:

    The Anaesthesia Museum…..enables people to explore its collections for inspiration, learning and enjoyment. It seeks to collect, safeguard and make accessible artefacts which are held in trust for society relating to the development of the speciality of anaesthesia. It promotes awareness of the history of the speciality amongst anaesthetists and the general public.

    The collection has grown since King’s donation in 1953 to include over 4,000 objects dating from the early nineteenth century, when the specialty developed, to the present day. It spans the entire history of the profession including anaesthesia, pain relief, resuscitation and intensive care.

    The Anaesthesia Museum is recognised by specialist researchers as the best collection of its kind, nationally and internationally. Its strength lies in Charles King’s original collection which contains equipment developed by pioneer anaesthetists John Snow and Joseph Clover; Snow’s 1847 chloroform inhaler and Clover’s 1877 portable ether inhaler. There is also an excellent selection of anaesthetic accessories such as mouthgags and facepieces, including early pieces from the 1860s and 1890s. Other significant items include prototypes for the 1988 laryngeal mask (which is still in use today) and a Manley ventilator, one of the most popular early mechanical ventilators. The museum also holds the ECG machine used during King George VI pneumonectomy in 1951.

    The collection is used in permanent displays in the museum and opportunities to bring objects out of store for display are provided through the annual temporary exhibition and travelling exhibitions displayed at Association conferences and sectors events (for example, London Museums Of Health and Medicine’s Up Close and Medical).

    The museum also has a small handling collection of duplicates and replicas. These objects support our aim to reach wider audiences and are used at travelling exhibitions, events and as part of our group visit offer to educational and community groups.

    The Anaesthesia Heritage Centre maintains a rare book collection and an archive, which includes an extensive oral history archive. However, these collections are not included in the Anaesthesia Museum’s holdings and are therefore outside the scope of Museum Accreditation.

    Source: Collection development policy

    Date: 2024

    Licence: CC BY-NC

Andrew Jackson Cottage and US Rangers Museum

(collection-level records)
Wikidata identifier:
Q4757457
Also known as:
Andrew Jackson Centre, Andrew Jackson Cottage and US Rangers Centre
Instance of:
regimental museum; local authority museum; history museum
Museum/collection status:
Accredited Museum
Accreditation number:
1874
Persistent shareable link for this record:
https://museumdata.uk/museums/q4757457/

Collection-level records:

  • Collection history (Collection development policy)

    The Andrew Jackson Cottage has operated as a visitor attraction since 1984, following its purchase by the legacy Council in Carrickfergus.

    A listed building dating from the 1750s, it tells the story of Andrew Jackson, 7th president of the USA, whose parents emigrated to America from Carrickfergus in 1765. The single storey building has been restored to its original state. The interior has been decorated with a dresser, spongeware crockery, iron pots and griddles. The cottage also has a collection of Ulster patchwork quilts.

    Beside the Jackson Cottage is an exhibition centre dedicated to the US Rangers, the elite American army regiment. Formed in 1942, the US Rangers were based in Carrickfergus during World War II. A donation of memorabilia at a reunion of the regiment to celebrate its 50th anniversary led to the construction of the US Rangers Museum in 1994. The exhibition has a comprehensive collection of uniforms, photographs, documents and other material detailing this famed combat unit. The US Rangers Museum underwent complete refurbishment in Spring 2017 for the 75th anniversary of the regiment.

    Source: Collection development policy

    Date: 2022

    Licence: CC BY-NC

  • Collection overview (Collection development policy)

    Andrew Jackson Cottage:

    • A range of domestic artefacts appropriate to a traditional Ulster-Scots farmhouse of the early 1800’s.
    • A small County Antrim cart on loan from the National Museums and Galleries of Northern Ireland (Ulster Folk and outward loaMuseum).
    • A number of items relating to President Andrew Jackson, including a family Bible.
    • A collection of traditional quilts.

    US Rangers Museum

    The US Rangers Museum houses a collection of militaria and other memorabilia relating to the US Rangers. The collection was donated to the legacy Council by veterans of the Regiment following a 50th anniversary reunion event in 1992.

    Source: Collection development policy

    Date: 2022

    Licence: CC BY-NC

Andrew Logan Museum of Sculpture

(collection-level records)
Wikidata identifier:
Q29950216
Also known as:
Amgueddfa Gerfluniaeth Andrew Logan
Instance of:
museum; independent museum
Museum/collection status:
Accredited Museum
Accreditation number:
1646
Persistent shareable link for this record:
https://museumdata.uk/museums/q29950216/

Collection-level records:

  • Collection history (Collection development policy)

    The Andrew Logan Museum of Sculpture is the first museum in Europe dedicated to a living artist. Andrew is a sculptor, jewellery maker and designer. He has created a vibrant space of colour and light to display examples of his work from over 50 years and to share with the world his unique approach to life and art.

    Source: Collection development policy

    Date: 2024

    Licence: CC BY-NC

  • Collection overview (Collection development policy)

    Within the Museum you will find sculptures, mirrored portraits, jewellery and costumes from the mid-sixties to the present day. Andrew’s ground-breaking performance piece, Alternative Miss World, is celebrated with outfits and crown jewels from the 15 shows held since 1972. These performances take the format of a beauty pageant but revise the standardised notions of beauty to explore transformation, creativity and celebration, in a show that goes beyond gender, age, and nationality.

    There are also personal items, created by Andrew for his friends, including the actor Divine, painters Luciana Martinez de la Rosa and Duggie Fields, fashion designer Zandra Rhodes and filmmaker Derek Jarman. Andrew’s work and life are inextricably combined, and his friendships and collaborations with creatives as diverse as the Sex Pistols to Stella Mc Cartney are explored in the Museum.

    Founded in 1991, the Museum is now a registered charitable trust but still works closely with Andrew to create a unique and surprising experience in the Welsh countryside.

    Source: Collection development policy

    Date: 2024

    Licence: CC BY-NC

ANGUSalive

(collection-level records)
Wikidata identifier:
Q94737454
Also known as:
Angus Alive
Instance of:
organization; museum service; theatre company
Persistent shareable link for this record:
https://museumdata.uk/museums/q94737454/

Collection-level records:

  • Collection history (Collection development policy)

    The Museums and Galleries have a wide-ranging collection, much of it acquired by the former Town Councils, all of which were founded during the first half of the 19th century. Most of the material acquired is of local significance, with Social History, Archaeology and Photography predominating. Less than 1% of the collections are out on loan at any time, mostly for short fixed terms to other Museums or Galleries for temporary exhibitions. All loans are adequately recorded.

    From 1st December 2015 ANGUSalive has the responsibility for providing a Museum Service in Angus under a service level agreement with the Angus Council. The title and ownership of the collections is retained by Angus Council.

    Source: Collection development policy

    Date: 2017

    Licence: CC BY-NC

  • Collection overview (Collection development policy)

    Fine art

    The Museums and Galleries presently hold over 4000 paintings, watercolours, drawings and sculptures. Significant collections by William Lamb of Montrose, David Waterson of Brechin and James Watterston Herald of Forfar and Arbroath make up a considerable part of the collection. Part of the collection comprises portraits of Provosts of the former Burghs.

    The Meffan Winter Exhibition, held annually, adds to our contemporary collections of professional artists working in, or associated with, Angus by means of a purchase prize. The collections consist mainly of works by Angus born or domiciled artists, or works by other artists depicting local views or portraiture of local people.

    Applied art

    The Museums and Galleries have a small but expanding collection of works by Angus craftsmen. Of particular interest are collections of Arbroath and Montrose silver, clocks and watches by clockmakers from the Angus Burghs and pistols and pottery made in Brechin and Montrose.

