A great supporter and friend of the Museum, the paranormal researcher Peter Underwood, has died aged 91. We wish to extend our condolences to his family and friends, and remember his fascinating work.
The Museum is currently rated in the top three visitor attractions in Cornwall by Tripadvisor. Come visit us and find out why we're so popular!"
Sunday, November 30, 2014
Urgent help needed for St Nectan's Glen
We received an email at the Museum today calling for support for St Nectan's Glen. If you've never been there, it is a lovely site between Boscastle and Tintagel - well worth a visit next time you're near the Museum. http://www.st-nectansglen.co.uk/
They are seeking planning permission for a small heritage centre and retreat as well as general improvements to their facilities. They aim to have schools come and do eco projects and to have a building within which documented history and visuals can be displayed.
They are seeking planning permission for a small heritage centre and retreat as well as general improvements to their facilities. They aim to have schools come and do eco projects and to have a building within which documented history and visuals can be displayed.
As always happens with planning permission, there is an opportunity for people to have their say for and against the proposal. If you would like to find out more about this proposal and support the project then please go to the website - www.planning.cornwall.gov.uk and search the planning applications with this PA application ref: PA14/09299. The deadline is today - November 30th so please act quickly if you want to show your support!
New edition of the Cauldron Magazine is well worth a read
The Cauldron Magazine, Witchcraft, Paganism and Folklore is always worth a read.
http://www.the-cauldron.org.uk/
It has been going since 1976 (we have many of the old editions in the library here) and contains a mix of eclectic and intriguing articles.
The most recent edition contains two articles with clear links to the Museum - one on Joan Wytte (her skeleton used to be on display here) and another on the Ghosts of Boscastle by Steve Patterson, author of Cecil Williamson's Book of Witchcraft A Grimoire of the
http://www.the-cauldron.org.uk/thecauldron_subs.html
Museum appears on podcast
You can listen to the podcast which mentions the Museum. Thanks to Peter Laws for this. http://theflicksthatchurchforgot.podomatic.com/
These are the photos for you if you haven't visited for a while or if you're simply missing the Museum...
These photos were taken by Simon Costin, the Director of the Museum about a month or so ago. If you haven't been for a while have a look to remind yourself of the Museum and if you have chance, make the most of our winter opening hours to pay a visit in person.
Tuesday, November 25, 2014
Winter opening times poster
If you're a supporter of the Museum, please display this and make people aware that we are open this winter. If you want a copy emailing to you or a printed version sent to you, please contact the Museum and we will get one to you.
Boscastle is a great winter destination (so says the Guardian!)
Our winter weekend openings are going well and it was nice to get an endorsement from the Guardian! Many thanks to the person who drew this to our attention.
HAD Poetry Competition
Poetry Competition from the organisation Honouring the Ancient Dead (HAD)
Often we find displays of the bones of ancestors in museums
that lack much, if any, consideration of the personhood of the individual on
display. Honouring the Ancient Dead (HAD) never advocates display of ancestors
but recognises that it still happens. Today we are launching a competition to
create a poem to be used as a standard tribute for the ancient dead. Every
museum known to have ancestors on display will be offered the winning poem to
be used as a plaque alongside the display. Additionally, the best local entries
will be presented to the relevant museum – to celebrate the community voice.
Detail can be found on HAD’s website at www.honour.org.uk/?p=1202
Are we one of the world's wackiest Museums?
According to an online article we are one of the ten wackiest Museum's in the world! See the complete list by clicking on this link...
http://matadornetwork.com/trips/liberoachi-voodoos-and-condiments-the-worlds-10-wackiest-museums/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed:%20MatadorNetwork%20(Matador%20Network)&partner=skygrid
http://matadornetwork.com/trips/liberoachi-voodoos-and-condiments-the-worlds-10-wackiest-museums/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed:%20MatadorNetwork%20(Matador%20Network)&partner=skygrid
Thursday, November 13, 2014
Event in April - call for papers
An event has been organised in collaboration with the Museum. More details on tickets etc. to follow. If you would like to submit papers, see this document. If you would like any more details then please contact the Museum. Should be an interesting day...
Read a blog (and see some more photos) of our Halloween event
Cassandra Latham-Jones has written a blog about the event that took place at the Museum in October. There are lots of great photos too.
http://cassandralathamjones.wordpress.com/2014/11/10/all-hallows-gathering/
http://cassandralathamjones.wordpress.com/2014/11/10/all-hallows-gathering/
Fantastic Friends AGM
Saturday was the Friends AGM and it was a very lively and interesting day. Friends of the Museum had the chance to listen to a day of talks, to meet with like minded people and to find out about the future of the Museum of Witchcraft. It was lovely to see so many people there and to know what widespread support the Museum has. There were also lots of changes to the Friends organisation - welcome to the new trustees who will do a great job. The photographs below give you an idea of the talks. If you want to come next year why not join Friends?
The Museum Team tell us about their library favourites
We recently catalogued our 7000th library item! Thanks so much to all the people who have generously donated their books to us to help create one of the most fantastic collection of books on witchcraft, magic and much much more. To commemorate having over 7000 works in our library, the Museum Team have chosen their favourite books and sections of the library.
You can search the library online to see what we have: http://www.museumofwitchcraft.com/library/simplesearch_library.php
If you would like to spend time in the Museum Library when you are next in Boscastle, please contact the Museum to book a visit.
