6000 x 3000 px | 50,8 x 25,4 cm | 20 x 10 inches | 300dpi
Data acquisizione:
28 ottobre 2009
Ubicazione:
The Priesthouse Tearooms, Wimborne Minster, Dorset, England
Altre informazioni:
The Priest's House Museum occupies ten rooms of a Grade II* listed historic town house situated in the centre of Wimborne Minster. The award winning garden includes a display of large agricultural and horticultural implements and the Boathouse Tearoom. The Museum houses much important social and local history material relating to domestic and rural life, crafts, trade and childhood. There are also major holdings of archaological material, photographs, costume and ephemera. The Museum has won various awards for its creative display and education programmes, and it continues as a very active and lively community service managed on a highly professional basis. The museum is dedicated to rural life in a market town in Dorset and the exhibits are based on the daily lives of people within the house and within Wimborne and Dorset. There are also exhibits on the religious use of the building and its home to past ministers of the Minster Church. The building has been restored and many of the original features remain intacted for public appreciation. Notable rooms are the 17th century main hall and the 18th century parlour and Victorian kitchen with its working 'Beetonette' range. Displays include reconstructions of local businesses that once ran from the building. Mr Low's Victorian stationery shop (closed up for over 30 years) and the Coles' Ironmongers, were both recreated from original shop stock. In addition to the main museum house, the East Dorset Villages Gallery gives a taste of local community life from industry to shopping, school to church life, with a hands-on Victorian schoolroom. A walled garden, with seating, behind the Priest's House covers one third of an acre and is open to visitors to the house. A tea room, formerly the 1920s Boathouse, also in the garden and on the banks of the River Allen is open to visitors. The Priest's House Museum is run by an independent charitable trust. It is supported by East Dorset District Council but relies on admission