National Justice Museum

LOCATION

Nottingham, Nottinghamshire

Assessed by
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Awards
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Our View

The Galleries of Justice Museum is located on the site of an original Court and County Gaol. A fun and interactive environment, with many tours actor led, the museum explores Nottingham's horrible history of crime and punishment. Act as witness, maybe stand trial in the Victorian court room, or spend time in a prison cell, dungeon or cave. Never before seen artefacts from prisons across the country offer visitors the chance to experience some of Britain's most gruesome, yet often touching, reminders of what prison life would have been for inmates and prison staff over the last three centuries.

Awards, accolades & Welcome Schemes

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Quality Assured Visitor Attraction
National Justice Museum
High Pavement, The Lace Market, NOTTINGHAM, Nottinghamshire, NG1 1HN

Features

About the area

Discover Nottinghamshire

Most people associate Nottinghamshire in the East Midlands with the legend of Robin Hood, though the former royal hunting ground of Sherwood Forest has been somewhat tamed since Robin’s outlaw days. Traditionally, the county’s primary industry, alongside agriculture, was coal mining but it is also an oil producing area, and during World War II produced the only oil out of reach of the German U-Boats.

The county is divided between the old coalfields north of the city of Nottingham, the commuter belt of the Wolds to the south, Sherwood Forest and the great country estates known as the ‘Dukeries’. Towns of note are the river port and market town of Newark, which hosts major antiques fairs six times a year, and Southwell, known for the medieval minster with exquisite carvings of Sherwood Forest.

D H Lawrence was a Nottinghamshire man, born in Eastwood, the son of a miner and former schoolteacher. He grew up in poverty, and his book Sons and Lovers reflects the experiences of his early years. Other Nottinghamshire notables include Thomas Cranmer, the first Protestant Archbishop; Jesse Boot, founder of the Boots pharmaceutical company; Henry Ireton, the man who singed Charles I’s death warrant; and Olympic skaters Torvill and Dean.

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