It is hard to pick a favourite thing about the museum
library, each book is a single thread in the complex web of magical
instruction, personal opinion, outrageous views, poetic works that make your
mind sing, artworks that transport you to other realms and academic research
into our magical past, as a sister or brother that partners the museum object
collection.
Those who have used the library will know, it entices you
initially and then just by browsing the shelves you can get drawn to other
paths and mysteries, time being the only constricting factor.
Lesser known are the 147 box files containing a vast array
of occult related magazines, from pamphlets to glossies, it’s worth having a
browse online if there are magazines of the past that you would love to see
again, or maybe have contributed to, we may hold a copy here….
Judith
Since arriving here in April, I have made it my mission to read quite a few books from the library. One of the most interesting was Blood and Mistletoe, a History of the Druids by Ronald Hutton. I hardly knew anything about this subject and was a bit confused about the difference between the Druids of the Ancient Past, those of the Celtic/Welsh tradition which I knew had some association with bards and those Druids who seemed to be linked to Paganism and magic. This book really helped to clear up a lot! It traces the history of Druids from the classical texts and archaeology arguing that the archaeological evidence should really be allowed to speak for itself as the primary sources are so misleading. The book also considers the relationship between Druids and Stonehenge and charts along the way the influential thinkers who have shaped a lot of people's views of this topic. Because of the difficulty of constructing Druids as historical reality, Hutton argues that people have constructed the Druids that they want to believe in. Some people really like Druids and others really dislike them. As a result of this, they have been used as symbols of all that is good and virtuous by some writers and of all that is damnable by others!
Peter
I really like the wide variety of cassettes, videos, CDs and
DVDs we have in the library - many of these items have not yet been catalogued but we plan to make a start soon. Thanks to
the generosity of donors and supporters of the Museum, the library can boast
many occult films including silent films, 40s and 50s classics, avant-garde Japanese cinema
and schlock-horror films.
Some of my
favourite things though are the old cassettes:
wonderful tapes such as ‘Dusty Miller (the Folk Magician) Chats about …
Brown Magic’ (self-released, 1985) who explains aspects of traditional English
earth and lunar magic; hag stones, the ‘out of work’ charm, a thunderbolt
‘money magnet’, and healing stones. We
have a series of fantastic interviews with MoW founder Cecil Williamson on CD,
in which Cecil talks elegantly about a number of issues: his relationship with
Gerald Gardner, Ursula Kemp’s mortal remains, and the joys of running a
Witchcraft Museum, among many others…
I
have also really enjoyed listening to the great music/spoken word collections
in the library collection. Highlights
include: ‘Aleister Crowley: The Gnostic Mass’ – a live recording of the ceremony performed by
the Gnostic Catholic Church in London 1994 (Talisman Tapes) including a spoken
description/commentary and beautiful synth music by Alison Gould and Kenneth J.
Rea. The great fiddler Dave Swarbrick
appears on ‘Pagan Roots: Esbat Music’ (Esbat Music, 1994), and Freya Aswynn,
dedicated priestess of Wodan, is most impressive on ‘Songs of Yggdrasil: Shamanic Chants from the Northern Mysteries’. Any donations from collectors, record labels
and enthusiasts are most welcome!
Joyce
Choosing a favourite book from the library has turned out to
be impossible, so instead I’ve opted for the strangest book I’ve come across.
That wasn’t an easy choice either, but in the end I decided on The
Necronomicon.
Originally a book that existed only in the imagination of
H.P. Lovecraft, encapsulating the maniacal labyrinthine darkness of his Cthulhu
Mythos, by a kind of eerie inevitability it has become real.
The museum’s copy is a handsome, only slightly
sinister-looking, black-bound book, written by the mysterious ‘Simon’, and
inspired by Sumerian and Babylonian magical texts.
It is a testament not only to H.P. Lovecraft’s enduring
significance as a spokesman for our unease about our position in the Universe,
but also to the way we continually reinvent and explore the nature of mythology
and our relationship with the supernatural.
Above all, it is a testament to the role of the book as an
embodiment of knowledge in all its power and danger – and so, I feel, not a bad
choice of a book to sum up the role of the museum’s library!
You can search the library online to see what we have: http://www.museumofwitchcraft.com/library/simplesearch_library.php
If you would like to spend time in the Museum Library when you are next in Boscastle, please contact the Museum to book a visit.
Friday, November 07, 2014
Don't forget we are open this weekend
Remember we are open weekends in November and December. Saturdays and Sundays from 10.30am until 4pm (last entries at 3.30pm) This is a trial and we really want it to be a success. If you can come along and support the Museum with this venture we would be really pleased to welcome you here! Don't be put off by the weather, there are plenty of other businesses open (lovely cafes and shops, the Visitor Centre etc.) so why not visit Boscastle this weekend?
Monday, November 03, 2014
A very busy October 31st!
We had a great day on October 31st, lots of young visitors came to the Museum in lovely costumes.
We were also given a generous donation - a very special, hand carved pumpkin which was lit and left in the Shrine all day.
And last but not least, we had the most amazing visitors! Thanks so much to everyone involved - it was too wonderful to put into words! The music, the atmosphere, the spectacle and the goodwill of all the participants and the audience was amazing. The osses started outside the Museum where they knocked for admission and where an interaction took place between those inside (including the Museum staff) and those outside (see photo below) Then they came in and toured the Museum to bring us luck for the year ahead. Afterwards, quite a crowd gathered and there was music and dancing outside and a sharing of wine, ale and cake! There has been talk of making this an annual event...
Sunday, November 02, 2014
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