    Archaeology

    The Museums and Galleries presently hold over 5000 artefacts from Angus and have greatly expanded this area of the collection in recent years. Especially strong is a nationally significant collection of carved Pictish Stones. Aberdeenshire Council Archaeology Service maintains the archaeological sites and monuments record for Angus Council under a service level agreement.

    Social history

    This is the largest collection, including a wide variety of artefacts covering the history of Angus over the last three centuries. The collection already includes some 80,000 photographs, many industrial. Angus Archives within the ANGUSalive Culture, Leisure and Sports Trust strives to ensure that printed local history material and manuscripts are conserved and made available for use. Within the museums, the maritime collections, especially fishing, are of national significance.

    The closure of Sunnyside Museum of Psychiatry at Montrose in 2001 meant that all locally significant material from this collection was transferred to Angus Council. This collection is strong in the origins and practice of psychiatry in Montrose and in the social life of staff and patients. Of particular note is a collection of stone carvings by an Adam Christie (the Gentle Shetlander). This collection is important as an early recognition of “Outsider Art”.

    Natural history

    This is a very large collection with some 10,000 dried plants in the Herbarium and a greater number of animal specimens, notably specimens of invertebrate Molluscs. A large proportion of these are of foreign origin, most having been collected last century. Information is collected relating to local wildlife and sites of importance in Angus.

    Geology

    There are over 10,000 specimens of Rocks, Minerals and Fossils in the collection, again mostly non-locally collected last century. There are nationally significant Devonian Fossils.

    The Museum Service collects information on the Geology of Angus and on Sites of Geological importance in the area.

    Numismatics

    There is a strong collection of Scottish coinage, medals and tokens. There is a locally significant collection of communion tokens.

    Ethnography

    There are strong collections of material from the Indian sub-continent, Africa and the Pacific and Antipodes. Further research requires to be undertaken on the significance of the local collectors, where known, of this material. Some of the earliest parts of the museum collections are of this material.

    Source: Collection development policy

    Date: 2017

    Licence: CC BY-NC

Arlington Court

Wikidata identifier:
Q675650
Also known as:
National Trust Carriage Museum
Part of:
National Trust
Instance of:
historic house museum; English country house; history museum
Museum/collection status:
Accredited Museum
Accreditation number:
1963
Persistent shareable link for this record:
https://museumdata.uk/museums/q675650/
Collection level records:
Not yet. If you represent this organisation and can provide collection-level information, please contact us.

The Armitt

(collection-level records)
Wikidata identifier:
Q688663
Also known as:
Armitt Museum, The Armitt Library, Armitt Museum and Library
Instance of:
local museum; library; independent museum
Museum/collection status:
Accredited Museum
Accreditation number:
427
Persistent shareable link for this record:
https://museumdata.uk/museums/q688663/
Object records:
Yes, see object records for this museum

Collection-level records:

  • Collection overview (Cornucopia)

    Biology Collection

    Botanical specimens.

    Subjects

    Biology

    Armitt Library

    Over 10,000 titles relating to the Lake District and the people who lived, worked and visited there. Includes an extensive collection of early guide books, a wide range of books about local history, Medieval Cumbria, Charlotte Mason’s educational theories, work by local authors, such as Arthur Ransome, Beatrix Potter and Norman Nicholson and books about mountaineering collected by Bob and Muriel Files.

    Subjects

    Literature; Local history; Childrens literature; Poetry; Mountaineering

    Costume and Textile Collection

    A textile collection featuring work from the Langdale Linen industry and samples of Ruskin Lace.

    Subjects

    Costume and Textile

    Social History Collection

    Domestic and work-related items made and used by local people.

    Subjects

    Social History

    Photographic Collection

    Collections feature local scenes and people and include albums, portfolio work and glass plates. They are mainly the work of Victorian photographers such as Herbert Bell, Frith, Mason and the Abrahams Brothers. Most important works date from the 19th and early 20th century. Herbert Bell was a former Honorary Librarian of the Armitt Trust.

    Subjects

    Photographic equipment

    Geology Collection

    Local geological specimens mainly collected by John Ruskin with some associated with Walter Annis and Dr. F H Day.

    Subjects

    Geology

    Archives Collection

    Manuscripts and letters associated with Lake District personalities including Ruskin, Harriet Martineau, the Armitt sisters, and the Collingwood Family, together with folk songs, local account books, poor-law records and deeds. There is also a collection of over 10,000 book titles relating to the area including works owned/donated by Lake District personalities and people who worked in and visited the Lake District. The Armitt was originally founded on works of literature from the Ambleside Book Club founded in 1828 and the Ruskin Library, formed in 1882, which remain a core and treasured part of the collection today. Books include early guidebooks and local history and archaeological reference works, Charlotte Mason’s educational theories and work by local authors including Arthur Ransome and Norman Nicholson. There are also Newspapers and Parish Magazines.

    Subjects

    Archives

    Archaeology Collection

    Roman material from Galava is of regional significance and there is also Neolithic, Bronze Age and Roman material collected in and around Ambleside. Bulk material forms part of R G Collingwood’s excavation archive of Ambleside Roman fort.

    Subjects

    Archaeology

    Personalia Collection

    Items in the collection relate to the local personalities such as William Wordsworth, Beatrix Potter, Canon Rawnsley (the co-founder of the National Trust) and other well-known people. Specific items include a lock of John Ruskin’s hair, a bust of John Ruskin by Barbara Collingwood, a scarf belonging to Dorothy Wordsworth and the life mask of Harriet Martineau.

    Subjects

    Personalia

    Fine Art Collection

    Includes over 500 prints, pastels, oil paintings and watercolours with works by John Harden, T L Aspland, Kurt Schwitters, James Bourne, John Flower, Graham Hoggarth, J C Ibbetson, William Green and J B Pyne. Watercolours include an additional important group of 400 works by Beatrix Potter depicting fungi, fossils, portfolios of her microscope studies and Roman archaeology e.g. metal and bone objects from the Bucklersbury excavations drawn in 1894. The collection includes the largest collection of her scientific drawings of fungi in the world.

    Subjects

    Watercolours; Fossils; Archaeology; Fine Art; Biology

    Source: Cornucopia

    Date: Not known, but before 2015

    Licence: CC BY-NC

Arundel Museum

(collection-level records)
Wikidata identifier:
Q4802241
Instance of:
local museum; independent museum
Museum/collection status:
Accredited Museum
Accreditation number:
1259
Persistent shareable link for this record:
https://museumdata.uk/museums/q4802241/

Collection-level records:

  • Collection history (Collection development policy)

    Foundation in the Undercroft

    Arundel Museum Society (AMS) was founded in 1962 by a group of local people. At this time, heritage was under threat from new development and was generally undervalued. AMS set out to rescue and conserve as much as possible of Arundel’s past and aimed to create a town museum with the advice of Sussex historian, Roy Armstrong, and archaeologist, Con Ainsworth. In March 1964, the first museum was established in the old prison cells in the Undercroft of the Town Hall. In this evocative but somewhat cramped and damp environment, AMS built up displays of the history of Arundel and the surrounding villages. From the beginning, the Museum relied totally on volunteer management and stewards. It was a successful small scale attraction and one of the first independent local museums in the area, but it had limitations.

