The Bowes Museum was purpose-built to house the collection of John and Josephine Bowes. The museum is built in the style of a French
chateau, in extensive grounds, and is by far the largest building in the town. It contains paintings by El Greco, Francisco Goya, Canaletto, Jean-Honoré Fragonard and François Boucher, together with a sizable collection of decorative art, ceramics, textiles, tapestries, clocks and costumes, as well as older items from local history. It is famous for the Silver Swan automaton, which played every day at 2pm until it seized up during the
2020 COVID-19 Lockdown, it is currently undergoing repairs. The Witham Arts Centre, on the Horse Market, presents a variety of events, including drama, cinema, music, spoken word and children's events, as well as being the town's visitor information centre. The Barnard Castle Meet is an annual carnival festival, held on the second bank holiday weekend in May, the schools' summer half-term week. The Meet, as it is known locally, grew from the North East Cyclists' Meet, dating back to 1885. Since the early 1900s, the town has staged a carnival and grand procession through the town centre on the bank holiday Monday. There are around twenty separate events that the Meet Committee asserts 'reach every corner of the community'. In recent years, the committee has staged its own music event, showcasing local and national talent on the Sunday and Monday, with all technical and musical support from Teesdale Community Resources (TCR). The TCR Hub is a community centre on the edge of the town, with a wide range of indoor and outdoor activities. The Barnard Castle Band, founded in 1860, is a
brass band, based in the town, known outside the area as a result of the march
Barnard Castle by
Goff Richards. ==Notable people== •
George Brown – missionary and ethnographer •
Anne Fine – children's writer. Twice Whitbread Prize winner •
Arthur Henderson – Winner of Nobel Peace prize (1934). Former MP for Barnard Castle and first Labour cabinet minister •
David Harper - BBC TV Antiques Presenter •
Glenn Hugill – television presenter and producer •
David Jennings – composer •
Ian Usher – traveller, adventurer, writer and speaker. Sold "entire life" on eBay in 2008
Former residents •
Joshua Harold Burn, 1942, Emeritus Professor of Pharmacology at Oxford University •
Bob Chatt, footballer for
Aston Villa •
Siobhan Fahey, singer/songwriter from Bananarama/Shakespears Sister lived here for a short time as a child •
Hannah Hauxwell, English farmer who was the subject of several television documentaries •
William Hutchinson, 18th-century historian •
Roderick Murchison, President of both the Royal Geological and the
Royal Geographical Societies •
Cyril Northcote Parkinson, writer and inventor •
Arthur Riddell, third Catholic
Bishop of Northampton •
Henry Witham,
geologist and
philanthropist ==References==