
Projects
International Haggis Journey
International Womens Group explored the connection between Scottish haggis and similar dishes from countries such as Syria, Iran and Egypt.
Heritage can be anything from the past that you value and want to pass on to future generations.
Explore the inspiring projects we’ve funded and help inform your own application.
Filter by location and heritage type to:
Projects
International Womens Group explored the connection between Scottish haggis and similar dishes from countries such as Syria, Iran and Egypt.
Projects
This project is exploring the impact of the First World War on the people of Broadland, from the perspectives of the men who went to war and those who remained at home.
Projects
Young people from Central Youth Theatre produced a film and exhibition to tell the story of soldiers executed for perceived cowardice in the First World War.
Projects
Young people from North Tyneside found out how the First World War affected their local communities through a range of creative activities.
Projects
Volunteers from the Scottish Pipers Association researched the tunes and stories behind the Pipers of the First World War, including the iconic image of the Piper leading the soldiers into battle.
Projects
Volunteers used the Otley Museum archives to create a digital map showing the address of every person on the town’s war memorial.
Projects
This exhibition tells the remarkable story of Mabel Stobart, a Dorset woman who led a women-only medical team to Serbia between April and December 1915.
Projects
Montgomery Town Council restored an existing First World War memorial, created a small memorial garden and researched the names of those fallen in the war, gathering stories to create a leaflet and exhibition.
Projects
Heroes of Chiswick aims to discover more about the lives of 23 men from the Parish of St. Michael (Sutton Court) who were killed on active service in France, Belgium, Gallipoli and elsewhere.
Projects
The Call Up helped participants piece together the lives of refugees living in Hampshire during the First World War.
Projects
Twenty young people, aged 14-19, researched the lives of Bolton soldiers who had died during the 1915 Gallipoli campaign.