    The High Street Years

    The Museum’s first big opportunity came in 1975 when the former Borough Council Offices at 61 High Street became available. Arun District Council offered AMS the opportunity to take a lease on this Grade 2* listed Georgian building. With huge determination, AMS created a new museum which opened in 1977. At this time, AMS became a Charity. During the 1980s and 1990s, AMS faced new challenges. Standards of curatorial care became more demanding. Techniques of conservation were more complex and scientific. With a new national structure for the management of museums and galleries came the requirement for museums to be registered to show that they conformed to minimum standards of good curatorial practice. Arundel Museum was the first in the area to achieve MLA Registration, a considerable achievement. The Museum expanded into eight galleries. In 2000, the oral history archive gathered by volunteers was published as a book entitled ‘Arundel Voices’. A grant was obtained for a new display on the Port of Arundel, and this was accompanied by a new Town Trail way-marked by ceramic plaques by local potter, Josse Davies. In 2004, an art gallery was established to stage exhibitions. A regular programme of town walks, lectures and short courses was offered, and school visits were hosted. In 2005, a new formal MLA requirement, Accreditation, was introduced with more demanding benchmarks and the need for extensive documentation and policies to meet specified formats. Arundel Museum was again one of the first in the area to achieve Accreditation, which it did at the first attempt.

    An Uncertain Future

    From 2000 onwards, the Museum had operated under the shadow of an uncertain future. Arun District Council had expressed an intention to sell 61 High Street, and the lease would not be renewed. AMS tried hard to find alternative premises so that a planned move from one building to another might be achieved. Unfortunately, this proved impossible. Whilst efforts to develop a new museum carried on in the background, AMS was obliged to leave their premises in the autumn of 2007. AMS volunteers, supervised by a consultant curator, undertook the enormous task of packing every item in the collection and transferring these into stores. From 2008, Arundel Museum was able to keep a presence in the town by opening in temporary portacabin accommodation, sponsored by Geoffrey Osborne Limited and Speedy Space Limited, in the car park in Mill Road. In October 2011, the Museum moved once more to temporary accommodation, this time in Crown Yard Mews where it took on the role as the Tourist Information Point for Arundel.

    Rescue

    Returning to 2008, the Angmering Park Estate Trust, Arundel Castle Trustees and the Norfolk Estate came to the rescue and provided AMS with a vision for the future. They agreed to jointly offer an ideal prime site for a new building in the centre of the main tourist area opposite the Lower Castle Gate entrance. AMS became involved in a two-pronged attack to achieve its aims.

    • Firstly, AMS needed plans for the new building. Architect, Graham Whitehouse created plans for the building and steered AMS through the planning process, giving his time at no charge. Jonathan Potter of Potter Associates worked closely with AMS to use cutting edge design and modern technology to develop an innovative design concept for the internal displays.
    • Secondly, AMS needed to embark on a major fundraising drive to raise a total of £1.4 million to build and fit out its new permanent home in the heart of Arundel. The first step was to apply for funding to the Heritage Lottery Fund (HLF). Planning consent was obtained in March 2009. Early in 2010, the news was received that the first round bid that AMS had made to the HLF had been successful. This meant that the HLF awarded AMS a grant of £102,800 to develop and submit more detailed development plans and apply for up to a further £888,000. The second-round bid was submitted to the HLF in November 2010.At the end of March 2011, AMS heard that the second-round application to the HLF for £888,000 had been granted, subject to contract, towards the project totalling £1,414,500. This grant, together with £385,500 from Arun District Council, £50,000 raised locally during the previous year and funding from other sources, provided sufficient funding for the building to go ahead. Construction commenced in June 2012, and the Museum was officially opened by His Grace the Duke of Norfolk on 24 June 2013.The collection displays in the new purpose-built museum were selected to tell the story of Arundel from prehistory to 20th century. Illustrated by key objects and photographs in the museum gallery. This includes palaeolithic flint hand axes, artefacts from the roman period, medieval items through to Arundel Castle development and buildings, occupations and people of Arundel and its countryside. Specific cases are available for changing displays, using items from the reserve collection. Additionally, there are major Museum curated exhibitions, which draw on artefacts and documents from the Museum collection. This approach utilises the collection within the limited archive storage capacity. New acquisitions for inclusion are considered against this strategy.

    Source: Collection development policy

    Date: 2023

    Licence: CC BY-NC

  • Collection overview (Collection development policy)

    The museum consists of the following collections:

    • Objects (including documents) – 2760
    • Photographs – 3746
    • Archaeological material – 725
    • Geological material – 104
    • Oral histories – 169

    These are all listed in the acquisition records and on the Modes Complete system. No more than 2% of the collection is on loan to the Museum. This includes objects from Arundel Town Council, Arundel Castle, and individuals. The remainder is owned by the Arundel Museum Society.

    The collections contain objects related to or used within Arundel and the adjacent collecting area. These include:

    • Documents
    • Maps
    • Photographs
    • Pictures and prints
    • Implements and tools formerly used by local rural and urban trades and industries
    • A collection of weights and measures
    • Objects related to local shops and trades which have now closed.
    • Domestic items
    • Clocks including made by Thomas Walder
    • Costume, fabrics and items of apparel
    • Local Archaeology, including collections of Palaeolithic and Neolithic flint tools, within the local boundaries defined by the Sussex Museums Group’s Archaeological Working Party in 2013
    • A collection of fossils
    • Building materials
    • Items relating to the River Arun and Port of Arundel and ship models.

    The Museum has a reference library with a collection of books and documentary material relating to its collections. There is an oral history archive that is digitised with audiotape master copies and transcripts.

    Source: Collection development policy

    Date: 2023

    Licence: CC BY-NC

Ashmolean Museum

(collection-level records)
Wikidata identifier:
Q636400
Also known as:
Ashmolean Museum of Art and Archeology, Ashmolean Museum of Art & Archaeology, Ashmolean Museum of Art and Archaeology
Instance of:
art museum; university museum; museum
Museum/collection status:
Accredited Museum; Designated Collection
Accreditation number:
1255
Persistent shareable link for this record:
https://museumdata.uk/museums/q636400/
Object records:
Yes, see object records for this museum

Collection-level records:

  • Collection history (Collection development policy)

    The Ashmolean Museum of Art and Archaeology is the oldest public museum in Britain. Founded in 1683, it holds collections of national and international importance comprising collections of the visual arts and archaeology of Europe, Asia and North Africa and world numismatics, and also including the 17th-century founding collections and the collections formerly part of the University Galleries.

    Source: Collection development policy

    Date: 2020

    Licence: CC BY-NC

  • Collection overview (Collection development policy)

    Department of Antiquities

    The collections of the Department of Antiquities (approximately 400,000 items) cover almost the entire span of human history from the Lower Palaeolithic to the Victorian era. They incorporate the surviving parts of the Museum’s earliest collections, notably the founding collections of the Tradescants, which were given to the University by Elias Ashmole in 1683. They also include a wide-ranging and comprehensive representation of the early cultures of Europe, Egypt and the Near East, which owes much to the Museum’s long association with the field of archaeology.

    The majority of the Museum’s founding collections and records from the original Ashmolean Museum, founded in 1683, are cared-for by the Department of Antiquities. The surviving parts of the founder’s 17th-century collections are documented in A.G. MacGregor (ed.), Tradescant’s Rarities: Essays on the Foundation of the Ashmolean Museum 1683 (Oxford, 1983). The manuscript catalogues of the early Museum were published by Dr MacGregor in 2000 and 2006.

    The European Prehistory collection is one of the finest and most comprehensive in the country, particularly with reference to the antiquities of northern Europe. At its heart is the personal collection of Sir John Evans (1823-1908), one of the great pioneers of prehistoric archaeology. This material was used by him as the basis for his influential studies, Ancient Stone Implements of Great Britain (London, 1897) and Ancient Bronze Implements of Great Britain and Ireland (London, 1881), still regularly consulted by scholars. A small collection illustrates Italian prehistory.

