Museum of Cambridge: Difference between revisions

Coordinates: 52°12′39″N 0°06′53″E / 52.210781°N 0.114755°E / 52.210781; 0.114755
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Cambridge and County Folk Museum}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Cambridge and County Folk Museum}}
[[Category:Folk museums]]
[[Category:Folk museums in the United Kingdom]]
[[Category:Decorative arts museums in England]]
[[Category:Decorative arts museums in England]]
[[Category:Museums in Cambridge]]
[[Category:Museums in Cambridge]]

Revision as of 16:50, 7 August 2019

52°12′39″N 0°06′53″E / 52.210781°N 0.114755°E / 52.210781; 0.114755

Museum of Cambridge

The Museum of Cambridge, formerly known as the Cambridge & County Folk Museum, is a museum located in Castle Street in central Cambridge, England. It is housed in eight rooms in the former White Horse Inn, a public house that closed in 1934. The museum presents the lives of the people of Cambridge and its surrounding area, the county of Cambridgeshire from 1700 onwards. The collection includes objects covering applied art, coins, costumes, decorative art, fine art, hobbies, law and order, medals, medicine, music, social history, textiles and toys.

The museum is supported by Cambridge City Council, the National Lottery, through the Heritage Lottery Fund, and two local organisations:

  • the Cambridge 800 Committee, a registered charity founded in 2006, whose aims are "to help ensure the future of the Cambridge and County Folk Museum so that it can be enjoyed by future generations, especially children".
  • the Friends of the Folk Museum, whose separate short term fund-raising provides specific items for the museum.

The museum was shortlisted for the 2006 Gulbenkian Prize.

See also

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