21
May 2024

Saving London's Museums and Galleries in WWII

Welcome to The Arts Society Eastbourne
Tuesday, May 21, 2024 - 14:00
East Dean & Friston Village Hall,
Village Green Lane, East Dean Eastbourne BN20 0DJ
Online Event

Packing up the Nation: Saving London's Museums and Gallering in the Second World War

This is the gripping and sometimes hilarious story of how a band of heroic curators and eccentric custodians saved Britain's national heritage during our Darkest House.  As Hitler's forces gathered on the other side of the Channel to threaten these islands, men and women from London's national museums, galleries and archives forged extraordinary plans to evacuate their collections to safety.  Utilising country houses from Buckinghamshire to Cumbria, tube tunnels, Welsh mines and Wiltshire quarries, a dedicated team of unlikely heroes packed up their greatest treasures in a race against time during the sweltering summer of 1939, dispatching them throughout the country on a series of secret wartime adventures, retold in this talk.

THE ARTS SOCIETY ACCREDITED LECTURER

Dr Caroline Shenton

Dr Caroline Shenton is an archivist and historian. She was formerly Director of the Parliamentary Archives in London, and before that was a senior archivist at the National Archives. Her book The Day Parliament Burned Down won the Political Book of the Year Award in 2013 and Mary Beard called it ‘microhistory at its absolute best’. Its acclaimed sequel, Mr Barry’s War, about the rebuilding of the Palace of Westminster, was a Book of the Year in 2016 for The Daily Telegraph and BBC History Magazine and was described by Lucy Worsley as "a real jewel, finely wrought and beautiful". Caroline was Political Writer in Residence at Gladstone’s Library in 2017, has appeared at the Cheltenham, Hay and Henley literary festivals and on BBC radio and TV. Caroline’s third book, National Treasures, will tell the extraordinary and sometimes hilarious stories behind the saving of London’s art and museum collections in World War Two.