Gold Hill Museum

Gold Hill Museum 8 light & airy modern galleries on two floors set in two historic cottages at the top of Gold Hill. Once Sun and Moon Inn, catering for market traders.

Gold Hill Museum, volunteer-run, at the top of Gold (originally perhaps Guild) Hill made famous by Ridley Scott's Hovis advert. Lively local history talks and attractive exhibitions featuring Prehistory, Roman, Saxon, traditional domestic bygones, Dorset buttons, fine lace and costumes, Dorset's oldest fire engine, World War memorabilia, and unique Byzant from water-gathering ceremony. Dolls' hous

es and activities for children. Wildlife-friendly garden overlooks Hardy's Blackmore Vale. Normally open daily, April - end October 10.30-4.30. but please check our website during pandemic. Free entry; donations welcome

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19/05/2026
From West Orchard, Dorset to Myponga, South Australia
01/05/2026

From West Orchard, Dorset to Myponga, South Australia

Alongside the temporary exhibition following the documentary trail of the Tomkins family’s 1853 emigration is the story of the redoubtable Elizabeth Hunt (nee Lemon) from West Orchard, researched and written by Dave Hardiman. There are parallels in the stories of both families, confirming that lif...

Free temporary exhibition based on original documents tracing the application of Shaftesbury man Job Tomkins for assiste...
24/04/2026

Free temporary exhibition based on original documents tracing the application of Shaftesbury man Job Tomkins for assisted passages in 1853 for his young family to start a new life in Sydney Australia

The story of Dorset unfortunates like the Tolpuddle Martyrs, deported as convicts to Australia in the 1830s, is well known. A more obscure Shaftesbury ne’er-do-well, Elijah Upjohn, transported at the age of 16, achieved some kind of fame in 1880 by deputising for the hangman at the ex*****on of th...

01/04/2026

A new exhibition at Gold Hill Museum is shedding light on the lives of Shaftesbury area residents who left Dorset for Australia in the mid-Victorian period in search of steadier work, better pay and a more secure future.

The display focuses first on Jobe Tompkins, whose family lived at Brick Hill, now Church Hill, in Enmore Green, when the area was still part of Motcombe Parish. Rather than telling the story in broad terms, the exhibition follows his family through census records, family details and the paperwork that led to their departure.

What makes the display compelling is the way it shows the process step by step. Papers in the case trace the family’s application from the first request for forms in March 1853 through approval, payment for the passage and the regulations issued before they left. Although the exhibition says the process took only two months, the sequence of documents gives a strong sense of how formal and uncertain it must have felt.

One detail stands out. Jobe’s application was first rejected because his daughters were under eight and because children had recently died on voyages to Australia. That small piece of information brings home just how risky the journey could be. The application was later accepted.

The exhibition keeps drawing the story back to places local visitors will know. Jobe is linked to Enmore Green and St James. His second wife, Elizabeth Burt, came from Semley. Those details help root a huge life change in familiar ground.

The voyage itself is brought to life, too. The family left Southampton on the 10th of July 1853 and arrived in Port Jackson on the 12th of October after three months at sea. During the crossing, a baby, George, was born just two weeks before the family landed.

Visitors can also learn more about the Ellenborough, the vessel that carried emigrants to Australia. The exhibition says it was a tine-built wooden ship and later served as a floating isolation hospital in Southampton. An image of emigrants aboard ship helps visitors imagine what that long passage may have felt like.

The exhibition also steps back and explains the wider reasons behind assisted emigration. One panel says Australia needed labourers to help build towns and roads at a time when poverty in England was rising. That means the display is not only about one family but about the forces that pushed and pulled people from this part of Dorset to the other side of the world.

Its strength lies in the records themselves. A census entry, a letter, a rejection and an approval build a picture slowly and powerfully. The exhibition does not stop with the Tompkins family either. It also points visitors towards the stories of William Sims, Elizabeth Lemon and the Upjohn family, widening the picture of 19th century emigration from the Shaftesbury area.

The temporary exhibition upstairs at Shaftesbury’s Gold Hill Museum, The Tompkins Family Emigration Papers, is on display until the end of June.

26/03/2026

Shaftesbury Abbey officially opens at noon with the traditional service and blessing held because the site is consecrated ground. The Reverend Mary Ridgewell will officiate, and the Shaftesbury Community Choir will sing the special piece composed by the late Nick Crump.
You may recognise the tune, because the musical notes also feature in Alfred’s on-air jingle, which Nick wrote too.

You are welcome to go along to this traditional event as the tourism season begins.
Gold Hill Museum also opens on Saturday and will remain open through until the 1st of November.

26/02/2026

The bells, the bells – no, they’re not working. We’ve had several messages from Alfred listeners that, apparently, the town hall bell has been on the blink for several days, and we’ve not even noticed. Shame on us. Possibly because on the hour, every hour, we play a recording of the town hall bells as a timecheck and heard it in the background and thought everything was OK.*. *feeble 'get out of jail excuse'

Anyway, we contacted the town council to find out what’s happening. They are aware that the bells are not chiming. You’d hope they would be, since they’re right underneath. They say they are awaiting a service, which is bad news for people who time their day by the hourly chime in the town centre. But if you’re on nights and live above a shop, it’s probably like Christmas has come early... without the bells.

Address

1-2 Gold Hill
Shaftesbury
SP78JW

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