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Stow Maries Great War Aerodrome

Wikidata identifier:
Q113370235
Also known as:
Stow Maries Great War Aerodrome Museum
Instance of:
aviation museum; military museum
Museum/collection status:
Accredited museum
Accreditation number:
2429
Persistent shareable link for this record:
https://museumdata.uk/museums/q113370235/
Collection level records:
Not yet. If you represent this organisation and can provide collection-level information, please contact us.

Stowe House Preservation Trust

Wikidata identifier:
Q134955418
Instance of:
museum; archive; collection
Accreditation number:
T 672
Persistent shareable link for this record:
https://museumdata.uk/museums/q134955418/
Collection level records:
Not yet. If you represent this organisation and can provide collection-level information, please contact us.

Strangers’ Hall Museum

Wikidata identifier:
Q7621576
Also known as:
Strangers Hall Museum
Part of:
Norfolk Museums
Instance of:
historic house museum; museum building; local authority museum; museum
Museum/collection status:
Accredited museum
Accreditation number:
734
Persistent shareable link for this record:
https://museumdata.uk/museums/q7621576/
Collection level records:
Yes, see Norfolk Museums

Stranraer Museum

Wikidata identifier:
Q21035627
Instance of:
museum; local authority museum
Museum/collection status:
Accredited museum; Recognised collection
Accreditation number:
1106
Persistent shareable link for this record:
https://museumdata.uk/museums/q21035627/
Collection level records:
Yes, see Dumfries and Galloway Council

Strathnaver Museum

(collection-level records)
Wikidata identifier:
Q113369893
Instance of:
museum; independent museum
Museum/collection status:
Accredited museum
Accreditation number:
67
Persistent shareable link for this record:
https://museumdata.uk/museums/q113369893/

Collection-level records:

  • Collection overview (Collection development policy)

    Strathnaver Museum’s permanent Collection comprises approximately 1,800 artefacts relating to the following subjects/themes:

    • The prehistory and archaeology of Strathnaver
    • Life in Strathnaver in the early historic to early modern period
    • The Strathnaver Clearances
    • Life in Strathnaver in the 19th and early 20th Centuries
    • The Grimble Collection: Strathnaver Museum founder, broadcaster, & historian Dr Ian Grimble
    • Clan Mackay Collection
    • Mackay Country Community Trust Archive
    • Intangible cultural heritage of Strathnaver

    The permanent Collection is made up of material collected from the area bounded by Strathhalladale in the East, Strathmore in the West and Ben Klibreck in the South.

    The period of time to which the permanent Collection relates is prehistory to the present day.

    Strathnaver Museum has a supporting Collection of unaccessioned material which is used in school & lifelong learning loan boxes.

    Source: Collection development policy

    Date: 2024

    Licence: CC BY-NC

Strawberry Hill House

Wikidata identifier:
Q7622436
Also known as:
Strawberry Hill, St Mary's Training College, Strawberry Hill House and Garden
Instance of:
historic house museum; masia; independent museum
Museum/collection status:
Accredited museum
Accreditation number:
2285
Persistent shareable link for this record:
https://museumdata.uk/museums/q7622436/
Collection level records:
Not yet. If you represent this organisation and can provide collection-level information, please contact us.

Streetlife Museum

(collection-level records)
Wikidata identifier:
Q7623101
Instance of:
transport museum; local authority museum
Museum/collection status:
Accredited museum
Accreditation number:
1213
Persistent shareable link for this record:
https://museumdata.uk/museums/q7623101/

Collection-level records:

  • Collection overview (Cornucopia)

