Royal Cornwall Museum
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The Royal Cornwall Museum in the city of Truro, England, United Kingdom is the oldest museum in Cornwall and the leading museum of Cornish culture. Its exhibits include minerals, an unwrapped mummy and objects relating to Cornwall’s unique culture. It belongs to the Royal Institution of Cornwall which was founded in 1818 for "the promotion of knowledge in natural history, ethnology and the fine and industrial arts, especially in relation to Cornwall."
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[edit] Collections
The museum has collections in the following areas:
- Cornish archaeology
- Non-Cornish archaeology
- Applied and decorative arts
- Biology
- Numismatics
- Fine art (including Newlyn School paintings and a recent bequest of works by Bryan Pearce)
- Geology (including Philip Rashleigh's collection of Cornish minerals).[1]
- Social history
- World cultures
[edit] The Courtney Library
The Courtney Library and Archive holds books, periodicals, archive material and ephemera relating to Cornwall and the South West of England. In addition, there is an extensive photographic collection which records the history of Cornwall from 1845 to date.
[edit] The 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 Institution acquired the adjacent Truro Baptist Chapel (1848). Together these substantial granite-fronted buildings (linked with a new foyer and shop in 1998) form an imposing street frontage at the centre of the historic city of Truro; both buildings were designed by the local architect Philip Sambell who was deaf without speech.
[edit] Access
Admission is free.
[edit] External links
- Official website
- Information from the 24 Hour Museum