    The Early Medieval collections from Britain and Europe are especially significant, and the collection of European Migration Period metalwork is exceptional: [E.T. Leeds and D.B. Harden, The Anglo-Saxon Cemetery at Abingdon, Berks (Oxford, 1936); A.G. MacGregor and E. Bolick, Ashmolean Museum: A Summary Catalogue of the Anglo-Saxon Collections (NonFerrous Metals) (Oxford, 1993); A.G. MacGregor, Ashmolean Museum: A Summary Catalogue of the Continental Archaeological Collections (Roman Iron Age, Migration Period, Early Medieval) (1997); D. Hinton, A Catalogue of the Anglo-Saxon Ornamental Metalwork in the Ashmolean Museum (Oxford, 1974)]. The Alfred Jewel, a masterpiece of late Anglo-Saxon goldsmith’s work has been described as the only Crown Jewel outside the Tower of London. The Medieval collections, especially pottery, are among the most comprehensive outside the national museums.

    The British archaeological collections at the Ashmolean Museum are central to the history of antiquarianism and archaeology in Britain. Their nucleus is also of national significance, and includes material resulting from pioneering work carried out in the Thames Valley under the auspices of the Museum up to the 1960s.

    The Aegean Prehistory collection is world famous and contains one of the richest collections of Cycladic Bronze Age material documented by E. S. Sherratt, Catalogue of the Cycladic Antiquities in the Ashmolean Museum, (Oxford, 2000), and the best collection of Minoan (Cretan) antiquities outside Greece. This is largely due to gifts made by Sir Arthur Evans, excavator of the Palace of Minos at Knossos, who virtually refounded the Ashmolean in 1894 as Keeper, and after his retirement in 1908 continued to encourage the collection with outstanding generosity, finally bequeathing a fund specially for its support. Much of the material was published in Evans’ Palace of Minos (1921-1935), supplemented by V.E.G. Kenna, Cretan Seals with a Catalogue of the Minoan Gems in the Ashmolean Museum (Oxford, 1960) and J. Boardman, The Cretan Collection in Oxford (Oxford, 1961). A major strength of the Aegean collections is the relatively high percentage of provenanced material and the presence of the Arthur Evans Archive.

    For about a century (c. 1885-1985) the University subscribed to British excavations in Egypt and the Near East, with the result that it has the finest collection in the United Kingdom of antiquities (including inscriptions) from those regions outside the British Museum. These are particularly strong in their representation of objects of everyday use illustrating thousands of years of cultural development. Such material comes from early Mesopotamian sites such as Kish [P.R.S. Moorey, Kish Excavations, 1923-1933 (Oxford, 1978)] Ur, Nimrud [Sir Max Mallowan’s excavations: Nimrud and its Remains (London, 1966); The Nimrud Ivories [London, 1978)], Nineveh and Deve Hüyük [P.R.S. Moorey, Cemeteries of the First Millennium BC at Deve Hüyük, near Carcemish, salvaged by T.E. Lawrence and C.L. Woolley in 1913 (Oxford, 1980)], in Iraq, from Atchana and Al Mina in Syria and Turkey [Sir Leonard Woolley’s excavations: Alalakh. An Account of the Excavations at Tell Atchana (Oxford, 1955)], and from sites in Palestine and other parts of the Levant, notably Jericho [Dame Kathleen Kenyon: Excavations at Jericho (London, 1960-1983)]. In addition, there are many “Luristan” bronzes [published by P.R.S. Moorey, Catalogue of the Ancient Persian Bronzes in the Ashmolean Museum (Oxford, 1971)], cylinder and stamp seals [published by B. Buchanan and P.R.S. Moorey, Catalogue of the Ancient Near Eastern Seals in the Ashmolean Museum I-III (Oxford, 1966-1988)]. The Cypriot collection contains important tomb-groups.

    The Egyptian collections of the Ashmolean are amongst the most extensive in Britain, and they represent every period of Egyptian civilization from prehistory to the 7th century AD. Predynastic Egypt is a notable strength. The Nubian collection is also worthy of note. Much of the Egyptian material was published by Sir Flinders Petrie in reports of the Egypt Exploration Society. The outstanding prehistoric material is published in J.C. Payne’s Catalogue of the Predynastic Egyptian Collection in the Ashmolean (Oxford, 1993; new edition 2000). The Department also houses extensive collections of papyri, ostraca, wooden labels and writing boards, including the Bodleian Library’s ostraca collections.

    The Museum’s collection of Classical Greek and Roman sculpture and inscriptions is the earliest in Britain, and was largely formed in the 17th century by Thomas Howard, Earl of Arundel (the “Arundel Marbles”). It is central to the study of the classical tradition in art and architecture in these islands. The collection of Greek painted pottery is important and substantial (thanks to the efforts of Percy Gardner, Sir Arthur Evans and Sir John Beazley [P. Gardner, Catalogue of the Greek Vases in the Ashmolean Museum (Oxford, 1893) and Corpus Vasorum Antiquorum, Oxford 1-3 (1927-1975)], but there are significant objects of many other kinds: bronzes, terracottas, gems [J. Boardman and M.-L. Vollenweider, Catalogue of the Engraved Gems and Finger Rings 1: Greek and Etruscan (Oxford, 1978)], and fibulae. There are important grave-groups from Thrace and the Crimea [M. Vickers, Scythian and Thracian Antiquities in Oxford [Oxford, 2000)]. The Arundel inscriptions were presented to the University in 1667, and Greek and Roman sculpture from the Arundel collection followed in 1755 [published by R. Chandler, Marmora Oxoniensia (Oxford, 1763)]. The Italic and Etruscan collection, though small, provides a representative overview of the antiquities of Iron Age Italy. The Roman collection is notable for rich type-series of gems, brooches, lamps, pottery [A.C. Brown, Catalogue of Italian Terra Sigillata in the Ashmolean Museum (Oxford, 1968)] and glass, and for its pewter and ironwork. Excavated material comes from local sites such as the villa at Shakenoak [A.C.C. Brodribb, A.R. Hands and D.R. Walker, Excavations at Shakenoak Farm, near Wilcote, Oxfordshire (Oxford, 1971)], the Romano-Celtic shrine at Water Eaton and elsewhere.

    The Department also holds important archival and documentary material. Most notable are the Sir John and Sir Arthur Evans Archives (European Prehistory and Aegean archaeology respectively), the Allen air photographs of British archaeological sites, the Kish (Iraq) excavation archives, and archives relevant to local archaeology for a century and a half.

    Department of Western Art

    The Department of Western Art (approximately 370, 000 items) holds collections of paintings, drawings, prints, sculpture, decorative arts, tapestries and musical instruments from the Middle Ages to the present day, incorporating numerous individual collections of high specialist importance.