    Transport Collection

    The early car collection represents the formative years of the motor car and is of significant technical and historical interest; a fact underlined by its association with the original London Motor Museum. The carriage collection is not large, but remains one of the most important in the country. The collection consists almost exclusively of carriages from across the social scale. This fact is underlined by the range of highly-regarded carriage builders that are represented within the collection. Many individual items are of national significance, in some instances, such as the Britzschka, being one of only two surviving examples in Britain. Others, for instance the Bow-fronted Hansom, were built by a renowned Birmingham maker, but they also have strong local associations. Hull’s collection is comprehensive, and in this sense compares favourably with the Science Museum and the Glasgow Museum of Transport. The development of Streetlife has presented a unique chance to interpret the collections in a lively and original manner, and offers the exceptional opportunity to compare significant early modes of transport within a single building. Early Cars The 9 cars all date from the turn of the century and are representative of the formative years of motoring in Britain. Technically they demonstrate the state of motor car design of the period. In particular, since there are 6 petrol-engined, 2 steam-powered and 1 electric car, they illustrate the then-unresolved argument about which form of motive power was superior. Three of the cars are French: an 1898 Panhard-Levassor, an 1899 De-Dion Bouton quadricycle, and a 1901 Gardner-Serpollet steamer. Panhard-Levassor were, along with Peugeot, the first French builders of petrol-engined cars in 1891 and manufacturers of the German-licensed Daimler engines that both used. In 1891/2 Levassor made the first motor car of modern design with the engine at the front, the gearbox behind and dinal drive to the back axle. The De-Dion Bouton exemplifies the debt owned by the early motor car industry to the cycle trade. This lightweight and simple design is an example of one of the first mass-produced motor vehicles. The Gardner-Serpollet steamer is the product of an inventive genius, Leon Serpollet, who made steam motor cars which worked more effectively than most steam-cars made since. The four English cars also represent the pan-European connections of the early motor industry. The 1898 Coventry Motette is a British-built example of a French design of voiturette (light cars). The 1900 Daimler is a copy of a Panhard-Levassor, and was a product of the first factory in Britain established to build such horseless carriages. The 1900 Marshall is a licence-built French Hurtu, that was itself a license-built German Benz (the first maker of production motor cars). The 1900 Sturmey is the one-off prototype of a light car, but fitted with a De-Dion Bouton engine, that had an innovative transmission system now best-known on bicycles as the Sturmey-Archer three-speed gear. The two American cars, a 1901 White steamer and a 1900 Cleveland electric, were both sold new in Britain. They illustrate the argument over motive power that in America was not fully resolved until the 1914-18 war. Some of the cars have particular historical associations. The Marshall was a participant in the 1000 Mile Trial of 1900. This was the first motoring event that really introduced the horseless carriage to the British public. The White was owned by Col. R.E. Crampton, who is better known as a pioneer of electric lighting. Henry Sturmey, maker of the 1900 cycle-car was the first editor of ‘The Autocar’ magazine. These cars formed a significant element of the world’s first motor car museum, organised by ‘The Motor’ magazine and opened in Oxford Street, London, in May 1912. The collection of 40 cars was moved to a new home at Crystal Palace in 1914, but this proved temporary with the outbreak of war. Subsequently in 1922 its dispersal was undertaken by the Science Museum, and 9 of the cars went to Hull. This was the largest number to go to any British or Empire Museum. The collection contains 14 carriages and a number of other large exhibits including sedan chairs (2), manual fire appliances (3), sleighs (2), a carrier’s wagon and a rulley. Smaller objects include coach paintings and prints (16) by renowned artists like Cooper Henderson and Pollard, coach horns, harness, horse brasses (450), postboys jackets, coach panels and a postillion boot. There is a small but significant collection of coaching waybills and turnpike records. Their importance lies in their completeness, which presents a vivid picture of the East Riding in the coaching era (1800-1850). There are three sporting carriages. The Drag (possibly built by Venthams) was owned by two famous personalities of the coaching revival era, Capt ‘Billy’ Cooper and Capt ‘Jack’ Stacey-Clitheroe. The Wagonette-Brake by Cowland and Selby (London) is the finest example of its type in any collection. The small four-wheeled dog cart is yet another fine example (built by Joseph Cockshoot and Co., Manchester). Two carriages in the collection are exceptionally rare. The Britzschka, although the body has been heavily restored, represents one of only two surviving examples in Britain of an important English carriage type. The Cabriolet, a wealthy gentleman’s carriage, is in original condition; built by Goodall and Son (London) it is the best of the three surviving examples in Britain. The Earl of Yarborough’s State Chariot is an excellent example of an aristocratic carriage, built by a famous London builder, Laurie and Marner. To illustrate the range of the collection, the Town Coach is the work of a good provincial builder, (Smith and Son, Doncaster). Of the three types of barouches, the Barouche in Hull is an excellent example of the smallest and most modest type and in Nicholson’s view is the best of its type to survive. The Caleche is an example of a French carriage built in Paris, the design itself was exhibited at the Crystal Palace Exhibition. Certain carriage builders specialised in particular types of carriages. Hull has a Brougham built by Barker and Co., London as an example of this practice. Marston and Co., Birmingham was famous for their hansom cabs; Hull has a very rare Bow-fronted Hansom that was used by a local hackney carriage firm. The Victoria, although a very modest carriage, was built in Hull and represents the local trade, and is the only such carriage in the collection. Post 1901 cars include: 1907 Lanchester 20hp Open Tourer; 1962 BMW Isetta tricycle; 1950 Jowett Bradford Ice Cream van; 1956 Morris Isis; 40 cycles ranging from 1818 Hobby Horse to 1980s BMX.

