Projects
The Mary Anning Wing
By collecting, preserving and making accessible the many artefacts found in the area, the museum aims to bring the history of Lyme Regis to as diverse an audience as possible.
Gall treftadaeth fod yn unrhyw beth o'r gorffennol yr ydych yn ei werthfawrogi ac eisiau ei drosglwyddo i genedlaethau'r dyfodol. Archwiliwch rai o'r prosiectau ysbrydoledig rydym wedi'u hariannu a fydd efallai yn help i chi lywio eich cais eich hun.
Gallwch chwilio yn ôl lleoliad a math o dreftadaeth i:
Mae'n bosibl na fydd pob enghraifft prosiect y dewch o hyd iddyn nhw ar gael yn Gymraeg ar ein gwefan. Mae hynny oherwydd gellir dod o hyd i brosiectau mewn ardaloedd a gwledydd eraill y DU wrth i chwilio.
Projects
By collecting, preserving and making accessible the many artefacts found in the area, the museum aims to bring the history of Lyme Regis to as diverse an audience as possible.
Projects
In 2010 and 2012, the National Lottery Heritage Fund supported the Sustaining Traditional Building Skills in Northern Ireland project.
Projects
The project was to carry out urgent repairs to the Grade II listed St Cadoc’s Church, Trevethin, near Pontypool.
Projects
Volunteers explored the hidden history of Indian soldiers who served alongside British troops on the Western Front.
Projects
The Curious Incident of the Gurkha Knife shared the role of South Asian soldiers in the First World War through live performances and an exhibition.
Projects
Narrative Eye helped London community groups research how people from Africa and the Caribbean contributed to the First World War.
Projects
This project saw urgent repairs made to the roof and external stone work of Sunderland Minster. The church now welcomes a wider audience due to the improved facilities and organised activities within the community.
Projects
This project saw the restoration of the windows, nave and transept of St Andrew’s Church in Sunderland and opening it to a wider audience.
Projects
Letters to themselves to be read in fifty years’ time, a Stoke City FA Cup Final ticket and school ties were some of the items young people in Chesterton buried in a time capsule beneath their new Vision Centre, built on the site of an old Victorian school.
Projects
Young people explored the origins of the Geordie language and dialect, its preservation through song, poetry and film, and how it could be considered a social barrier by both Geordies and outsiders.
Projects
Young people connected with their circus heritage through archive investigations and oral history interviews, and brought their discoveries to life in performance, an exhibition, website and project newspaper.
Projects
Securing funds for an endowment aimed to provide income in the long term to support two posts, that will help the Watts Gallery Trust to manage the heritage.