Tuesday, January 31, 2023

Oral History Volunteer - New Opportunity

Looking to learn new skills and meet new people?

Join us as an Oral History Volunteer!

3 men sat on a step outdoors having a chat with one stood up behind. 1 of them is smoking
Some gents having a chat in Fryston, taken by Jack Hulme between 1935 and 1955

In 2025, we will open an exciting new Library & Museum in the heart of Wakefield City Centre. The new site will feature innovative and interactive museum galleries, which tell the story of the whole Wakefield district. We want the new galleries to be full of personal stories from local people, told in their own words, so we’re embarking on a large-scale oral history project. We’ll be going out into the community and recording interviews with local people about the stories and experiences that have shaped their lives and our district.

We are looking for Oral History Volunteers to head out into the community to record interviews with local people on a wide range of subjects. You will use audio recording equipment to record your interview, and you will make sure the appropriate paperwork is completed. You will listen carefully and empathetically to local people’s stories and ensure that they feel valued and appreciated. You will also share our plans for the new museum with enthusiasm and passion, helping us to build up excitement for the project.

This opportunity is based in the community. All travel expenses will be reimbursed.  

What will I be doing?

-       Attending training on oral history interviewing.

-       Contacting individuals in the community and setting up appointments for you to visit them or for them to visit one of our sites, depending on their preference.

-       Recording oral history interviews, using audio recording equipment.

-       Completing the appropriate paperwork.

-       Writing short summaries of the interviews you have recorded.

 

What skills, experience and qualities do I need?

-       Interest in museums, collections, history, or art.

-       Excellent listening skills.

-       Accuracy and attention to detail when recording information.

-       A friendly, approachable manner and the confidence to speak to members of the public.

 

How much time will I be expected to give?

-       At least two days per month, but more would be preferable. Exact dates and times are still to be worked out with interviewees, so some flexibility is needed.   

What can I expect from Wakefield Museums & Castles?

-       A rare chance to work on a large-scale museum development project and to listen to the stories and experiences of local people.

-       A welcoming and friendly team of staff and volunteers to work with.

-       Induction, full training, and ongoing support.

-       A named member of staff to provide support and answer questions.

-       An opportunity to develop skills, knowledge, and confidence.

-       A sense of achievement.

The induction programme for this role will include:

-       An overview of Wakefield Museums & Castles, our sites and collections- who we are and what we do.

-       Our volunteer policy and the volunteer agreement (signed by volunteers and their supervisor), including Assignment of Copyright and our Transparency Notice about how we process and protect your personal data.

-       Relevant policies and procedures, including Health and Safety.

-       Full training in oral history interviews, provided by the Oral History Society.


How do I apply?

Please email Leah Mellors, Museums Development Manager, on lmellors@wakefield.gov.uk with any queries or to request an Expression of Interest form.

Expressions of Interest must be returned by Monday 20th February 2023.

Click here for all of our current volunteering opportunities

Wednesday, January 25, 2023

Moving Stories - Opening 6 February 2023

 

Decorative poster for Moving Stories at Wakefield Museum. Features motif of packing boxes with the Wakefield Museum logo on, surrounded by speech bubbles and movement, with stories waiting to break out of the boxes!

Moving Stories

Wakefield Museum

From 6 February 2023

Free Entry

Wakefield Museum is getting ready to move! 

We are developing an exciting new Library & Museum in the former British Home Stores (BHS) building in the heart of Wakefield city centre. As we prepare for the big move, we want to celebrate our story so far and we need your help to write the next chapter.

A postcard from the 1970s of Kirkgate, Wakefield, showing BHS (as British Home Stores) and Marks & Spencer shopfronts and people going about their daily business
A postcard of Kirkgate, Wakefield in the 1970s

Launching in the museum’s centenary year, Moving Stories is a vibrant, interactive exhibition. Join us for a look back at the stories we’ve told over the last 100 years. Discover the new stories that we’ve been hearing. And tell us your own story.

Take a peek behind the scenes and find out how we plan to turn an empty, old department store into awe-inspiring museum galleries. Let us know what you would like to see in the new venue. Be part of the story as we work together to create something special for the Wakefield district. 

A map of the Wakefield district with coloured sticky notes and flag pins full of people's answers to the question "What puts Wakefield on the map?" at an event in Featherstone last summer.
Responses to "What puts Wakefield on the map?" at an event in Featherstone last Summer

Moving Stories features exciting new illustrations by West Yorkshire artist, Tom Bailey.