    Source: Cornucopia

    Date: Not known, but before 2015

    Licence: CC BY-NC

Stretton Watermill

(collection-level records)
Wikidata identifier:
Q7623527
Instance of:
watermill; local authority museum
Museum/collection status:
Accredited museum
Accreditation number:
122
Persistent shareable link for this record:
https://museumdata.uk/museums/q7623527/

Collection-level records:

  • Collection overview (Cornucopia)

    Agriculture Collection

    A working 18th century watermill with associated machinery and objects and items connected with milling elsewhere in the county where they enhance understanding of local material.

    Subjects

    Agriculture

    Social History Collection

    The collection includes items related to the Carden Estate.

    Subjects

    Social History

    Source: Cornucopia

    Date: Not known, but before 2015

    Licence: CC BY-NC

Stromness Museum

Wikidata identifier:
Q29563029
Instance of:
museum
Museum/collection status:
Accredited museum
Accreditation number:
467
Persistent shareable link for this record:
https://museumdata.uk/museums/q29563029/
Collection level records:
Not yet. If you represent this organisation and can provide collection-level information, please contact us.

Strutt’s North Mill

Wikidata identifier:
Q4884648
Also known as:
Belper North Mill
Instance of:
cotton mill; museum; independent museum
Museum/collection status:
Accredited museum
Persistent shareable link for this record:
https://museumdata.uk/museums/q4884648/
Collection level records:
Not yet. If you represent this organisation and can provide collection-level information, please contact us.

Sturminster Newton Museum and Mill

(collection-level records)
Wikidata identifier:
Q113370052
Instance of:
museum; local authority museum
Museum/collection status:
Accredited museum
Accreditation number:
1186
Persistent shareable link for this record:
https://museumdata.uk/museums/q113370052/

Collection-level records:

  • Collection overview (Cornucopia)

    Agriculture Collection

    This is a collection of farm implements.

    Subjects

    Agriculture

    Social History Collection

    There are domestic and personal mementos such as several butter decorations in porcelain; many artefacts reflecting local trades and businesses such as shopkeeping and banking; many objects relating to the Sturminster Newton Workhouse; and a railway model of Sturminster and associated items.

    Subjects

    Social History

    Personalia Collection

    Material relating to local personalities such as Thomas Hardy, William Barnes and Robert Young is represented in the collection.

    Subjects

    Personalia

    Costume and Textile Collection

    The collection includes some adults and children’s clothing from the first half of the 20th century; and some silk and lace items.

    Subjects

    Costume and Textile

    Photographic Collection

    There is a collection of photographs of local interest including some the important Hinton St Mary Roman mosaic pavement, which is in the British Museum. There is also a series of photographs of Sturminster Newton Workhouse.

    Subjects

    Photography

    Source: Cornucopia

    Date: Not known, but before 2015

    Licence: CC BY-NC

Sudbury Hall

Wikidata identifier:
Q3502926
Part of:
National Trust
Instance of:
historic house museum; English country house
Museum/collection status:
Accredited museum
Accreditation number:
1681
Persistent shareable link for this record:
https://museumdata.uk/museums/q3502926/
Collection level records:
Not yet. If you represent this organisation and can provide collection-level information, please contact us.

