Tuesday, May 26, 2020

Enjoy the Family Friendly Museum from Home...


... and nominate us for an award!


Nominations are now open for the Kids in Museums Family Friendly Museum Award From Home.


Charity Kids in Museums is inviting families and museums to share what they think is the best virtual activity created by a museum, gallery, historic house or heritage site. They are celebrating the most creative ideas keeping families occupied and entertained during lockdown and we hope you might have loved one of our activities enough to put us forward!



Not had a go at our resources yet? Head over to our Activities at Home page to see what you’re missing! We’ve picked out a few highlights here to get you started.


We miss welcoming you all to our museums so our team have been beavering away to bring the collections to you here on our blog and on our social media. With games, quizzes, crafts, crosswords and more, we hope you’ll find something for everyone this half term and beyond.


Although the kids can’t come and play in our kitchen at Wakefield Museum right now, they can have fun colouring in our Victorian range, or spotting the differences in some retro toys that they might recognise from the museum.




Our friendly local dragon, Ilbert misses showing you and your Mini Museum Explorers around Pontefract Castle and wants to say hello online instead! You can also check out our fun paper craft activities inspired by the castle. What will you make first – a Tudor kitchen, a siege cannon, or your very own fiery dragon?!


Are there any budding curators in your family? Have a go at designing your own displays inspired by Pontefract Museum and show us how it’s done!


If you’re missing Castleford Museum, how about making a Roman soldier finger puppet inspired by the town’s history as an important fort. Or follow in the footsteps of local photographer Jack Hulme and start snapping! You can discover Jack’s fantastic photos, have a go at taking your own, and get an Arts Award Discover for your efforts with our new specially designed resource pack.



And if that’s not enough to keep you going, for even more fun with our weird and wonderful collections, check out our regular creative challenges on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram. Dig the paints and crayons out for #WFMuseumsArtFun on Mondays and get the creative juices flowing with our #PonteCastleBeCreative and #WFMuseumsBeCreative writing prompts on Tuesdays and Wednesdays.



After you’ve had fun with our collections, if you would like to support us and share an online activity you have particularly enjoyed with your family, please nominate us on the Kids in Museums website: 


The deadline for nominations is 5pm on 30 June 2020. 

Thank you! 

An expert panel will meet in mid-July to whittle entries down to a shortlist. These activities will be reviewed by family judges. Their feedback, combined with the views of an expert panel, will decide the award winners.

For more information visit the Kids in Museums website: www.kidsinmuseums.org.uk

Tuesday, May 19, 2020

#KindnessMatters – Keeping in Touch

This week (18th - 24th May) is Mental Health Awareness Week 2020. This year’s theme is kindness, which is more important than ever at the moment. As the Mental Health Foundation say:

One thing that we have seen all over the world is that kindness is prevailing in uncertain times. We have learnt that amid the fear, there is also community, support and hope.

The added benefit of helping others is that it is good for our own mental health and wellbeing. It can help reduce stress and improve emotional wellbeing.

              https://www.mentalhealth.org.uk/campaigns/mental-health-awareness-week 

Kindness doesn’t have to be a grand gesture. Often it starts small – right now, keeping in touch with your friends and family could be the best way to begin. We’ve found some inspiration from the collections for staying connected and communicating.


Why not start at home? It could be as simple as making tea or coffee for your household and taking time to stop and have a chat around the kitchen table or in the garden. 

The Holmes family enjoying tea at Priory House, Pontefract


So put the kettle on and get out the best china. 
You could even video call a friend or relative to catch up over a cuppa virtually and compare your favourite mugs!


Coffee and tea pots made by Clokie & Co Ltd, Castleford and hand decorated by Vera Ward and Ida Woodward at pottery painting classes, 1920s- 1940s 




Coffee and tea cups by Clokie & Co Ltd, Castleford, 1930s

Many of us are also reaching out to those outside our households, who we can’t see at the moment - whether it’s an email or message, a phone call, or a video chat. You might share an interesting article with someone, send a joke, share a TV or a book recommendation, or simply say hello.

