The Museum of Policing in Warrington will be opening its doors for the final Open Wednesday event of the year tomorrow, Wednesday 28 August, 10 am to 3 pm
Over the course of the last month, over a thousand people have paid a visit to the museum’s cells.
This week, the museum will open its doors for the final Open Wednesday event of the year on Wednesday 28 August from 10am to 3pm.
Based at Warrington Police Station on Arpley Street, Cheshire’s Museum of Policing is home to a large collection of exhibits and artefacts spanning a long history of policing in the county.
A trip to the Museum includes a chance to hop aboard one of the force’s former squad cars and motorbikes, as well as an opportunity to try on a number of helmets and uniforms previously used by officers. Visitors can expect to find a number of policing artefacts including vehicles, weapons, investigative tools used to tackle crime in Cheshire over the force’s 150-year-plus history.
The Open Wednesdays have also provided an opportunity for visitors to experience what life was like for criminals behind bars, locked up in Victorian-era cells, and hear the story of how one daring criminal even managed to escape them.
For those unable to attend the final Open Wednesday, a Family Open Day will be held on Saturday 14 September, which will include displays by the Search Dogs and the Drone Unit, the Police Band and a range of vehicles to explore.
The museum is an independent charity run by volunteers in cooperation with Cheshire Constabulary and regularly hosts a number of events for everyone including local schoolchildren from across the region to the force’s newest recruits and even retired senior officers.
For more information about the museum, which is funded through public donations, you can visit the Museum of Policing website or call 01606 365803.
You must be logged in to post a comment Login