Tom Bailey is an artist from Leeds who draws pictures to make things easier to understand. He often attends events, listens to people and draws what they say. Tom also illustrates books and makes murals. Have a look at more of Tom’s pictures on Instagram at @mrtombailey.

Click here for some photos from the exhibition and a selection of Tom's drawings going on display!

Click here for visitor and access information at Wakefield Museum


The new Library & Museum is funded by the government’s Levelling Up Fund and Wakefield Council. The project is part of the Wakefield City Masterplan, which aims to deliver improved facilities for residents.

Friday, January 20, 2023

Fab February Half Term!

A young visitor doing crafts at Pontefract Castle with their grown-up

February half term is already rapidly approaching!

Looking for what's on in Wakefield this February half term? 

Here's everything that's happening across our sites for the week starting 13th February!

Bronze age artefacts including tools and a cup

Brilliant Bronze Age at Castleford Museum - 13, 14, 16 and 17* February

Looking to go on an ancient adventure this half term?

Join us at Castleford Museum to travel back thousands of years to the Bronze Age!

Walk in the shoes of the first Castlefordians on a story trail around our awesome ancient artefacts. Discover the tools and tricks to survive in Bronze Age Castleford with the axes and arrowheads they left behind.

Once you’re safely back in the present, we’ve got lots of fantastic materials to make your own crafts inspired by the brilliant Bronze Age. What will you take home to remember your journey by?

All materials are provided for free.

*Friday 17 January: SEND families are always welcome at all of our sessions but we are running this SEND session for those groups who require a more relaxed atmosphere.

The session will be run with more sensory activities, more focus on independent learning, a lower light level and with a sensory tent and ear defenders available upon request.

Activities available 10 until 3 on Monday 13, Tuesday 14, Thursday 16 and Friday 17 February at Castleford Museum

Free and no booking required

Two young visitors to the Women in Rugby League exhibition at Pontefract Museum in England kits holding aloft a celebratory scarf

Rugby, Rugby, Rugby! at Pontefract Museum - Wednesday 15 February

Do you love Rugby League? Join us at Pontefract Museum to celebrate our Women in Rugby League: Life with the Lionesses exhibition with stacks of super sporty crafts!

Ever wanted to design your very own rugby kit? Here’s your chance! We’ll also be making flying rugby balls and flicking finger puppets to take the field. Be inspired by local and national Rugby League legends and take the Lionesses’ spirit home with you.

All materials are provided for free. 

10.30 until 3 at Pontefract Museum on Wednesday 15 February

Free and no booking required

Spring flowers in bloom

Ready, Get Set, Grow! at Pontefract Castle - Wednesday 15 February

Spring has almost sprung at Pontefract Castle!

Join us to take in the sights of the Castle grounds and smells of our medieval herb garden this half term.

Decorate your own plant pots with loads of fun, recycled fabrics and fill it with bulbs ready for spring. Watch your very own pot full of fabulous flowers grow at home!

Tickets are £2.50 per child, with accompanying adults free.

Wednesday 15 February, sessions at 11 and 1.

Activity Zone at Pontefract Castle


Bunches of fresh forced rhubarb

Foody Fun for Under 5s at Wakefield Museum - Thursday 16 February

Looking for something for your little ones this Rhubarb Festival?

Join us for a multisensory crafty rhubarb adventure at Wakefield Museum, specially designed for ages 2 to 5!

We’ll be mark making and model building using Wakefield’s favourite food. Take part in an interactive story aboard the Rhubarb Express train and paint and make with rhubarb!

All materials provided for free. 

10.30 and 1.30 in the Learning Zone at Wakefield Museum, Thursday 16 February

No booking required

A scrumptious rhubarb crumble

Let's Make Rhubarb Crumble! at Wakefield Museum - Friday 17 February

Families are invited to join us for this hands-on workshop where we will explore the history of rhubarb growing in our region, make yummy rhubarb crumbles* to bake at home, and imagine that we run our own rhubarb crumble businesses, designing eye-catching packaging for our products.


This workshop is suitable for families with children of all ages and has been designed to provide opportunities for families to learn and have fun together. 

*All materials provided, including gluten-free and dairy-free ingredients

10 - 12am and 1.30 - 3.30pm in the Learning Zone at Wakefield Museum

Tickets £2.50 per child, accompanying adults free


Montgomery Bonbon: Museum Mystery Trail - Includes front cover of the book

Montgomery Bonbon: Museum Mystery Trail at Castleford Museum, Pontefract Museum and Wakefield Museum - 11 February to 31 March

Go undercover and test your detective skills at our museums as part of the national Montgomery Bonbon: Museum Mystery Trail, organised by Kids in Museums and Walker Books. The trail celebrates the release of new children’s book Montgomery Bonbon: Murder at the Museum written by comedian Alasdair Beckett-King and illustrated by Claire Powell. Grab an activity sheet, solve puzzles and have fun with your family this half term. Remember to pick up a free moustache bookmark to get in the mystery-solving mindset!

