Cynthia is 75 today. After Holy Communion at the Minster we are joined by family members at our hotel before a visit to the Castle Museum followed by early bird dinner.
YORK MINSTER
The Third Sunday of Lent
HOLY COMMUNION (Book of Common Prayer)
The Order of Service may be found on page 294 of the Book of Common Prayer. The collect and readings are those given for the Third Sunday of Lent, page 133.
The Collect
We beseech thee, Almighty God, look upon the hearty desires of thy humble servants, and stretch forth the right hand of thy Majesty, to be our defence against all our enemies; through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.
Wednesday 10 March
07.30 Matins and Holy Communion (Zouche Chapel)
12.30 Holy Communion, BCP, (
17.15 Evensong sung by the Minster Choir (Quire)
19.30
York Castle Museum
York Castle Museum is one of Britain's leading museums of everyday life. It shows how people used to live by displaying thousands of household objects and by recreating rooms, shops, streets - and even prison cells.
It is best known for its recreated Victorian street, Kirkgate, which combines real shop fittings and stock with modern sound and light effects, to evoke an atmosphere of Victorian Britain.
The street was named after the museum's founder, Dr John L. Kirk, a North Yorkshire country doctor who collected everyday objects and wanted to keep them safe for future generations.
The museum's room settings include a Victorian parlour, an 1850s Moorland cottage, Jacobean and Georgian dining rooms, a 1940s kitchen and a 1950s front room.
Our grooviest gallery, The Sixties, explores the music, fashion and everyday life of this exciting decade.
Elsewhere are displays of historic toys, fashion, armour, weapons, tools, printing presses, cooking utensils, farming equipment and much more.
The museum's past as two prison buildings is explored in York Castle Prison, where visitors come face to face with ex-prisoners including highwayman Dick Turpin, who was hanged in 1739 for horse stealing.
Conditions in the overcrowded prison were harsh and brutal and the real stories of the prisoners and staff are told in sometimes gruesome detail.
Turpin spent his last six months in the Debtors' Prison, which was built in 1701-5, and today houses half of the museum's displays. The other half of the museum was originally the Female Prison, built in 1780-83.
The museum, which opened in 1938, was named after the former York Castle, which stood on the site.
26 Coppergate
York
YO1 9NR
01904 644330
Relax in our spacious ground floor restaurant and
enjoy morning coffee, lunch or dinner,
whilst watching the world go by in the Historic City of York.
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