    The wide-ranging collection of European old master drawings and prints, based on the Douce Bequest of 1834 and the purchase by public subscription in 1842 of the near-incomparable collection of drawings by Raphael and Michelangelo made by Sir Thomas Lawrence, is one of the finest assemblages in the world and, among UK museums, second only to the holdings of the British Museum. [Catalogues of the Collection of Drawings in the Ashmolean: K.T. Parker, Vol. I. Netherlandish, German, French and Spanish Schools (Oxford, 1938); K.T. Parker, Vol. II. Italian Schools, 2 vols. (Oxford, 1956); H. Macandrew, Vol. III. Italian Schools: Supplement (Oxford, 1980); D.B. Brown, Vol. IV. 17th & 18th Century English Drawings (Oxford, 1982); C. Bailey, Vol. V. Nineteenth Century German Drawings (Oxford, 1987); J. Whiteley, Vol. VI. French Ornament Drawings of the Sixteenth century (Oxford, 1994); J Whiteley, Vol. VII, French School, (2001)]. Among English drawings, those by J.M.W. Turner, Samuel Palmer, John Ruskin, and the Pre- Raphaelites are of spectacular quality [L. Herrmann, Ruskin and Turner … in the Ashmolean Museum (London, 1968); R. Hewison, Ruskin and Oxford: the Art of Education (Oxford, 1996)]. A particular strength is the work of Camille Pissarro and his family (based on the Pissarro Family Gift of 1950) [R. Brettell and C. Lloyd, Catalogue of Drawings by Camille Pissarro in the Ashmolean Museum (Oxford,1980)]. Current research is focusing on Old Master drawings from the Italian and the Dutch and Flemish Schools.The paintings comprise one of the principal collections in England outside the National Museums [The Ashmolean Museum: Complete Illustrated Catalogue of Paintings (Oxford, 2004)].They are particularly rich for Renaissance Italy [C. Lloyd, A Catalogue of the Earlier Italian Paintings in the Ashmolean Museum (Oxford, 1977)], European Baroque [C. Whistler, Baroque and Later Paintings in the Ashmolean Museum (London, 2016)], for England in the 18th and 19th centuries, and for 17th- century Holland and Flanders [C. White, Catalogue of the Dutch, Flemish and German Paintings in the Ashmolean Museum, 1999], notably the Daisy Linda Ward collection of still-life paintings [F.G. Meijer, Dutch and Flemish Still-life Pictures bequeathed by Daisy Linda Ward (Oxford/Zwolle, 2003)]. Oxford had a key role in the formation of the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood, which is reflected in some much-loved key works by the protagonists, especially from the Combe Bequest of 1894. The holdings of

    English art of the early 20th century are especially representative for the Camden Town School, thanks mainly to the Bevan Gift (1957) and Sands Gift (2001). The collection of Russian art of the late 19th and early 20th centuries is also important [L. Salmina-Haskell, Russian Paintings and Drawings (Oxford, 1990)]. A new catalogue of the French paintings is currently being compiled by Jon Whiteley. The modern paintings and drawings form (especially drawings) an active collecting area. The collection of British 20th-century printmaking in traditional black-and-white modes, particularly wood-engraving, is in some respects more comprehensive even than the collection in the British Museum and has been much enriched in recent years. A small collection of avant-garde prints from German-speaking countries has been assembled in the last decade.

    The Museum’s holdings of other European arts are nationally pre-eminent or internationally important in several specific areas. The European sculpture has been described as the most important collection in Britain outside the V&A [N. Penny, Catalogue of European Sculpture in the Ashmolean Museum, 1540 to the Present Day, 3 vols. (Oxford, 1992); J. Warren, Medieval and Renaissance Sculpture. A Catalogue of the Ashmolean Museum collection, 3 vols, 2014]. C.D.E. Fortnum’s collections of Italian Renaissance bronzes and maiolica [T. Wilson, Italian Maiolica and Europe (Oxford, 2018)], and of rings, are each of world importance in their fields.

    The English domestic silver of the 17th and 18th centuries, based on the Farrer Bequest of 1946, rivals even the great national collection at the V&A [T. Schroder, Catalogue of British and Continental Gold and Silver in the Ashmolean Museum, Oxford, 2009]. The Marshall Collection is the most comprehensive assemblage of early Worcester porcelain anywhere [R. Sword, The Marshall Collection of Worcester Porcelain in the Ashmolean Museum (Oxford, 2017)]. The Hill Collection is one of the most select collections in existence of European stringed instruments in near-original condition from the 16th to the 18th centuries [J. Milnes (ed.), Musical Instruments in the Ashmolean Museum, 2011]. Other notable specialist holdings include watches from the 16th to the 19th centuries, portrait miniatures, English Delftware [A. Ray, English Delftware Pottery in the Robert Hall Warren Collection in the Ashmolean Museum (London, 1968)], English 17th-century textiles, and English 18th-century glass and pottery. Selective collections of 20th- and 21st-century British studio pottery and silver have been developed since about 2000.

    Among nationally important archive material held in the Department are the extensive holdings of correspondence of members of the Pissarro family and papers belonging to two crucial Victorian scholar-collectors of sculpture and the applied arts, C.D.E. Fortnum and J.C. Robinson.

    Department of Eastern Art

    The Department of Eastern Art (approximately 55,000 items including potsherds and longterm loans) holds the University’s collections of the art and archaeology of the Islamic world, of the Indian subcontinent, Central Asia, the Himalayan region and Southeast Asia, and of China, Japan and Korea. More ethnographic objects from these regions are primarily housed in the Pitt Rivers Museum. The collections are of international importance and in almost all cases the most extensive and important of their kind in this country outside London, surpassed only by those of the British Museum and Victoria & Albert Museum. Since the opening of the Department in 1963 the collections have continued to expand greatly, both through purchases and the generosity of several benefactors.

    The Islamic collection is especially important for its ceramics, which span the period from the 8th to the 20th century, and an area stretching from Spain in the west to Afghanistan and Uzbekistan in the east. These mostly come from two gifts, that of Gerald Reitlinger [G. Reitlinger, Eastern Ceramics and other works of Art from the collections of Gerald Reitlinger (Oxford, 1981)] and of Sir Alan Barlow [G. Fehervari, Islamic Pottery: A comprehensive study based on the Barlow Collection (London, 1973); J.W. Allan, Medieval Middle Eastern Pottery (Oxford, 1971)]. The collection is also notable for its seals and talismans [L. Kalus, Catalogue of the Islamic Seals and Talismans in the Ashmolean Museum (Oxford, 1986)], and medieval Egyptian embroideries from the Newberry Collection [Marianne Ellis, Embroideries and Samplers from Islamic Egypt (Oxford, 2001)]. The Department also holds complementary collections of Islamic metalwork; glass, including a splendid early 14th century Egyptian mosque lamp; works on paper and illuminated codices, comprising Qur’anic material and illustrated literature; textiles, including a small selection of 18th-20th century carpets and saddle bags; and ivory, including a royal Cordovan piece dated 998-999 AD.

    The Indian collection comprises representative holdings of the main phases of Indian art from the Indus Valley civilization (c.2500-1800 BC) to the period of British rule. It is particularly rich in Hindu, Buddhist and Jain sculpture in stone, bronze, terracotta and other materials [Naman Ahuja, Art and Archaeology of Ancient India: Earliest Times to the Sixth Century (Oxford, 2018); David Jongeward, Buddhist Art of Gandhara in the Ashmolean Museum (Oxford, 2019)]. Among the more famous examples are the terracotta goddess from Tamluk (c.200 BC), acquired in the 1880s and known as “the Oxford plaque”, and the Pala stone image of Vishnu (11th century) given to the Ashmolean by Sir William Hedges in 1686, three years after the foundation. There is also a substantial collection of paintings and decorative arts of the Mughal period (1526-1858). A selection of objects was published in J.C. Harle and A.Topsfield, Indian art in the Ashmolean Museum (Oxford, 1987). Paintings of the Mughal period are published in A. Topsfield, Indian paintings from Oxford collections (Oxford, 1994). The Department also has an important collection of Tibetan and Nepalese art including a number of early (pre-1400) examples [A. Heller, Early Himalayan Art, (2008)], and substantial collections from Central Asia and Southeast Asia. The Newberry Collection of Indian textile fragments found at Fustat in Egypt is the most important of its kind [R. Barnes, Indian block-printed textiles in Egypt: The Newberry Collection in the Ashmolean Museum, Oxford (Oxford, 1997)].

