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The Great Britain Guide

Museums · Yorkshire & the Humber

Yorkshire Museum of Farming

Modern♿ Wheelchair accessible

Yorkshire Museum of Farming — farming museum, living history centre in York, England, United Kingdom.

Yorkshire Museum of Farming, museums in Yorkshire & the Humber

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Plan your visit

Typical visit
1.5 h–3 h
Best time of year
Year-round
Nearest railway station
Murton Park · 0.2 km
  • Family-friendly
  • Wheelchair accessible

About

Yorkshire Museum of Farming is a museum in the United Kingdom. Records date its origin to 1982. Wikidata describes it as: "farming museum, living history centre in York, England, United Kingdom". Coordinates: 53.9610°, -1.0088°.

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From the Wikipedia article

The Yorkshire Museum of Farming is located in Murton Park near York in England. It is housed on a grass field site of approximately 14 acres (5.7 ha), and is the only museum in the district specifically dedicated to the subject of farming. In the autumn of 2010, the museum was awarded full accreditation status by the Museums, Libraries and Archives Council. The museum has built up a large collection of artefacts that illustrate the history of farm mechanisation. The collection also contains domestic items and other documentary material relating to the social structure of rural life in the area. Events are held throughout the year relating to rural and farming themes. There is also a children's play area and a cafe. The site is also home to the last surviving stretch of the Derwent Valley Light Railway, part of whose archive is also in the museum's collection. The museum shares the site with the Danelaw Centre for Living History. Living history facilities include a mock Roman fort called Brigantium, which is a disguised outdoor classroom designed to cater for up to 65 children at a time. There are also buildings dedicated to the Tudor and Viking ages, and an early medieval village and how they farmed the land centuries ago.

Excerpt from Wikipedia under CC BY-SA 4.0. See the source article linked in Sources below.

Background

History

The museum opened in 1982. It was originally designed to house a growing collection of farm machinery that had been donated by various farms from North and East Yorkshire to the East Yorkshire Farm Machinery Preservation Society and stored at Burton Constable. The core of the collection focuses on the development of the mechanisation of farming during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. A wide variety of items are on display, divided between two main exhibition galleries, the Four Seasons Gallery and the Livestock Gallery. A number of rare breeds of livestock are kept on site, including a Toggenburg goat, 'Jeffrey', who has been made an honorary member and mascot for the RAF 609 (West…

Sourced from Wikipedia under CC BY-SA 4.0.

Coordinates
53.9610, -1.0088
District
York
Parish
Murton
Postcode
YO19 5GH
Parliamentary constituency
York Outer
Established
1982
Nearest railway station
Murton Park0.2 km
Official site
murtonpark.co.uk

Sources

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Frequently asked questions

Where is Yorkshire Museum of Farming?
Yorkshire Museum of Farming is in Yorkshire, United Kingdom (postcode YO19 5GH), in the parish of Murton.
When was Yorkshire Museum of Farming built?
Built or established in 1982.
How do I get to Yorkshire Museum of Farming?
The nearest railway station is Murton Park, about 0.2 km away. Drivers can navigate to postcode YO19 5GH.