We are happy to announce that
the museum will be open for Half term holiday.
(Sat, Mon, Tues, Weds, Thurs & Fri (We have
a lack of volunteers available for Sunday) ) Although the Museum is open,
there is still at least another £300,000 required for a controlled
atmosphere building for Secundus and other valuable and unique
artifacts, together with study room and compressor house/workshop so Please If you think this project is a great
one then HELP us MAKE money for the project at NO cost
to you (Click
Here)
Purbeck is rich in Minerals
and they have been supplied across the world. They have changed the way
we live. The Museum has been built to tell that story. Ball clay has
been regarded for many years as a mineral of national importance because
of its special qualities and rare occurrence. The Museum is a recreation
of a typical mine from the late 1980s/early 1990s. From Corfe to Wareham, the extraction Ball
Clay has been been the main employment since the mid 18th Century. The
Museum records the living conditions of the workers, and the
families of the Clay Merchants. The Museum records that 3 narrow
gauge clay lines were in Purbeck before the Swanage Railway branch was
built. The Museum has a narrow gauge railway that has been relayed along the old formations at Norden
that were there before the building of the Swanage Railway Branch in
1885.
The visitor can read about, see and hear the Mining activities now relegated
to the history books.