Susan D.
Yelp
The York Castle Museum was next on our trip to the U.K. This particular musem was founded in the 1930s and is located in prison buildings built in the 18th century. The prison was built on the site of York Castle, built by William the Conquerer in 1068. It shows how people used to live by displaying thousands of household objects and rooms. It even has a recreated Victorian street named Kirkgate, after the museum's founder.
I couldn't make up my mind which exhibit I like best, the Sixties or the Prisons. The Sixties exhibit was particularly awesome. Anyone who knows me knows I like vintage and retro clothes (although I'm not sure I wanna go that retro). I loved the art, fashion, record players, Beatles singles, cars (gotta love the original Mini!). And the music? Hey, I grew up in the 1990s. You know--grunge, alt-country, Gin Blossoms, Nirvana, Pearl Jam. But I loved all the Beatles' and Stones' records and discovering how pop music and pirate radio (great movie, BTW) persuaded the BBC to launch Radio 1, when the Beatles dominated the world.
And yet on the other hand, I also loved seeing the York Castle Prison history exhibit too! I've got this almost Dickensian fascination with prisons--at once fascinated and repulsed by them. The old Castle was at times a women's and a debtor's prison. The prison system was brutal and crooked, and yet of course absolutely necessary. I got to "meet" their most notorious prisoner, the legendary highwayman Dick Turpin. The Prison also highlights the last woman to be burnt at the stake and still maintains an active prisoner database.
All in all, this was a pretty cool place to visit.