As a historic castle and market town on the edge of the Yorkshire Dales, Skipton's a popular tourist spot. When you grow up there, though, and spend your teenage years just weaving around slow-moving coach parties, it's easy to forget that the area holds so much in the way of interest - and hippos. That's where the Craven Museum plays such an important role.
The museum is essentially just one sizeable room. Visitors start at the prehistoric Leeds hippo skull (no, really) and move forward in time by - appropriately - going around the room clockwise. As you'd expect, many of the artefacts on display are industrial and agricultural, but the museum's crowning exhibit sits in the middle of the Early Modern period in a special booth all of its own: a genuine original First Folio of Shakespeare's plays. True to my name, I am something of a fawning fan of the Bard's, and I've come here more than once simply to stand in something approaching awed reverence in front of the tome.
There are some informative notices explaining its journey of ownership, ending with its donation to the museum, and it's worth visiting just for the Folio. But there are other highlights on display, too, such as some beautiful dresses and an old lead ingot engine.
Someone has designed some neat little activities for kids, as well. There's a colouring table and a play-archaeology dig, and at the moment they're running a crowd-sourcing project to identify a mystery artefact found in the area. It's something a little like a five-pronged shoe-horn and there are some great ideas from children on the Post-It note suggestions.
You'd struggle to entertain a class-load of children here for long on a school trip, as much for the reason of limited space as anything else, but if you've got a small family then it should keep the young ones entertained for a little while. It could stand to be more interactive, but given the size of the place and the fact that it's entirely volunteer-run, it's an amazing and fascinating addition to the town and to the area as a whole. read more