Visit the Kids in Museums website to find out how you could win a signed copy of the book!

Attending any of our fab February events? Tag us on socials with your photos!

We're on Facebook @WakefieldMuseum, Twitter @WFMuseums and Instagram @WakefieldMuseums


To be the first to find out about future events, click here to sign up to our newsletter


For more events already listed, click here

Wednesday, January 11, 2023

Digital Arts Workshops with Guy Schofield

This January, artist Guy Schofield is hosting a series of free digital making workshops for 12-16 year olds about generative art!

Guy Schofield helping a young participant at one of the digital arts workshops. There are printouts of information next to them, including an image of Richmal Mangnall
Artist Guy Schofield working with young participants at the Digital Arts Workshops

The workshops are inspired by Richmal Mangnall and her work. 

Richmal Mangnall was the head of Crofton House school from 1808-1820. She wrote educational books which used simple questions and answers as a way of teaching young people about the world. 

The workshops are exploring how question and answer systems are used in modern technology, including games and digital art. 

A painting of Richmal Mangnall. She is a white woman with curly brown hair tucked up into a white hair wrap. She is wearing a very high-necked, long-sleeved white dress and a chunky orange beaded necklace. She is holding an open book and looking towards the painter with a slight smile, with more books positioned beside her.
Richmal Mangnall by John Downman, 1814. © National Portrait Gallery, London

Using software including Processing and Unity, young people will learn programming and game design skills for making amazing digital artworks. They will explore generative art: images created by rules you program yourself. 

No experience in programming is required to take part and each workshop will be different. You can attend one workshop, several or all of them.

The final works will be included in an exhibition at Wakefield One in January 2023. 

Some great work has already been produced at the first two workshops and we can't wait to see what our young people do next!

Young participants busy at work on laptops creating digital art


One participant at the workshops busy creating digital art with another watching on

All attendees must be dropped off and picked up by a parent or guardian. Parents and guardians are also welcome to stay and take part!

The remaining workshops are:
Wednesdays 11 and 18 January, 4 until 7 in the Learning Zone at Wakefield One

Saturdays 21 and 28 January, 10 until 3 in the Pontefract Suite at Wakefield One

Click here to book onto the remaining workshops 


Click here for example of Guy's work on his website 

*Please note, no food will be provided at these sessions and so participants may wish to bring a packed lunch with them.

Thursday, January 5, 2023

Make Volunteering your New Year's Resolution!

Happy new year! 

Looking for volunteering opportunities near you?

It's the time for new beginnings and taking on exciting challenges, and we've got lots of fantastic volunteer opportunities here at Wakefield Museums and Castles.

A volunteer doing crafts with a young visitor at Pontefract Museum

Whether you would like to help our Learning Team deliver workshops to schools, support adults to learn a new skill or welcome families to our sites, we'd like to hear from you!


Maybe you can help us with our community engagement programme to develop our brand new museum, or want to get hands-on gardening in the Pontefract Castle grounds?

A staff member watering the medieval herb garden at Pontefract Castle

Each role offers flexible hours, and we provide full training and support. We also cover reasonable travel expenses.

All roles are currently available until 31 March 2023.

Click here for information on all available volunteering opportunities.

Monday, December 19, 2022

12 Signs of Christmas: Makaton Festive Fun

Our Visitor Experience Assistant Marie has put together a playlist full of Makaton signs celebrating Christmas

We've also found a fun festive object in our collections to go with each sign. 

Enjoy learning Makaton with us and practice it with your friends and family this Christmas! 

A screenshot from our Merry Christmas Makaton film, showing Marie signing the Makaton for Merry Christmas

Monday, November 21, 2022

Knottingley: Fire & Water - 23rd November 2022

On 23 November 2022, Wakefield Museums & Castles are celebrating the industrial heritage of Knottingley through a commissioned artwork by David Appleyard.

Knottingley: Fire & Water is an innovative artwork, with illuminations, projections, and local community responses. It will be an evening of wonder, celebration, and community spirit.


But why Knottingley, why now, and why should you come to see it?