    The Chinese collection represents the art and archaeology of China from the neolithic period to the present day. The early bronzes, jades and ceramics were mostly donated by Sir Herbert Ingram in 1956 and form the nucleus of the Chinese holdings. The ceramic collection is particularly strong, with the greenwares of the 3rd-11th centuries comprising the largest and most important collection of these wares outside China [M. Tregear, Catalogue of Chinese Greenware in the Ashmolean Museum Oxford (Oxford, 1976)]. The holdings of later porcelain are extensive, including a significant collection of 17th century wares mostly bequeathed by Gerald Reitlinger, and these are complemented by collections of later metalwork and decorative arts. The highly important Barlow Collection of Chinese ceramics has also recently been transferred on long-term loan to the Museum. The collection of later Chinese painting is very strong, following a series of major donations from 1995 onwards [S. Vainker, Modern Chinese Paintings: The Reyes Collection in the Ashmolean Museum, Oxford (Oxford, 1996)]. Now Europe’s foremost collection of modern Chinese painting, it is displayed in the purposebuilt Chinese Paintings Gallery named after Michael and Khoan Sullivan, whose own distinguished collection of Chinese paintings has recently been bequeathed to the Museum.

    The Japanese collection includes the only serious holding of Japanese painting in Britain, other than in the British Museum [J. Katz, Japanese Paintings in the Ashmolean Museum, Oxford (Oxford, 2003)]. There is a good collection of screens [O. Impey, The art of the Japanese folding screen (Oxford, 1997)], and of Edo period (1600-1868) painting in general; particularly noteworthy are the Nanga paintings [J. Hillier, in Oriental Art, XIII, 3 (1967)] and the Shijo paintings [many of which were published in J. Hillier’s The Uninhibited Brush (London, 1974)]. The collection of Japanese export porcelain is one of the finest in the world [O. Impey, Japanese export porcelain: Catalogue of the collection of the Ashmolean Museum (Oxford, 2002)], while ceramics for the Japanese market are also well represented, including good examples of Arita, Nabeshima and Hirado porcelain, tea ceremony wares and Kyoto earthenwares. The other collections of Edo applied arts include Buddhist sculpture, sword furniture [unpublished catalogue of the A. H. Church collection of Japanese sword-guards (tsuba) by Albert James Koop is now available online], lacquerware for both export and domestic markets, netsuke [O. Impey, Japanese netsuke in Oxford (Oxford, 1987); J. Seaman, Manju netsuke (Oxford, 2013)] and woodblock prints [O. Impey, Hiroshige’s Views of Tokyo (Oxford,1993); O. Impey, Hiroshige’s Views of Mount Fuji (Oxford, 2001); O. Impey and M. Watanabe, Kuniyoshi’s Heroes of China and Japan (Oxford, 2003); M. Watanabe, Beauties of the Four Seasons (Oxford, 2005), C. Pollard and M. Watanabe Ito, Hiroshige – Landscape, Cityscape (Oxford, 2014), K. Hanaoka and C. Pollard, Plum Blossom & Green Willow: Japanese Surimono Prints from the Ashmolean Museum (Oxford, 2019)]. The collection of Meiji period (1868-1912) painting and applied art is strong and growing [O. Impey and J. Seaman, Japanese Decorative Arts of the Meiji Period (Oxford, 2005); Oriental Art, XLII, 3 (1996)]. The collection of porcelain sherd material from Arita is better than any outside Arita itself [O. Impey, The Early Porcelain Kilns of Japan (Oxford, 1996)].

    About 11,000 objects from the collection were digitised to a high standard between 2007 and 2013 thanks to the support of a private benefactor and have since been shared with the broader public on a dedicated website, Eastern Art Online (www.jameelcentre.ashmolean.org). This, in addition to our blog (http://blogs.ashmolean.org/easternart) and the new Ashmolean Museum’s main website, offer regular access to our collections and range of activities on the world wide web.

    The Department also holds important archival and documentary material of various kinds (over 116,000 items), most notably the May Beattie Archive for the study of oriental carpets, and the Creswell photographic archive of Islamic architecture, both of which are also partially digitised.

    Heberden Coin Room

    The Heberden Coin Room contains about 400,000 items, many of which are placed on long term deposit by various colleges in the University. The holdings include Ancient, Medieval and Modern coins of all countries, medals, orders and decorations, tokens, jetons, paper money, and other forms of money (‘paranumismatica’). The collection is progressively being put online through: https://hcr.ashmus.ox.ac.uk/.

    Coins and many other forms of money are mass produced so that publications routinely embrace material from many sources. The Greek collection covers all areas of the Greek world, from Spain to Bactria. It is in process of publication as Sylloge Nummorum Graecorum, vol. 5, Ashmolean Museum, Oxford. Already published are: J.G. Milne, Part I, Evans Collection. Italy, 1951, C.M. Kraay, Part I (A), Italy, Etruria-Lucania (Thurium), 1962, id., Part II, Italy, Lucania (Thurium) – Bruttium, Sicily, Carthage, 1969, D. Nash, Part III, Macedonia, 1976, C.M. Kraay, Part IV, Paeonia-Thessaly, 1981, S. Ireland and R. Ashton, Part IX, Bosporus – Aeolis, 2007.

    The Roman collection is also extensive. All rarities have been included systematically in the standard catalogues, Roman Republican Coinage, 2 volumes, by M.H. Crawford, 1974, and Roman Imperial Coinage, 10 volumes, by various authors, 1923-1996. A start was made with the systematic publication of the whole collection in C.H.V. Sutherland and C.M. Kraay, Catalogue of the Coins of the Roman Empire in the Ashmolean Museum, Part I, Augustus (c. 31BC – AD14), published in 1975. This project has since been partially superseded by a collaborative international scheme which incorporates the Ashmolean’s coins into a catalogue of ten major collections, under the title Roman Provincial Coinage, see https://rpc.ashmus.ox.ac.uk/. There is an outstanding collection of late Byzantine coins catalogued as E. Lianta, Late Byzantine Coins. 1204 – 1453 in the Ashmolean Museum, 2009.

    The English coin collection is extensive and of fine quality. Some of the most important parts of it have been published under the auspices of the British Academy’s Sylloge of Coins of the British Isles (SCBI). The earliest Anglo-Saxon coins were published in C.H.V. Sutherland, Anglo-Saxon Gold Coinage in the Light of the Crondall Hoard, 1948. The so-called sceattas of the 7th and 8th centuries are all published and discussed in D.M. Metcalf, Thrymsas and Sceattas in the Ashmolean Museum, Oxford (3 volumes, 1993-4). For later coins, see J.D.A. Thompson, Ashmolean Museum, Oxford, Anglo-Saxon Pennies, 1967 (=SCBI, vol. 7), and D.M. Metcalf, Ashmolean Museum, Oxford, Part II, English Coins, 1066-1279, 1969 (=SCBI, vol. 12). The E.J. Winstanley collection is included in D.M. Metcalf, Ashmolean Museum, Oxford, Part III, Coins of Henry VII, 1976 (=SCBI, vol. 23). The rich series of Scottish coins, from the Hird gift, are published jointly with the Glasgow collection in J.D. Bateson and N.J. Mayhew, Scottish Coins in the Ashmolean Museum, Oxford, and the Hunterian Museum, Glasgow, 1987 (=SCBI, vol. 35).

    The Ashmolean has an outstanding collection of Crusader coins, of which the catalogue is the standard work on the subject: D.M. Metcalf, Coinage of the Crusades and the Latin East in the Ashmolean Museum, Oxford (2nd edition, 1995).

