Make sure you put this museum on your list of things you must see in York. We felt that it was second only to the Minster… and it would have been a close second. The museum occupies buildings that were once used as prisons: the Female Prison Building of 1783 and the Debtor’s Prison Building of 1705. This is a marvelous social history museum--a museum of everyday life principally in the Victorian and Edwardian periods. Not everything will appeal to everybody, but for 6.50 pounds, everybody will get their money’s worth. (This attraction is not on the York Pass.)
After entering, you will pass by a number of rooms including a Victorian parlour (1870), a Moorland cottage (1850), a Georgian room (1780) and even a front room from 1950. They are wonderful and combined with the displays of china and Victoriana, they hint at what’s to come. Displays deal with hygiene and household cleanliness, and you’ll find everything from washing machines to toilets. Here the exploration goes back 350 years, and Lord Hervey’s comment of 1728 reminds us of how far we’ve come, "At court last night there was dice, dancing, crowding, sweating and stinking in abundance as usual."
The displays move on to the subjects of marriage, birth and death and the social customs and mores that have surrounded them over the last 200 years. There is so much here, that one can pick and choose. Everyone will probably agree however, that the Victorian street scene with genuine storefronts that were rescued from destruction is the high point of the visit.
Displays in the former debtor’s prison include militaria and WW II social history and costume. On the lower floors, the old cells remain, a number of them containing displays of the tools of dying crafts: joiners, comb-makers, blacksmiths and gunsmiths etc. A few of the cells carry on the prison theme. You will see the condemned cell, the last home of the notorious highwayman, Dick Turpin, who was hanged nearby at age 26 in 1739. This is also the place where 17 Luddites were hanged in a single day in 1813.
The museum is a wonderful place, and the collection is incredibly extensive. There is something here for everyone in the family.