A black and white image of two glassworkers pouring molten glass at Bagley's glassworks is projected onto a building in Knottingley, lit up in red and blue
A concept design preview of the Knottingley: Fire & Water event

Knottingley – Industria Ditat

The coat of arms of the town of Knottingley has the Latin motto ‘Industria Ditat’, which means ‘Progress through Industry’. It was an appropriate motto for a town so strongly defined and shaped by industry. This industry was made possible by the town’s position on the River Aire and the Aire & Calder Navigation.

Knottingley's coat of arms. Arms: Azure issuant from Water barry wavy in base a Bridge of two arches proper in chief a Lacy Knot Or between two Roses Argent barbed and seeded also proper. Crest: On a Wreath Argent and Azure a cubit Arm holding an ancient Glass Bottle proper. Motto: industria didat - progress through industry
Knottingley's coat of arms, also used by the town's Rugby Union club, cricket club and Silver Band.
Image from Heraldry Wiki.com.

Shipbuilding, glassmaking and coal mining became the dominant industries. The town’s shipyards built and maintained both inland and seagoing vessels. The glass factories – the most notable being Bagley and Co – were at the forefront of glass production and the development of new machinery. Kellingley Colliery, just two miles away from Knottingley, employed over 2000 miners in its heyday. Ships, goods, and coal were transported along Knottingley’s waterways, out to the Humber and beyond, and the town thrived.

Wakefield Museums & Castles wanted to celebrate this strong industrial heritage by commissioning an artist to develop a digital artwork, inspired by the town’s heritage, the museum’s collections, and the stories of former employees. After a competitive process, they appointed Yorkshire-based artist David Appleyard, well-known for his community-based approach and his focus on industrial heritage.

For more about David's appointment, click here

 

‘My home, my life, my community’

As with many northern industrial towns, Knottingley is navigating a transition and finding a new identity. Although it has retained its glassmaking industry, with Stoelzle Flaconnage and Allied Glass remaining large employers in the town, the closure of Kellingley Colliery and reduction in community facilities have left some in the town feeling “forgotten” and left behind.

What does Knottingley mean to you? I have friends from London. When visiting Knottingley, they summed it up in one - "everyone knows each other, it's crazy. It's not often you come across a place that even in 2022 there's such a sense of community!" "You don't even use contactless in the pubs!" - they thought that was crazy!


What does Knottingley mean to you? Originally from Castleford. Memories of Knottingley Sports Centre and Swimming Baths as a child. Then all of a sudden seemed to disappear. Currently live in Pontefract. Apart from the Addy I don't know anything that Knottingley now has to offer which is such a shame for the community & surrounding areas.
Two of the postcards filled out by members of the community as part of the project
(full transcription in alt text)

Over the past seven months, David Appleyard has immersed himself in the community, working closely with local people to reflect on the Knottingley of the present, as well as the Knottingley of the past. Local people have responded to the question ‘What does Knottingley mean to you?’ on postcards and beermats, and local schoolchildren have redesigned the Knottingley coat-of-arms. A mixture of positive, negative, and indifferent responses has been received. More than 200 people have taken part.

What does Knottingley mean to you? Growing up in Knottingley I've felt bad about being from here, because of other people's opinions. As I have gotten older and I have seen Knottingley grow and I can now appreciate Knottingley for what it is. A lot of families with a lot of backgrounds. The people pull together to make it a better place. I am now proud to be from Knottingley.
Another postcard from David's community project (full transcription in alt text)

What does Knottingley mean to you? Home, family, friends. Lost town (doubly underlined). Sad (drawing of a sad sighing face)

A beermat with a response to the question 'What does Knottingley mean to you?'
(full transcription in alt text)


Light Up

The culmination of David’s work exploring Knottingley, both past and present, is the Knottingley: Fire & Water event on Wednesday 23 November, 5pm - 8pm.

The event will see some of Knottingley’s iconic industrial buildings illuminated with light, colour, and historic photographic images. Community responses to Knottingley today, on postcards and beermats, will be on display in the Town Hall. There will be free refreshments, entertainment, and performances from Knottingley Silver Band.

The event is designed to bring the people together in an evening of celebration, reflection, and community spirit.

 

Map of the Knottingley: Fire & Water event. Event features Knottingley's iconic industrial buildings illuminated, "What does Knottingley mean to you?" display at the Town Hall, free refreshments, Knottingley Silver Band & Entertainers.
Map of the Event

So come along for:

  •          Illuminated buildings
  •          Projections of historic photographs showing Knottingley’s industrial past
  •          Knottingley Silver Band
  •          Glow entertainers
  •          Free refreshments