Sudley House

(collection-level records)
Wikidata identifier:
Q1290927
Instance of:
historic house museum; national museum
Museum/collection status:
Accredited museum
Accreditation number:
757
Persistent shareable link for this record:
https://museumdata.uk/museums/q1290927/

Collection-level records:

  • Collection overview (Cornucopia)

    Fine Art Collection

    The collection of paintings was acquired by George Holt from the late 1860s and includes British art of the period, particularly English landscapes and genre pieces. Later acquisitions include John Everett Millais’s ‘Vanessa’, Pre-Raphaelite paintings and portraits such as ‘Viscountess Folkestone’ by Gainsborough, ‘Mrs Sargent’ by George Romney. ‘The Wreck Buoy’ is one of two late paintings by Turner.

    Subjects

    Fine Art

    Decorative and Applied Art Collection

    Sudley draws from the decorative art collections of the Walker Art Gallery and objects on display in the house include furniture by George Bullock.

    Subjects

    Decorative and Applied Arts

    Source: Cornucopia

    Date: Not known, but before 2015

    Licence: CC BY-NC

Suffolk Regiment Museum

Wikidata identifier:
Q98088434
Instance of:
regimental museum; independent museum
Museum/collection status:
Accredited museum
Accreditation number:
2276
Persistent shareable link for this record:
https://museumdata.uk/museums/q98088434/
Collection level records:
Not yet. If you represent this organisation and can provide collection-level information, please contact us.

Sulgrave Manor

(collection-level records)
Wikidata identifier:
Q17527277
Also known as:
The Manor House and Attached Brewhouse
Instance of:
historic house museum; country house; independent museum
Museum/collection status:
Accredited museum
Accreditation number:
509
Persistent shareable link for this record:
https://museumdata.uk/museums/q17527277/

Collection-level records:

  • Collection overview (Cornucopia)

    George Washington Library Collection

    The library comprises the collected writings of George Washington, including letters, diaries and biographies. There are also books on American and Anglo-American history. International significance.

    Subjects

    United States; American War of Independence (1775-1783); Books; American history; Letters (documents); Biographies

    Agriculture Collection

    A small collection of agriculture related items.

    Subjects

    Agriculture

    Music Collection

    A small collection of related items.

    Subjects

    Music; Musical instruments

    Photography Collection

    The collections contain some photographs. Local significance.

    Subjects

    Photographs

    Social History Collection

    Local significance, Collection contains domestic material and material relating to Sulgrave village.

    Subjects

    Domestic life; Local history; Social history

    Archives Collection

    Collection of archive material deposited with Northamptonshire County Record Office. Local significance and international interest.

    Subjects

    Archives

    Arms and Armour Collection

    Local significance. A small collection of items.

    Subjects

    Armour; Weapons; Armed forces

    Costume and Textiles Collection

    Local significance. A small collection of items.

    Subjects

    Textiles; Costume

    Decorative and Applied Art Collection

    Local significance. Furnishings of house contains relevant decorative and applied art items.

    Subjects

    Decorative Arts; Furnishings

    Fine Art Collection

    Local significance. The collection includes some paintings/drawings and prints.

    Subjects

    Fine arts; Paintings; Prints; Drawings

    Numismatics Collection

    Local significance. A small collection of items.

    Subjects

    Numismatics; Medals; Coins

    Personalia Collection

    Local significance and international interest. Collection contains material associated with George Washington and the Washington family.

    Subjects

    Personal narratives; Personal history; Personal property

    Source: Cornucopia

    Date: Not known, but before 2015

    Licence: CC BY-NC

Summerlee Museum of Scottish Industrial Life

Wikidata identifier:
Q7637622
Instance of:
museum; independent museum
Museum/collection status:
Accredited museum; Recognised collection
Accreditation number:
1280
Persistent shareable link for this record:
https://museumdata.uk/museums/q7637622/
Collection level records:
Not yet. If you represent this organisation and can provide collection-level information, please contact us.

Sunderland Museum and Winter Gardens

(collection-level records)
Wikidata identifier:
Q7639734
Also known as:
Museum and Library, Sunderland Museum & Winter Gardens
Instance of:
natural history museum; local museum; museum building; local authority museum
Museum/collection status:
Accredited museum
Accreditation number:
387
Persistent shareable link for this record:
https://museumdata.uk/museums/q7639734/

Collection-level records:

  • Collection history (Collection development policy)

    Sunderland Museum was the first local authority museum outside London to open following the Museums Act of 1846. The collections of the Sunderland Natural History and Antiquarian Society were taken over by Sunderland Corporation. This collection had itself been founded by the Sunderland Subscription Museum in 1810 and the Society had only taken on its care probably shortly after it was itself founded in 1836. The collection grew slowly at first, until the opening of the new purpose built Library Museum and Winter Gardens in 1879 which stimulated their growth.

