Corsham Area Heritage & Information Centre
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                  "Corsham has no match in Wiltshire for the wealth of good houses, and there are a few of really high merit"
                  Sir Nikolaus Pevsner



                  Corsham, Wiltshire

                  With Royal Saxon origins, Corsham features the unique 1668 Schoolroom and Almshouses, Corsham Court (based on a 1582 Elizabethan manor house), and the High Street consisting mostly of properties from the 16th, 17th, and 18th centuries where peacocks wander freely.

                  The town owes its prosperity to the wool trade and quarrying of golden Bath stone, brought to life in the town's heritage centre.

                  Nearby is the village of Box from where stone was quarried from the 8th century. The quarries became the most productive in the world after massive deposits of Bath Stone were discovered when the Tunnel for the Great Western Railway was completed in 1841 by Isambard Kingdom Brunel. Some of his first timid travellers left the train before it entered the long tunnel and rejoined it at the other end!

                  Corsham Area Heritage & Information Centre

                  Arnold House
                  31 High Street
                  Corsham
                  Wiltshire SN13 0EZ

                  Tel: 01249 714660
                  Email:
                  enquiries@corshamheritage.org.uk

                  The Corsham Area Heritage & Information Centre provides a wide range of information, gifts, accommodation booking and travel services including National Express tickets. The Centre has recently undergone a major refurbishment and now has disabled access.


                  Opening hours (January-March 2012):

                  10.00am - 2.00pm    Monday to Friday
                  10.00am - 1.00pm    Saturday.

                  A programme of changing exhibitions relating to aspects of local history runs throughout the year. Admission is free.

                  The Wool Room

                  Picture
                  Set in the downstairs rooms of a clothier’s mediaeval house, this tells the tale of Corsham’s rise in prosperity, based on the spinning of wool for weaving cloth. There are interactive displays suitable for children. By the way, the 17th Century clothier was called William Arnold and he became a major landowner and one of the wealthiest people in Corsham.

                  The Heritage Room

                  Picture
                  Corsham’s second economic boom happened after the engineer Isambard Kingdom Brunel completed the Box Tunnel for the Great Western Railway in 1841. About 2 miles long, the excavation revealed large deposits of limestone (“Bath Stone”) under Box Hill and a vast expansion in underground quarrying took place. These workings were taken over by the Government at the outbreak of WW2 for secure underground ammunition storage as well as underground engineering factories, including an aircraft engine assembly line! In 1956 the Ministry of Defence developed it into a Regional Seat of Government in anticipation of a nuclear war. Home for 4000 personnel it was decommissioned in 1991 and declassified in 2004.


                  Corsham Area Development Trust 2011 | A company limited by guarantee | Registered in England and Wales No. 5890639