A Glimpse of Tudor Domestic Life in Barton

Neil Wilkyn analyses a probate inventory, a document compiled after an individual’s death listing all that they owed. This example gives us a tantalising glimpse into the home of a Barton resident in the sixteenth century. What possessions did they have? What was their furniture like? A chance to look through a window into a... Read more...

Ships Sail Right into the Heart of Hull

Joseph Wright Hall Queen Street, Barton upon Humber

Colin Cooper describes how the character of Hull has been shaped by its geography and history.  Hull was once the UK's third port and the world’s largest fishing port, the quays and docks, railways and industry dominated the townscape, while ocean-going vessels and trawlers sailed right into the heart of the city.  Please note this... Read more...

Recreational Management along the Humber Estuary

Joseph Wright Hall Queen Street, Barton upon Humber

The Humber Estuary is one of the most important estuaries in Europe for wildlife and is designated as a Special Area of Conservation.  Jackson Sage describes the wonders of this internationally important wetland site, and the work of the Humber Nature Partnership

Susanna Wesley – “Mother of Methodism”

Joseph Wright Hall Queen Street, Barton upon Humber

Susanna Wesley was the mother of John and Charles Wesley, the founders of the Methodist movement.  Catherine Fordham shares Susanna’s life story including her marriage to Samuel Wesley, her support of his work,  and providing a stable home and education for their children at the Epworth Rectory.

Soldiers in Petticoats: Fashion and the Suffragette Movement

Joseph Wright Hall Queen Street, Barton upon Humber

Madeleine Gray, Collections Assistant with North Lincolnshire Museums Service, explores the history of the suffragette movement, and how suffragettes used fashion to emphasise their cause.  Non-members £4.

The Horse, the Ambulance and the Wagoners’ Special Reserve

Joseph Wright Hall Queen Street, Barton upon Humber

Martin Watts, from the Wagoners’ Museum at Sledmere, describes the importance of horses for the army in the First World War, and the role of Wagoners’ Special Reserve’s veterinary hospitals and mobile veterinary units.  The talk includes a special screening of a short new film of the Museum’s own preserved ambulance.

AGM followed by Baysgarth Park Update

Joseph Wright Hall Queen Street, Barton upon Humber

Liz Bennet reviews the efforts of the local community, in partnership with North Lincolnshire Council and Barton Town Council, to care for the Park which now has a Green Flag Award recognising it as one of the UK’s very best green spaces.  The talk will commence at 8pm.

Annual Trip to Sledmere

Joseph Wright Hall Queen Street, Barton upon Humber

Members and non-members are welcome to join our trip to East Yorkshire’s “finest country house” and visit the Wagoners’ Museum.  Full details will be available in the Spring.

Dr. Mary Murdoch: Suffragist and Social Reformer – Heritage Open Days

Joseph Wright Hall Queen Street, Barton upon Humber

Dr. Murdoch was a Scottish medical doctor who settled in Hull in 1896 and galvanised the suffrage campaign in Hull and East Yorkshire, as part of the national movement for women to be granted the right to vote in parliamentary elections. This talk by Cecile Oxaal is part of the Civic Society 2022 Programme and... Read more...

£2

Dr. Mary Murdoch: Suffragist and Social Reformer

Joseph Wright Hall Queen Street, Barton upon Humber

Dr. Murdoch was a Scottish medical doctor who settled in Hull in 1896 and galvanised the suffrage campaign in Hull and East Yorkshire.  Cecile Oxaal explores her background, the suffrage campaign in Hull and East Yorkshire, during which the Pankhursts visited the City, and Dr Murdoch's championing of other social reforms for women, children and the... Read more...

Who Was Ted Lewis? – Heritage Open Days

The Ted Lewis Centre Ferrby Road, Barton upon Humber

    Ted’s biographer, Monty Martin, gives an illustrated presentation of the eventful artistic and gregarious life of novelist, Ted Lewis, including how and why he came to write Get Carter, and his other eight novels as well as is graphic art and jazz music. No fee but a contribution to the Charity would be... Read more...

Free

Samuel Wilderspin’s Outdoor Classroom – Heritage Open Days

Wilderspin National School Museum 4 Queen Street, Barton upon Humber

A Practical Lecture and Exhibition by an Agent of Mr. Wilderspin Esq; Inventor of the Infant & Training Systems of Education. The forty minutes demonstration commences outside in the Playground with an opportunity afterwards in the Schoolroom for questions about his plans for giving children religious, moral, mental, and physical education. Free to members of... Read more...

Free