Have you got a story to tell about Manchester’s Science and Industry Museum? Has the museum had an impact on your life? Inspired a love of science? Influenced your career choice? Did you meet the love of your life there?
This October marks 50 years since the creation of The North Western Museum of Science and Industry, now the Science and Industry Museum.
To mark the occasion the museum’s team are looking for stories of the impact that a trip to the museum has had on people’s lives.
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Opened in 1969, the North Western Museum of Science and Industry quickly outgrew its temporary premises on Grosvenor Street in Chorlton-on-Medlock. When Liverpool Road Station closed in 1975, Greater Manchester Council agreed to purchase it to become the museum’s new home.
Throughout its 50 years, the Science and Industry Museum has hosted exhibitions including Body World, Robots and its latest exhibition The Sun, leading projects including building replicas of the first stored programme computer and the iconic locomotive, Planet.
It’s the home to Europe’s largest collection of working steam engines.
But they want to know about you – how has the Science and Industry Museum affected your life?
Speaking about the anniversary and the search for visitors’ stories, Sally MacDonald, Director of the Science and Industry Museum, Manchester, commented “This is such an exciting year for us as work starts on restoring our beautiful Power Hall to full working order, and we move closer to opening our Special Exhibitions Gallery which will host the very best science exhibitions.
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“Celebrating our 50th birthday gives us the opportunity to look back, as well as forward, to the founding ambition of Dr Richard Hills, who wrote in his reminiscences that the purpose of the museum was to ‘to arouse the interest of young people, to play a valuable role in helping to increase the recruitment and training of scientists and technologists and… to provide a convenient place for the meeting of arts and science minds.’
“We know that this museum has been inspiring people for the last 50 years – whether you’re someone who’s been inspired to go on to take up a career in science, whether you’ve been inspired creatively, or whether you just have happy or funny memories, photos or film of visits to the museum over the years… please do share them with us.”
Stories, videos and photographs can be submitted via the museum website or at the museum over the weekend of 16 and 17 October 2019.