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You can
find the Dorman Museum on Linthorpe Road right next to Albert Park. It
has been extended and refurbished to add a number of new exciting
galleries with diverse themes from local history to astronomy. A large
purpose built education suite, temporary exhibition gallery and on site
store have also been added to the original building.
The museum was officially opened on the 1st of July
1904, by the Colonel in Chief of the Yorkshire Regiment, as the Dorman
Memorial Museum. It was presented to the town by Sir Arthur Dorman as
a memorial to his son George Lockwood Dorman, and others of the Yorkshire
Regiment who lost their lives during the South African wars of 1899-1902.
The Dorman Museum is built of red brick and terracotta
with an ornamental copper domed tower, which has become one of Middlesbrough’s
landmarks.
J.Mitchell Bottomley, Son and Welford were the architects commissioned
to design the purpose built museum.
Although the museum was opened in 1904 it’s history
actually dates back to the late 1860’s when members of the Cleveland
Literary and Philosophical Society Field Club gave various objects and
specimens to create a museum at their premises on Corporation Road.
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