Rotary dial telephone handset with wall attachment, 1960s-1970s
Apple Macintosh Classic desktop computer, keyboard and mouse, 1980s

Nokia 8110 mobile phone, 1996


Modern technology has been a lifeline for many of us recently, helping us to keep in touch, but sometimes there’s nothing better than a surprise via snail mail! You could polish up your penmanship and pop a message in the post.


Glass inkwells with Bakelite lids
Dip pen with carved bone handle



Propelling pencil with perpetual calendar

Smith Corona typewriter, 1920s


Silver handled ivory letter opener, 1903

Cross written letter, 1833

Embroidered card

How are you keeping in touch with your loved ones? Has someone reached out to you and made your day? The Mental Health Foundation wants to get the nation talking about acts of kindness. Share your experiences with us in the comments or on social media using the #MentalHealthAwarenessWeek, #KindnessMatters and #WakeyKindness tags.


Thursday, May 7, 2020

VEDay75 - 8th May 2020

75 years ago today, a crowd was gathering on Wood St, communities across the district were stringing up bunting and setting up trestle tables. After 6 years of conflict, the Second World War was finally nearing its end with victory declared in Europe. There was a sense of relief and an air of celebration across the country. 


Oh yes, we went to celebrate in the Bull Ring. You felt very relieved that no one else was going to be killed.

Kathleen Turner (evacuated from Jersey to Wakefield), 17 on VE Day


As we mark the anniversary of VE Day in 2020, we are privileged to have recollections, photographs and even film footage captured by local people who were celebrating on 8th May 1945. Take some time to experience the day through their eyes and words.



Dancing in the streets

This amateur footage taken by a local businessman shows soldiers, Wrens and the Home Guard parading, as the atmosphere in the city centre builds. In Wood Street, specially erected spotlights have replaced blackout blinds and revellers fill the streets ready to dance into the night.

V.E. CELEBRATIONS (1945), 16mm, Black & White, Silent

Film ID: YFA 2343, www.yorkshirefilmarchive.com/film/ve-celebrations


I went up into Wood Street with some friends and we were dancing in the street.  There was a fantastic atmosphere and there were crowds of people. 

Betty Littlewood, 14 on VE day



I must have gone in the afternoon and stayed over into the evening.  All the lights were on - everything looked so much better, so much happier and brighter.  Everyone was singing and dancing and shouting to one another.  It was a very lovely day.

Edna Morrell, 17 on VE day

 

You couldn't get any beer, everyone had drunk it by about 6.30. 

Herbert Spurr, early 20s (20/21) on VE Day


Community Spirit


Away from the city, communities that had supported each other through the war were coming together again, this time in celebration.


Neighbours gather for a group photo at a street party on Nevison Avenue, Pontefract


Crossley Street, Featherstone trimmed up for the occasion


We had a street party at the end of the war.  We'd borrowed some trestles and tables from the chapel, and we had all sorts of food and games.  We had a real celebration.


I lived in a mining village, everybody worked at the pit, they were all friendly and would help each other out.  That was our strength during the war.

Sid Wilkinson, 14 on VE Day


Well done Fryston lads



In the mining community of Fryston, amateur photographer, Jack Hulme, was on hand, as he so often was, to record the occasion. In the mid 20th century, former coal miner and local hairdresser, Jack caught everyday life on camera, photographing his family and neighbours at work and play, creating an extraordinary record of his community. Jack was known and trusted by his subjects and his works are honest, affectionate and often humorous. His VE Day photographs are no different, capturing all the local camaraderie on camera and giving us a glimpse into the anticipation and merriment of the day.


Although we can’t take to the streets as they did in 1945, many of us will still be commemorating the anniversary of VE Day in our homes today. Let us know how you are marking the occasion. If, like Jack Hulme, you are recording the day on camera, we’d love to see your photos. Get in touch on our social media channels or leave us a message below.