    Source: Collection development policy

    Date: 2022

    Licence: CC BY-NC

  • Collection overview (Collection development policy)

    Archaeology

    There is a large prehistoric collection from Wearside from the early fieldwork of Dr Trechmann and Dr Edward Backhouse. There is further Bronze Age, Roman and medieval material, with excavation material from Anglo-Saxon Monkwearmouth and medieval pottery from Finchale Priory. In addition there is some Danish, Swiss and Egyptian material.

    Art: Fine Art

    Sunderland Museums have a wide-ranging collection spanning 17th to 21st century fine art. The collection mainly consists of oils and works on paper, with a few sculptures. A large number of works have a strong local/regionalconnection.
    The Victorian paintings are a particular strength, which was greatly enhanced by the John Dickinson bequest in 1908. Important early acquisitions include: The Opening of the Sunderland Docks’ by Mark Thompson, 1854, which may be the first example of a town council commissioning an artist in the United Kingdom; and Rossetti’s donation of two drawings in 1879 to mark the opening of the new building.
    The contemporary art works are an extremely important aspect of the collection. They include the largest regional collection of paintings and drawings by LS Lowry outside Salford and Manchester. Other notable works include pictures by Edward Burra, Michael Ayrton, Sheila Fell, Prunella Clough, Allen Jones and Ged Quinn. More recent acquisitions have included less traditional materials such as Brian McCann’s photography and mixed media work

    Art: Decorative Art

    There are excellent collections of Sunderland-made glass and pottery, and a small collection of silver.

    The collection of 18th and 19th century locally-manufactured pottery is the largest in the world. Comprising over 750 pieces, it represents all aspects of the production of Sunderland pottery, from traditional slipware to transfer-printed creamware and earthenware, including the famous pink lustre wares. Major donations include those from the pottery manufacturers Messrs Scott & Sons of Southwick in 1897 and the Roland Burdon collection in 1946-7.

    Highlights of Sunderland’s glass collection are: friggers; 19th century engraved glass, including Sunderland’s famous Wear Bridge rummers; the early 19th century Londonderry and Darnell services; Victorian pressed glass and 1930s Jobling’s art glass. There is a large collection of items made by PYREX, dating from the start of PYREX production in this country in the 1920s to the closure in 2007. Hartley Woods, the stained glass manufacturer, is represented by glass samples, pressed ‘jewels’ and hand-blown decorative pieces.

    The silver collection dates from the 16th to the 19th centuries. It contains a wide range of domestic items, including a large collection of 17th century spoons, and a collection of local church silver. Many of the items were bequeathed to the Museum in 1947 by James Wilson.

    Since the late 1970s the Museum has developed a small collection of contemporary glass by glassmakers working in, or closely connected with Sunderland, particularly makers associated with the University of Sunderland.

    Recent acquisitions of contemporary glass/ceramics have reflected a blurring of the ‘fine’ and `decorative art’ boundaries to include work by Katharine Dowson and Jeffrey Sarmiento

    History:

    Elements of the history collections date back to the very early days of museums in Sunderland. For example, the boots that are claimed to have been owned by the sixteenth century radical thinker Colonel John Lilburne (also known as Freeborn Jack) appear in the Subscription Museum catalogue of 1825. In the later nineteenth century local shipbuilders donated some model ships. During the First World War there was some collecting of material relating to the War including weapons and helmets.

    Collecting continued in a piecemeal way in the following years up to the end of the 1960s. In the 1970s there was much more proactive collecting of social history material as that discipline became more popular as well as in land transport material (principally railway, tram and bus related material) as Sunderland Council developed and opened Monkwearmouth Station Museum (1973). During the Tyne and Wear years history as a discipline had more resources in terms of staff and storage allocated to it around the whole service and this enabled more material to be collected and processed. New galleries were opened highlighting the social and industrial history of Sunderland. Sunderland Museum, unique among the museums of Tyne and Wear, kept the paper ephemera and photographic archive that in the other sites had been placed with the relevant local studies libraries and the Museum catalogued and continued to develop these parts of the collection

    Today the history collection is broken down into four distinct areas:

    Local History — Community Life. Strengths and highlights of the collection include a large and rich collection of photographs, ephemera and maps documenting the development of Sunderland and covering many aspects of the lives of Sunderland people including community life, and working life.

