Royal Cornwall Museum

The Royal Cornwall Museum in Truro holds an extensive mineral collection rooted in Cornwall's mining and engineering heritage. The county's artistic heritage is reflected in the museum's art collection.[1] Through the Courtney Library the museum also provides a collection of rare books and manuscripts to help with education, research and the discovery of Cornish life and culture.

Royal Cornwall Museum
Established1818
LocationTruro, Cornwall
Coordinates50.2637°N 5.0548°W / 50.2637; -5.0548
Websitewww.royalcornwallmuseum.org.uk

The museum also highlights Cornwall's relationship with the wider world through one of the most significant British emigrations of the 19th century. The museum hosts a permanent exhibition of Ancient Greek, Roman and Egyptian objects, supported by the British Museum.

The museum is part of the Royal Institution of Cornwall (RIC), a learned society and registered charity.[2]

The Courtney Library

A Dream Princess by Elizabeth Forbes (1897)

The Courtney Library and Archive[3] holds books, periodicals, archive material and ephemera relating to Cornwall and the South West of England.

Museum building

The Grade II building which has housed the RIC since 1919 was built in 1845 as the Truro Savings Bank and subsequently became Henderson's Mining School. In 1986/7 the RIC acquired the adjacent Truro Baptist Chapel, built in 1848. Together these granite-fronted buildings (linked with a new foyer and shop in 1998) are a distinctive presence in the centre of the historic city of Truro; both buildings were designed by the local architect Philip Sambell, who was deaf and without speech.

Rail access

The nearest railway station is Truro railway station.

gollark: > already have but it flies over your indoctrinated zombie coconutSee, this is probably a thing which makes people angry.
gollark: I'm actually Atheist, I worship the god Athe.
gollark: That is not how burden of proof works.
gollark: I'm pretty strongly biased against claims of "free energy" and stuff because if you could trivially produce vast quantities of energy through some magic thing, *it would be used everywhere*.
gollark: Also the ether, which as far as I'm aware was obsoleted a hundred years ago by better theories.

See also

References

  1. "Discover Artworks". Art UK. Retrieved 5 April 2020.
  2. Charity Commission. The Royal Institution of Cornwall, registered charity no. 1150749.
  3. "Official website". www.royalcornwallmuseum.org.uk. Retrieved 5 April 2020.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.