Posted by: Blog Administrator
on Nov 8, 2011
Tagged in:
workshop ,
Wiltshire Heritage Museum ,
Volunteer ,
Salisbury ,
Paul Smith ,
museum ,
Mervyn Grist ,
Mere ,
Dewey ,
Devizes ,
curator ,
Cricklade ,
conservation ,
Athelstan ,
art ,
Archives
The Archives Conservation team recently held a number of workshops for museum curators and volunteers on the care of paper and archive collections.
This was very much untried territory for the team, Paul Smith and Mervyn Grist, but was in response to requests for assistance from museums around the county. Three days (one in September and two in October) were arranged and numbers limited to six delegates per session. The programme for the sessions was devised by Paul Smith, Senior Archives Conservator. Staff and volunteers from Wiltshire Heritage Museum, Devizes, Dewey, Cricklade, Athelstan, Mere and Salisbury Art Collections attended.
Posted by: Blog Administrator
on Dec 17, 2010
Tagged in:
workshop ,
Wiltshire ,
walls ,
vagabonds ,
Thomas Platt ,
The Old Bridewell ,
The Grange ,
suspects ,
surgeon ,
State of the Prisons ,
Southwell ,
solitary confinement ,
segmental ,
sashes ,
Salisbury ,
rogues ,
Richard Ingleman gaol ,
red-brick houses ,
prison reformer ,
Principal ,
pre-trial ,
polygonal prison ,
Police station ,
Oxford ,
Norwich ,
Nether Stowey ,
Margaret Parrott ,
London ,
Lincs ,
Ladies’ School ,
keystone ,
John Howard ,
Jane E. Hollis ,
jail ,
initials ,
infirmary ,
idle poor ,
Health of Prisoners Act ,
grafitti’d ,
governess ,
garden ,
Folkingham ,
fire ,
exercise yard ,
Eliza Hopkins ,
Dorothy Treasure ,
Devizes Almshouse Trust ,
Devizes ,
detaining ,
County Gaol ,
committee ,
Cheltenham ,
burnt down ,
Bridewell Street ,
Bridewell prison ,
bridewell ,
Borough ,
boarded with her ,
attics ,
apothecary ,
almswomen
In the centre of Devizes is an unassuming building, not very different from those red-brick houses flanking it. It has large, airy two-by-two pane sashes with typical segmental arches which contain a shaped keystone. Behind the net curtains can be glimpsed a cosy living room, and a pretty garden beyond. This is The Grange and it was once the old Devizes jail, or bridewell, in Bridewell Street.

The Old Bridewell, Devizes
The Bridewell started life in 1579 as a timber-framed building in the street which now bears its name. It was established after the opening of the Bridewell prison in London in 1556 as a new type of prison to deal with the growing numbers of those regarded as rogues and vagabonds or the idle poor. This example had been followed in Oxford in 1562, Salisbury in 1564 and Norwich in 1565. It was burnt down twice and rebuilt: after a fire in 1619 and another more serious fire in 1630, but still in timber, much of which survives today.