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Today we began working with Castleton Historical Society to assist their members produce an exhibition about the village during the First World War.
Castleton and Hope Historical Societies reprint the Medieval self-guided trail leaflet due to demand.
Here are some photographs of two of the recently installed interpretation panels we have produced for Bedford River Valley Park.
Spiders in the toilet, and a candle to keep the cistern from freezing. Outdoor toilets and scratchy clothes made a big impression on youngsters from Walkley Primary School in their encounters with local ‘elders’ Audrey Buxton and Geraldine Stansall, as part of the Walkley Ways, Walkley Wars local history project.
The Walks Around Britain video features the Peak District’s Monsal Trail and the inHeritage audio player. The player includes railway memories of the trail recorded by inHeritage and the specially commissioned Johnny Cash style Monsal Trail Blues by Natchez Burning.
Tideswell Living History Group launched the history box on a gloriously sunny day in time for the Easter holidays. Group Chair Audrey Hopkins and local historian Tony Hill did the honours in front of a crowd of fifty residents and visitors. If you’re in Tideswell pop into the box to dial up a story on …
Tideswell Living History Group will launch the Tideswell History Telephone on Friday 11th April. This is the first time an unused iconic red telephone kiosk still in its original location has been turned into a permanent oral history audio heritage centre.
Grant writing, report writing, historical comic and graphic novel, community talks, interactive website and photography. English Heritage commended our graphic novel Ancestors of the Don Gorge as an example of best practice in innovative heritage interpretation.
The Princes of Gwynedd website was launched this month at Dinas Emrys, the legendary birthplace of the Welsh red dragon. inHeritage wrote the English text for the website, which involved visiting the sites and consulting with key archaeologists.
Here is a video of the first test pit of Hands on History Barnsley being dug. Dan Jarvis came to help out dig the first turf before catching the train to Westminster. Volunteers then excavated two test pits at New Lodge Crescent, finding pottery, slag and other artefacts. The test pits were the first in …
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