    Social History — Personal and Domestic Life. Strengths and highlights of the collection include a large and rich collection of objects and artefacts covering many aspects of the lives of Sunderland people including personal life, home and family life, and working life.

    Maritime History — Shipbuilding, Ship Repair, Marine Engineering, Life at Sea, Shipping Companies Collecting of maritime artefacts began in the nineteenth century with significant guidance and support from local shipbuilders, ship owners and industrialists. The collapse of shipbuilding in the 1970s and 80s led to a round of collecting to secure the future of important items of the regional maritime heritage. The collection is weak with regards to material relating to life at sea. The collection includes ship models, tools and equipment used in the various maritime trades. Ship Repair, Marine Engineering, Life at Sea, Shipping Companies

    Science and Industry — Scientific Research and Development, Engineering, Civil Engineering, Mining and Manufacturing other than Maritime The collection has been built up over many years but especially over the last 40 years during a period of decline in the traditional heavy and light industries associated with the North East and Wearside in particular. It contains important artefacts relating to persons, events and industries associated with Wearside and is well represented in terms of coal-mining, marine engineering and automotive industries.

    In the time of Tyne and Wear Museums the Textile and Costume Collection and the Transport Collection were treated as separate collections. From this time onwards neither Textile and Costume nor Transport material will not be considered as separate subjects for collection policy purposes and will be linked with the four above areas when material from these subjects is being considered for the collection. For example, a Sunderland operated motor bus could be considered under local history whilst a christening gown could be considered under social history. However, the items relating to Transport or items of Costume and Textile themselves may be managed together in purpose designed storage facilities if deemed appropriate to do so. This is for the benefit, long term sustainability and accessibility of the individual items in those collections.

    Natural Science: Biology

    Natural Science collections at Sunderland originated with the Sunderland Subscription Museum, founded in 1810. The collections grew little until Sunderland Corporation took over the running of the museum in 1846, and there was a great period of expansion and acquisition between 1850 and 1900. Natural Science dominated the displays at Sunderland Museum until the 1960s, and a major gallery is still devoted to wildlife.
    Major donations to Sunderland have included the collections of Edward Backhouse and Charles T. Trechmann. Backhouse supported the museum by donation during his lifetime, and in 1907 his collection was given to the museum by Mrs Backhouse. The extent of the donation can be measured by the fact that the cabinets, when laid end-to-end, extended to 85 metres. Natural Science was a major element in his collection, and included fine quality minerals and fossils, butterflies and moths, birds’ eggs and mounted birds. Trechmann’s collection, donated in the 1960s, included objects of scientific importance as well as display material.

    Natural Sciences: Mammals and birds

    Principal collections include material prepared by South Shields taxidermist William Yellowley (1823-1893), the collection of wealthy Sunderland banker Edward Backhouse (1808-1879) and Lord Ravensworth’s (1869-1932) birds. The collections provide comprehensive coverage of the British fauna, and also include some rare exotic species such as Lion, Tiger and Leopard, many specimens of birds of prey, and a pair of the now-extinct Passenger Pigeon.

    Natural Sciences: Osteology

    The osteological collection includes bone material from most British species, exotic skulls and a part-skeleton of a leopard. There is also a small but significant collection of cetacean material. Notable items include the skull of a Baird’s Beaked Whale and a partially mounted Common Dolphin skeleton.

    Natural Sciences: Fish Reptiles and Amphibians

    A small collection of historic casts and mounts was supplemented in the 1970s by the acquisition of a comprehensive series of locally caught fish preserved in spirit.

    Natural Sciences: Insects

    The Backhouse collection of exotic butterflies includes specimens collected in the mid- 19th Century. Other collections of British butterflies and moths provide a comprehensive coverage of the British species. Coverage of other groups is patchy, although some groups of Diptera (especially, hoverflies) are well represented, and a good series of Coleoptera has been built up in the course of recent fieldwork.

