Looking to the Future Through an astute approach to commerciality and income generation, workforce development, sharing our achievements, and the strengthening ambition and role of Barnsley Museums and Heritage Trust, we look forward with confidence to the role we can play long into the future. We have continued with our resilience and sustainability strategy of focusing on supporting Barnsley Museums through our Charity, Barnsley Museums and Heritage Trust, by refreshing our earned income strategy and by continuing to invest in our venues and programmes by securing external investment. This year has seen Barnsley Museums and Heritage Trust go from strength to strength. It has attracted new funders, enabled the delivery of a wide variety of projects, welcomed a new Chair of Trustees, agreed a new three year business plan and attracted record levels of public donations at the museums. Funding previously received from the Foyle Foundation resulted in the support of ‘Museums on Tour’ this year, with the creation of innovative new handling boxes for families and school children throughout Barnsley. In addition, we were delighted to receive significant new funding from the Garfield Weston Foundation that has been used to support learning activities across the museum venues. Grants from Co-op Local
Fund, Awards for All, the Youth Social Action Fund, Shawlands Trust, Woodmansterne Art Conservation Fund, the Idlewild Trust and many more have contributed to a range of fantastic programmes. Cannon Hall was the focus for our first Crowdfunder, which, together with support from Barnsley Boost, provided funding for the installation of a tree sculpture to mark the beginnings of a new discovery trail. Our earned income strategy has focused on improving our retail offer and our wedding business, as we also launched a nationwide search with the BBC’s Countryfile for a new Miller for Worsbrough to further develop our organic stoneground flour business. We also opened our new Pet Crematorium at Cannon Hall in partnership with Barnsley Council’s Bereavement Services team. We have continued to invest heavily in our greatest asset this year – our team. From curatorial training for front of house assistants to resilience and leadership programmes, our team have developed their skills and as a result continue to contribute greatly to our success and organisational resilience. Advocacy and having the support of strong ambassadors is also key to our approach.
I am looking forward to the exciting challenge of leading the Trust as it builds upon its success to date and really starts to have an impact in supporting Barnsley Museums and their wonderful and important work.’’ Paul Jagger OBE, Chair of Barnsley Museums and Heritage Trust
Heritage and Our Economy Our museums and heritage sites are important and effective economic drivers. They are a permanent home to over 40 businesses and they support hundreds more each year. Our museums attract visitors to our region to spend money and play a vital role in challenging perceptions of our borough. Elsecar Heritage Centre is home to over thirty businesses and is a thriving place. Our packed programme of events in the Ironworks brings thousands of people to the site every weekend. Our other sites are homes to a range of enterprises from pop up vendors, to catering outlets to wedding businesses, supporting innovation and start ups. Barnsley Museums are committed to supporting local businesses, raising the profile of Barnsley and boosting our economy through day and overnight visits to our borough. Big events like the Flavours Food festival, the Man Engine spectacular, the Tour de Yorkshire and more have brought tens of thousands of visitors to Elsecar this year, and injected hundreds of thousands of pounds into the local economy. Together with our funders we continue to invest in our venues as places that contribute massively to the local economy. At Cannon Hall, thanks to the National Lottery Heritage Fund, we are continuing our programme of conservation in the parkland and gardens. Experience Barnsley and the Cooper Gallery are recognised as crucial to our town centre, and provide experiences and cultural offers
that make a real difference to where people choose to shop and spend time, be they local or from further afield. At the Cooper Gallery, thanks to funding from Arts Council England and others we are creating artist studio spaces, extending our café and creating an outdoor gallery. At Worsbrough Mill we are creating a bigger retail offer, exploring opportunities for a new artisan bakery on site, and working to extend covers in our busy café.
I’m proud to live and work in Barnsley and as I travel the country I am noticing a genuine change in the way people perceive us. We are seen as creative, as dynamic, as forwardthinking, as a place that’s determined to involve everyone in the joyful and fulfilling process of making and appreciating art, however you define that word. The arts make us healthier, mentally and physically, they make us resilient, they make us aware of each other and they make us celebrate the universal in the local. We are creative people in a creative place.” Ian McMillan, Poet
1,249,902 people have visited museums
831 2420
secondary school pupils engaged
local businesses supported
4
217 local history e-books loaned
into the Museum collections
25,141
primary school children in formal sessions
120
28,158
individual volunteers
artists worked with
29 work placements supported
economic impact value
9,970
1
community allotment created
hectares of new woodland and orchard planted
7 new loan boxes created
16,735 Volunteer hours given
2,740 new items added to our online catalogue
paintings conserved
06
£26.9M family participants in organised activities
S E V E N
Rembrandt painting on loan from the National Gallery
123
1,976
275
archaeological digs undertaken
supported
exhibitions and new displays
collections enquiries
social media followers
4 PAID 1 INTERNSHIPS
21
331
383 OBJECTS ACCESSIONED
1,200 community heritage activity participants
£690,000 external funding secured
24k tonnes of silt removed from Cannon Hall lakes
32 specialist wildlife recording days