Milton Keynes Museum

Milton Keynes Museum
Museum entrance
Map
Former name
Stacey Hill Museum
Established1973
LocationMcConnell Dr, Wolverton, Milton Keynes MK12 5EL
Coordinates52°03′22″N 0°48′18″W / 52.056°N 0.805°W / 52.056; -0.805
Public transit accessSapphire #6 to Stacey Bushes, then about 0.4 miles (0.6 km) walk
Nearest parkingonsite
Websitehttps://miltonkeynesmuseum.org.uk/

Milton Keynes Museum is an independent local museum in the parish of Wolverton and Greenleys in Milton Keynes, England.[1] It is mostly run by volunteers with a small number of paid staff.

Reproductions of the Milton Keynes Hoard at the Milton Keynes Museum.[2]

The museum is housed in a former Victorian farmstead. It covers the history of the Milton Keynes area, including northern Buckinghamshire and southern Northamptonshire, from the year 1800 onwards. It includes the Stacey Hill Collection of rural life, consisting of agricultural, domestic, industrial, and social objects connected to the area before the 1967 foundation of Milton Keynes.

There is also a collection of many memorabilia of the nearby Wolverton railway works.

The museum's Connected Earth collection includes a variety of historic telephones and switchboards, many still in working order.[3] The museum also has some historic Post Office and British Telecom vehicles. The largest of these is the Road Phone, an enormous working telephone used for promotional purposes.

The museum was previously called the Stacey Hill Museum.[4]

In January 2025 the museum opened a new gallery featuring among other exhibits an ichthyosaur found at Caldecotte Lake[5] In February 2025 the museum had to close due to an electrical fire.[6] No items in the museum collection were damaged by the fire and it re-opened in April the same year.[6]

  1. ^ Milton Keynes Museum, Culture 24.
  2. ^ British Museum: the Milton Keynes Hoard Archived 2 March 2010 at the Wayback Machine (now in collection of the British Museum).
  3. ^ Milton Keynes Museum Archived 19 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine, Connected Earth Archived 2007-05-10 at the Wayback Machine.
  4. ^ Milton Keynes Museum Trust, Qype, UK.
  5. ^ Heywood, Harriet (23 January 2025). "Permanent new home for 180-million-year-old fossil". BBC News. BBC. Retrieved 25 January 2025.
  6. ^ a b Fisher, Tony (11 April 2025). "Museum damaged in electrical fire reopens". BBC News. BBC. Retrieved 12 April 2025.

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia · View on Wikipedia

Developed by Nelliwinne