    The museum’s Islamic coins, including the former Shamma loan, are being published as the Sylloge of Islamic Coins in the Ashmolean Museum (SICA). The following volumes have been published so far: S. Album and Tony Goodwin, Vol. 1, The Pre-Reform Coinage of the Early Islamic Period, 2002, N.D. Nicol, Vol. 2, Early Post-Reform Coinage, 2009, N.D. Nicol, Vol. 6, The Egyptian Dynasties, 2007, S. Album, Vol. 9, Iran after the Mongol Invasion, 2001, and S. Album, Vol. 10, Arabia and East Africa, 1999. The collection of South Asian and Far Eastern coin collection constitute a major body of evidence for subjects with international academic interest such as Gandharan Art and the History of collecting coins in China and Japan. The Indian coin collection is mainly formed through the Shortt Bequest and includes collections of important collectors of oriental coins such as Sir Aurel Stein, P Thorburn, Alfred Master and H E Stapleton. The Senior Collection of Indo-Scythian and Indo-Parthian coins is by far the most important numismatic evidence for Gandhara and has been published as a type catalogue by Senior (R C Senior, Indo-Scythian Coinage and History, vols. I-IV, 2001). The collections of the coinage of the Bengal Sultanate, the Mughals, and the British East India Company are also noteworthy. The far eastern coin collection has recently been rearranged. It includes significant holdings of Chinese, Japanese, Korean and Vietnamese coins.

    The collection of modern coins and paper money is largely an incidental collection, formed through individual donations rather than as a result of a focussed acquisition strategy. However, it includes numismatic material of great significance to collectors of modern monies, such as coins preserved in high collectible grades, coins issued during wars or episodes of emergency and banknotes of very high denominations. Joe Cribb, the former Keeper of Coins and Medals in the British Museum, has gifted a collection of nearly 2000 modern banknotes to the department.

    Many commemorative medals in the Ashmolean’s large collection are listed in Medallic Illustrations of British History (19 parts, 1904-1911) and in more detail in L. Brown, A Catalogue of British Historical Medals 1760-1960 (2 vols., 1980-1987).

    Cast Gallery

    The Cast Gallery possesses about 1,100 plaster casts of Greek and Roman sculpture, most of which were acquired before 1925. The collection was started in the late 19th-century to serve as a teaching facility for the then new subject of Classical Archaeology in the University. The casts provide a strong and exact three-dimensional representation of Greek and Roman statues and reliefs in marble and bronze, from the beginning of Greek statue-making in the sixth century BC to late Roman material of the sixth century AD.

    At first the casts were displayed among original pieces in the main museum. In 1961, the collection was moved to its current purpose-built Cast Gallery. And in 2010, after the renovation of the main museum, the Cast Gallery was also renovated and connected directly to the main museum. The collection was completely re-displayed along thematic lines. At the same time, major casts were included in displays in the main museum, most notably in the central atrium.

    Recent acquisitions have been concentrated on increasing the presence of Hellenistic and Roman material. Since 1995, more than 100 new pieces have been added. The collection is fully documented, photographed, and published in Rune Frederiksen and R. R. R. Smith, Cast Gallery of the Ashmolean Museum: Catalogue of Plaster Casts of Greek and Roman Sculpture (2013).

    The Cast Gallery has one curator who is also the fulltime Lincoln Professor of Classical Archaeology and Art in the University (R.R.R. Smith) and one half-time Assistant Curator (Milena Melfi).

    Source: Collection development policy

    Date: 2020

    Licence: CC BY-NC

Ashwell Village Museum

(collection-level records)
Wikidata identifier:
Q17554760
Also known as:
Town House (Ashwell Museum), Ashwell Museum
Instance of:
museum; independent museum
Museum/collection status:
Accredited Museum
Accreditation number:
658
Persistent shareable link for this record:
https://museumdata.uk/museums/q17554760/

Collection-level records:

  • Collection history (Collection development policy)

    The museum was founded in 1930 when the collection of two local schoolboys was, by the generosity of Sir William Gentle, given a permanent home run by a committee of trustees.

    The present curator was appointed in 1983. He took over from one of the founders and recognised the need to bring the museum up to modern standards whilst retaining its unique atmosphere. With the addition of two extensions, a Resource Centre and website the museum is now able to be worthy repository for Ashwell’s historical artefacts and make the collection available to a wide public.

    Source: Collection development policy

    Date: 2023

    Licence: CC BY-NC

  • Collection overview (Collection development policy)

    Social and Local History

    1. The bulk of the collection concerns the social history of the village covering all periods and including photographs archives and printed sources The nucleus was formed by the founders in the 1920’s and has been added to ever since
    2. The strengths of the collection are its comprehensivity, its longevity and its location.
    3. New items will be added to the collections only where a local provenance can be established. This shall relate to the domestic, community, rural and industrial environment of Ashwell and its immediate neighbourhood and shall be interpreted in its widest sense. No non-local material will be collected.
    4. The current level of documentation allows the museum to determine gaps in the collection. However because of the very limited nature of the allowable provenance of any suitable material passive collecting operates as far as artefacts are concerned except in rescue cases. Archives and photographs particularly of recent events are actively collected to try to maintain a record of the continuing history of the village.
    5. Duplicates are only collected where their provenance differs greatly from previous accessions.

    Archives

    1. Wide variety of material particularly strong on local organisations and businesses.
    2. There could be some discussion with the Hertfordshire County Record Office as to the suitability of some items for deposit there.
    3. Large collection (5,312 items) of mainly copied sources important to the history of Ashwell formerly in the possession of D. Short.

    Photographs and Pictorial representation

    1. Good general photographic collection but early images are rare and more images of activities including work would be useful.
    2. There is a collection of portraits of First World War Veterans, a large collection of prints and colour slides by Mr Shelton, a photographic survey of every building in the village in 1991 and the photographic archive of the Royston Crow relating to Ashwell.
    3. There are also a number of cine-films dating back to the 1930’s.
    4. Digital photographs of recent events

    Archaeology

    1. Material from excavations carried out in the parish and from casual finds.There are no excavations planned by us for the area as there are other agencies in the area (e.g. North Herts Museums Service), which are much better suited to carrying out such work.
    2. Some new material is being donated by metal-detector operators working on deep ploughed fields
    3. with the owner’s permission.
    4. The Ashwell Hoard and the HLF funded Ashwell Archaeology project (2014) have significantly changed the interpretation of local archaeology without adding to the collection.

    Geology and Natural History

    1. Samples collected in the locality mainly by the founders, Albert Sheldrick and John Bray, in the 1920’s and 30’s. These were all identified and documented by Brian Sawford in 1978.
    2. Collection of Gold Prospector in Australia who came from and returned to Ashwell. Surveyed, conserved and displayed in a purpose built case.

    Coins

    Collection of Roman Coins mostly casual finds, 17th century Trade Tokens of Ashwell and some other neighbouring examples and some examples of British currency.

    Textiles

    1. Collection of clothes and samplers with a strong local provenance and the work of Percy Sheldrick.
    2. Mostly stored in acid-free boxes.
    3. Space and conservation requirements prevent much of this being on display.

    Craft and Fine Art

    Collection of paintings, watercolours, prints, sculpture and ceramics representing local artists and crafts people.

    Source: Collection development policy

    Date: 2023

    Licence: CC BY-NC

Avoncroft Museum of Historic Buildings

(collection-level records)
Wikidata identifier:
Q4829273
Also known as:
Avoncroft Museum
Instance of:
museum; charitable organization; independent museum
Museum/collection status:
Accredited Museum
Accreditation number:
621
Persistent shareable link for this record:
https://museumdata.uk/museums/q4829273/

Collection-level records:

  • Collection overview (Cornucopia)

    Costume and Textile Collection

    The collection essentially supports the presentation and interpretation of the buildings collection. The collection reflects the life and activities that took place within the buildings in the museum’s collection, and reflects the periods of the buildings concerned.