    Natural Sciences: Molluscs

    The shell collections include two major elements. The Backhouse collection comprises mainly exotic species and includes some material acquired through major early collectors such as Reeve and Cumming. Woodward’s collection, donated in 1977, includes a number of type, figured and cited specimens and is supported by a library of books and offprints.

    Natural Sciences: Birds’ eggs

    Several collections of birds’ eggs have been donated over the years to all of the constituent museums of Tyne & Wear Archives & Museums. Most have been held in store since their donation, but both South Shields Museum and Saltwell Towers Museum once had eggs on display. The collections provide comprehensive coverage of the British fauna, and there are some exotic species also present. There is also a small collection of British birds’ nests.

    Natural Sciences: Invertebrates

    A collection of 900 microscope slides, mainly of diatoms, has never been thoroughly researched. Originating in the mid-19th century, the collection includes material from various local and national scientists. The Backhouse bequest included a collection of display-quality corals.

    Natural Sciences: Botany

    The collections form an important herbarium with an extensive local flora, concentrating on County Durham (Vice-County 66). Pre-eminent elements include the 18th century collection of Stephen Robson, and material collected by Rev. G.G. Graham in County Durham in the late 20th century.

    Natural Sciences: Geology

    Natural Science collections at Sunderland originated with the Sunderland Subscription Museum, founded in 1810. The collections grew little until Sunderland Corporation took over the running of the museum in 1846, and there was a great period of expansion and acquisition between 1850 and 1900. Natural Science dominated the displays at Sunderland Museum until the 1960s, and a major gallery is still devoted to wildlife.

    Major donations to Sunderland have included the collections of Edward Backhouse and Charles T. Trechmann. Backhouse supported the museum by donation during his lifetime, and in 1907 his collection was given to the museum by Mrs Backhouse. The extent of the donation can be measured by the fact that the cabinets, when laid end-to-end, extended to 85 metres. Geology was a major element of his collection and included fine quality minerals and fossils. Trechmann’s collection, donated in the 1960’s, included objects of scientific importance as well as display material, and was rich in rocks, fossils and minerals. Other collectors of note include J.W. Kirkby, D.B. Smith, W. Hutton, D. Woolacott and John Bell.

    Natural Sciences: Palaeontology and Petrology

    The largest part of the collection consists of Permian vertebrate and invertebrate fossils and rocks from the Zechstein strata of North East England. Important specimens include the only British example of a Permian Gliding Reptile (Coelurosauravus ), one of only two British specimens of an early lizard-like reptile ( Protorosaurus), the Holotypes of a Permian plant (Durhamia belli ) and fish (Platysomus parvus, the oldest recorded specimen in Sunderland Museum dating back to 1815), together with numerous specimens which have been cited or figured in literature. Other fossil collections include numerous Carboniferous plants (including a fossil tree trunk), vertebrates from the Coal Measures strata of Northumberland and County Durham, including a rare Carboniferous amphibian from Usworth Colliery, and considerable invertebrate collections. There are also holdings of Jurassic vertebrates and invertebrates from Cleveland, North Yorkshire and southern England, and considerable lower Palaeozoic, Cretaceous, Tertiary and Quaternary collections from localities throughout the UK and indeed the world.

    Natural Sciences: Mineralogy

    Mineral collections consist of specimens collected principally from the North Pennine Orefield, but also include material from throughout the UK, Europe and other continents. This collection is particularly noteworthy for the quantity and quality of North Pennine ‘Spar’ minerals, many of which have been collected from localities which no longer yield quality specimens, as well as rare minerals such as alstonite. There are also considerable rock collections held at the museum, including a series of important cores collected from the North Sea during exploration for hidden coal reserves. The Sunderland University Gem Collection has been acquired from the geology department of Sunderland University, which has now closed. This collection includes raw and cut specimens from around the world and was originally assembled as a teaching collection.

