Galleries of Justice Museum
High Pavement
Lace Market
Nottingham
Nottinghamshire
NG1 1HN
England
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info@galleriesofjustice.org.uk
Telephone
0115 952 0555
Fax
0115 993 9828
The Galleries of Justice Museum is a heritage site housed in the old Shire Hall in Nottingham’s Lace Market and made up of a range of Victorian courtrooms, an 18th century prison and Edwardian Police station. For centuries citizens of the local community were locked up in the prison, stripped of their civil liberties in the courtroom and sometimes lost their lives, on the gallows of the front steps.
Venue Type:
Museum, Historic house or home, Heritage site
The Unknown Oscar Wilde
In 1895 Oscar Wilde stood in the dock at Bow Street’s Magistrates Court on charges of ‘committing indecent acts’. He was later tried at the Old Bailey, found guilty and sentenced to two years’ imprisonment. This exhibition tells the story of Irish poet and play-writer Oscar Wilde whose literary success was cut short when he was charged with acts of gross indecency. The exhibition explores the literary work of Oscar Wilde, the trials, his life in prison, and his prison reform work including the poem ‘The Ballad of Reading Gaol’.
Centred around the original Bow Street Dock, where Oscar was charged and sent to trial, the exhibition will tell the story of Irish poet and play-writer Oscar Wilde whose literary success was cut short when he was charged and sentenced at the Bow Street Court.
Come and stand in the Bow Street Dock where Oscar Wilde stood and see his original cell door!
Suitable for
Admission
Free with admission
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