    Subjects

    Costume (leisurewear); Textiles; Costume and Textile; Costume (workwear); Western European

    Agriculture Collection

    The collection reflects the activities that took place in such structures as the windmill, barns and other agricultural buildings, and is mainly of 19th. and early 20th.C. date. The agriculture collection supports the understanding and presentation of the buildings collection.

    Subjects

    Food processing; Agriculture; People (society); Western European

    Social History Collection

    The collections relating to domestic life and service are important in their own right and as a vehicle in the interpretation of the site. The social history collection reflects activities associated with the buildings collection as well as having significance in its own right.

    Subjects

    Ceramics; Metalwork; People (children); Furniture; People (society); Social History; Glass; Western European

    Transport Collection

    The transport collection contains a number of horse-drawn vehicles of various kinds appropriate to the buildings collection The working transport exhibits are important both in their own right and in the interpretation of the site. They are of late 19th. and early 20th.C. date.

    Subjects

    Road Transport; Transport; Horse-drawn transport; Western European

    Science and Industry Collection

    The tools and machinery collection provides a detailed insight into a wide range of processes. The chain-making, nail-making and sawpit equipment are especially well represented. A number of working/interactive exhibits reflect activities associated with the buildings on site. The collection of building materials, equipment and fittings is unusual. There is a small display, but most of the material is kept for study purposes. The purpose of the collection is to preserve and record material from trades and industries that were pursued in the museum’s buildings. The chain-making, nail-making and sawpit equipment are especially well represented. The collection of building materials, equipment and fittings is unusual.

    Subjects

    Agriculture; Industry and commerce; Construction; Science and Industry; Manufacturing; Metal working; Western European

    Archives Collection

    The museum library and archive contains written material related to architecture, building trades and crafts, building conservation, rural trades and industries, local history and topography and other related museums in the UK and abroad. There is a photographic archive relating largely to buildings on site, and the museum also holds the archive of the Hereford and Worcester Architectural record Group. There is also a small oral history archive. The collection is of late 19th. and 20th.C. date. There is a wide-ranging archive of material related to the buildings and associated trades covered by the object collections. There is a photographic archive relating largely to buildings on site, and the museum also holds the archive of the Hereford and Worcester Architectural record Group. There is also a small oral history archive.

    Subjects

    Oral history; Documents (commercial); Documents (historic); Archives; Photography; Western European

    Source: Cornucopia

    Date: Not known, but before 2015

    Licence: CC BY-NC

Axminster Heritage Centre

(collection-level records)
Wikidata identifier:
Q4830658
Also known as:
Axminster Museum
Instance of:
local museum; garden
Museum/collection status:
Accredited Museum
Accreditation number:
2373
Persistent shareable link for this record:
https://museumdata.uk/museums/q4830658/

Collection-level records:

  • Collection history (Collection development policy)

    Axminster Museum was opened in 1982 and was housed in the old courthouse. This museum built up a collection to tell the story of Axminster and the surrounding villages. The Collection was mainly developed by donations from local residents. Run by a dedicated team of volunteers they gained Accreditation for the museum in 1996.

    In 2002 a group of local Axminster carpet enthusiasts set up a group to plan for the 250th anniversary of the first Axminster carpet in 2005. The events were a success and it was suggested to them that they set up a museum dedicated to the Axminster Carpet story. In 2006 Axminster Heritage Ltd was formed and in 2012 they were successful in purchasing part of the second phase of the Georgian carpet factory. However, by this time it was clear a museum just of Axminster Carpets was going to be a bit niche and Axminster probably couldn’t maintain 2 museums.

    Discussions were held between Axminster Heritage Ltd and Axminster Museum and in 2015 the collection of Axminster Museum was transferred to Axminster Heritage Ltd. The transfer was agreed because the old carpet factory offered a much better space for exhibition development, storeroom development and as the museum would be on the ground floor it could be made fully accessible. Some of the former Trustees of the Axminster Museum became Trustees of Axminster Heritage Ltd, and many of the volunteers transferred over to carry on roles at Axminster Heritage Ltd.

    Since 2015 Axminster Heritage Limited has taken on the role for collecting artifacts and archives that tell the story of Axminster and the surrounding areas, but does declare one of its specialist interests is Axminster carpets. Axminster Heritage Ltd was able to gain both a Georgian Loom and a 1937 Crabtree carpet loom to illustrate the two periods of Axminster carpet manufacture in the town, as well as extend the general collections.

    Source: Collection development policy

    Date: 2016

    Licence: CC BY-NC

  • Collection overview (Collection development policy)

    The geographical area to which the collections relate is the parish of Axminster and the surrounding parishes of Musbury, Shute, Membury, Kilmington, Dalwood, Stockland, All Saints, Chardstock and Uplyme, including villages of Umborne and Whitford.

    Axminster Carpets – this is a collection of original Axminster carpets, including an original loom. Future priorities are to increase the number of original carpets and become a base for a national collection, setting up a data base for all known Axminster carpets around the world. It features an original painting of Thomas Whitty, the creator of Axminster carpet industry and will include a small collection of hand spinning and weaving looms. Future priorities are to collect and develop a full range of linked equipment.

    Decorative Art – this is a small collection including cider mugs, glass bottles, ceramic receptacles, stone and furniture ,including a grandfather clock made in Axminster by J.Hawkins c 1795.Some of this has been photographed and catalogued.

    Costume and Textiles– this is a small collection, including accessories, from mid-Victorian times to the 1930’s. It includes domestic, agricultural and military items. Of particular note is christening gloves believed to be the first Duke of Marlborough’s. This all needs conservation checks and repacking in 2016.

    Numismatics – this contains military medals, commemorative medals and coins. Of particular interest is the collection of agricultural medals.

    Geology – this mainly relates to the Victorian collection of Dr. Connybear who was born in Axminster.

    Archaeology – this is a small collection ranging from information on Cloakham circles, the Dissolution of Newnham Abbey and Roman finds at Wick .

    Photographs – including prints, plates and negatives of local views, people and activities. It includes local companies such as Shands and Axminster Carpets, as well as the Cattle Market and local social events and sporting events. This has been largely catalogued. Also included is a library of local books from Victorian times.Priority areas are future storage and conservation and the completion of digital copies, some of which have been done.

    Archive – this is a medium collection relating to local families, commercial firms, local organisations, newspapers, broadsheets, programmes, paper souvenirs, and other ephemera. Also included are documents from Axminster Carpets, Shands and Dawkins. These date from c 1700 and future rationalisation will be needed.

    Agriculture and Rural life – this is a medium collection of objects relating to various aspects of rural life including wine and cider jars. There is also a small collection of advertising signs relating to local businesses. Most items are catalogued but some rationalisation is needed owing to the condition of some of the items.

    Social History – this includes ALL the other material that does not fit into the other categories eg the material relating to Thomas Wakely who created the Lancet. There is also a good selection of social history books relating to Axminster. This collection will require rationalisation with some items transferring to the Handling collection.

    The Handling collection – the trust owns a handling collection which consists of some real and some replica artefacts. Some have been donated as handling items and transferred from main collections. This is a priority for development over the next few years, particularly in terms of rationalising the social history collections and transferring them for handling purposes. Items selected will generally either be duplicates of other items or not from the core collection.

    Source: Collection development policy

    Date: 2016

    Licence: CC BY-NC

Barnsley Museums

Wikidata identifier:
Q123820847
Instance of:
museum service
Persistent shareable link for this record:
https://museumdata.uk/museums/q123820847/
Collection level records:
Not yet. If you represent this organisation and can provide collection-level information, please contact us.

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