You can explore these fabulous images in more detail and find out more about Jack Hulme in our VE Day teaching resource, available to download on our Schools at Home page.

Tuesday, May 5, 2020

On Our Doorstep - Online!


Whilst our doors are sadly closed, we don’t want you to miss out on our current exhibition so we have brought the wonderful paintings of Geoff Leathley online until we can welcome you back to Pontefract Museum.



On Our Doorstep: Paintings by Geoff Leathley


A painting of a busy market day in Pontefract marketplace in the 2000s
Wednesday market
The works in this exhibition are of Pontefract and Castleford and were painted between June 2017 and June 2018, although I have sketched and painted in each town for over 30 years.
There is a great choice of subjects: a castle, churches, a canal and a wonderful riverside mill. The heart of both towns remains the market, so it is not surprising that here I found lots of subjects and without doubt the most challenging. I decided upon a straightforward style without embellishments or exaggerations of form or colour, although I had to rearrange figures and place them in such a way as to balance the picture.
I found the whole project exciting and enjoyed every minute.

Geoff Leathley

  • A painting of part of All Saints Church
  • A painting of a canal with houseboats, people fishing and a bridge
  • A painting of Castleford Mill, an imposing brick building, reflected on the river beside it
I always carry a pocket-sized sketch book. Most drawings are done for pleasure and are taken no further. A few of these can be taken to the next stage and become studies.

  • Pencil sketches of adults and children
  • Pencil sketch of buildings and a yard
  • Assorted pencil sketchings of buildings and people
Studies are worked up from a number of sketches, on which I make colour notes. The setting from one sketch, the figures from several individual sketches. They can be reproduced in oil or watercolour. All the problems are worked out at this stage. There can be many alterations. Some will remain as studies; others will be worked up into a larger format.
Painting of a view over a park, houses and All Saints Church in the background
The old and the new - Pontefract study

On Our Doorstep - Pontefract

  • Painting of a houses and nearby park with people walking and cycling along a path
  • Painting of a factory building with smoke billowing from the chimney
  • Painting of the view down to Pontefract Town Hall on market day
  • Painting of an older gentleman in a flat cap sat on a bench in the Buttercross, looking out onto market day
  • Painting of a street in Pontefract lined with shops and bars, with cars parked up
  • Painting of a pedestrianised path between shops and businesses
  • Painting of the pavement up to Pontefract Hospital

Reflections and renovations: Pontefract Castle

  • Painting of a row of cottages along a cobbled path
  • Painting of a muddy piece of ground being worked on, with puddles from a rainy day
  • Painting of the old stone steps leading up to the remains of the keep at Pontefract Castle
  • Painting of part of the grounds of Pontefract Castle with buildings in the background
  • Painting of people in a gazebo on the grassed castle bailey at Pontefract Castle on a sunny day

On Our Doorstep - Castleford

  • Painting of large trees in a field by some houses
  • Painting of a market stall full of flowers, with an older lady browsing
  • Painting of the stone paved high street in Castleford with people walking along it
  • Painting of an elderly gentleman fishing by a lock
  • Painting of two small boats moored by a bridge on the canal

‘The heart of the town’: market days

  • Painting of a busy market day in Pontefract in the 2000s
  • Painting of fruit and veg market stalls doing business
  • Painting of a fruit market stall doing business
  • Painting of two older gentleman sat on a bench
  • Painting of a fabric market stall

In all weathers

  • Painting of a stormy day in Pontefract marketplace
  • Painting of Pontefract town square
  • Painting of a hazy day in Market Street, Pontefract
  • Painting of a rainy day in Pontefract with crowds walking around and the street shimmering with rain
With huge thanks to Geoff Leathley for his work on this project.

Photo of Geoff painting a field

Geoff as an older gentleman painting at his easel, with his hat on the stand


If you have enjoyed Geoff’s paintings, why not have a go at our digital jigsaw of ‘Wednesday market’.
preview35pieceWednesday market