    World Cultures/Ethnography

    Ethnographic material has existed in Sunderland Museum collections since 1846, when Sunderland Subscription Museum collections were taken over by the council. During the late 19th century there was a major period of acquisition when Edward Backhouse contributed items to improve the displays, and finally bequeathed his collection to Sunderland. There are 1,200 artefacts held in the ethnography collection. Although not large, the collection is representative of the major cultural groups, and potentially useful for display and educational purposes. They include 350 items from Africa, 220 from Asia, 200 from Oceania and 100 from the New World. Among the more significant items are: an ivory oliphant collected by John Petherick in the southern Sudan; an early Maori paddle; a Marquesas Islands stilt step and u’u club; a fine quality 19th century Nootka tobacco pipe in the form of a mosquito pupa; a mask from the Papuan Gulf and a Mandist banner taken at the battle of Omdurman. Edward Backhouse was a leading member of the Quaker community and his collection includes some items brought from the Pacific by Quaker missionaries. There is also a collection of shoes, spears, Oceanic weapons, Peruvian (Chimu) pottery, paddles and a scoop from the Austral islands, oriental armour and ivories and North American quillwork

    Source: Collection development policy

    Date: 2022

    Licence: CC BY-NC

Sunnycroft

Wikidata identifier:
Q7640801
Part of:
National Trust
Instance of:
historic house museum
Museum/collection status:
Accredited museum
Accreditation number:
2057
Persistent shareable link for this record:
https://museumdata.uk/museums/q7640801/
Collection level records:
Not yet. If you represent this organisation and can provide collection-level information, please contact us.

Surgeons’ Hall Museums

(collection-level records)
Wikidata identifier:
Q7646188
Also known as:
Surgeons' Hall, Surgeons' Hall Museum
Instance of:
medical museum; independent museum
Museum/collection status:
Accredited museum; Recognised collection
Accreditation number:
2112
Persistent shareable link for this record:
https://museumdata.uk/museums/q7646188/

Collection-level records:

  • Collection history (Collection development policy)

    The Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh was founded in 1505, with the Museums’ collections growing significantly from 1699 after ‘natural and artificial curiosities’ were publically sought. In the 1800s, the original museum expanded to include the remarkable collections of surgeon and anatomists, Sir Charles Bell and John Barclay. Originally developed as a teaching collection for students of medicine the collections have been on display to the public since 1832. The collections continued to grow mainly by donations from Fellows of the college and acquisition by previous Conservators. It contains one of the largest and most historic collections of surgical pathology in the world and in addition includes surgical instruments, artefacts, college memorabilia and works of art. The collection was again strengthened by the donation of the significant dental collection established by Menzie Campbell in 1964.

    Source: Collection development policy

    Date: Not known

    Licence: CC BY-NC

  • Collection overview (Collection development policy)

    The collections comprise of around 25,000 objects. The entire collection has been deemed a collection of National Significance gaining Recognised status in 2009. The core selection is divided into the following sections:

    Wolh Pathology Museum Collections

    The pathology specimens make up the majority of the collections and represent one of the largest and historic collections of surgical pathology in the world. It has been built up by many generations of Fellows and Conservators to further the educational opportunities for surgical students but it was also from its earliest times open to members of the public to improve general public understanding of medicine. The collection holds bone and tissue specimens and contains a large histology collection. The museum no longer actively collects human remain collections but undertakes a case by case review on any offers of donation.

    History of Surgery Collections

    The history of surgery collections contain a unique collection of surgical instruments and medical equipment dating from mid-17th century through to current day. The collection also holds artwork both portraits of prominent surgeons and of anatomical artwork. Diagnostic and teaching material including, x-rays, slides, models and photographs add significantly to the collection. College memorabilia including furniture, silverware, robes and medals represent the history of the Royal College and its members. Key themes in this area include the beginnings of surgery, the development from trade to profession, the College and Scotland’s’ contribution to the development of surgery and medicine, military surgery, surgical techniques and surgical instrumentation.

    Dental Museum Collections

    The core of the dental collection was bequeathed by the dental historian John Menzie Campbell. It represents the development of dentistry from the earliest times through to modern day and is one of the finest in the UK. It holds dental instruments, artefacts, prints, paintings, engravings and models.

    Source: Collection development policy

    Date:

    Licence: CC BY-NC

Surrey Heath Museum

Wikidata identifier:
Q1651766
Instance of:
museum
Accreditation number:
T 547
Persistent shareable link for this record:
https://museumdata.uk/museums/q1651766/
Collection level records:
Not yet. If you represent this organisation and can provide collection-level information, please contact us.

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