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About Us The Museum is in the process of being rebranded as The Yorkshire Waterways Museum. The Yorkshire Waterways Museum , together with Waterstart Thorne and Surewaters Selby, are part of the Sobriety Project a registered charity (No. 510221) and a company limited by guarantee not having a share capital. Sobriety or ‘The Project' describes the ‘umbrella' organisation. Otherwise Yorkshire Waterways Museum or the abbreviation YWM is used. Aims and Purpose To use the heritage, arts and environment of the Yorkshire waterways as a resource for learning and regeneration and specifically to provide a pathway to worthwhile occupation for disadvantaged people who have : Address and Registered Office: 01405 768730 Objectives Maintain museum, archive and fine art facilities to accreditation standards Develop the Yorkshire Waterways Museum as a front line tourism destination in Yorkshire. Provide a pathway to worthwhile occupation for disadvantaged people who have/are: Mental health issues Drug/alcohol problems, Histories of offending, Learning disabilities, Long term unemployed (more than 6 months) or Living in rural isolation. The Museum Aims to: Provide opportunities for school curriculum enhancement. Maximise the independence of elderly people through supported leisure activities. Create opportunities for worthwhile volunteering. Create a management and consultation structure which will further the aims and values of the Project. Be pro-active in partnerships that will help the Project to further its objectives. Strive for awards that will promote confidence in the organisation.
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Click here for our 2004 Review Click here for our Thorne Project Recent awards
Yorkshire Tourist Board Best Visitor Attraction (under 100,000) Finalist 2004 National Institute for Continuing EducationAdult Learner of the Year 2004 Investor in People 2004 Publications Reviews of the Year : Annually 1981 – 2004 Railway on the Water : Tom Puddings and The Yorkshire Coal Industry : Crabtree and Clarke : 1994 Spring to Release : The Waterways as a Re-settlement Resource : C. Buckley : 2003 The Waterways Museum : Educational Materials for Key Stage 2 : John Rice : 2004 (CD format)
A towpath nature trail established and maintained by the Museum is the habitat of great crested newts, barn owls and several rare species of butterfly. In 1996 the Museum won the Unilever Prize for being the best UK museum of industrial and social history in that year. More recently capital grants from the Heritage Lottery Fund and Yorkshire Forward have resulted in expansion of visitor facilities, displays and community outreach. A good example of outreach has been the development of a sister charity, the South Dock Compartment Boat Hoist Company. This has a remit to interpret and improve access to the No.5 Hoist whose Grade 2* listing puts it in the top 15% of Britain 's historic monuments.
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