Two private museums came into being from the mid-nineteenth century in Cirencester, and both were the result of the increasing quantity of Roman artifacts coming to light as the town developed. In 1856 the Bathurst family of
Cirencester Park built a museum (still extant but no longer a museum) on Tetbury Road to house the two Roman Mosaics (Hunting Dogs and Spring Mosaics) that had recently been found under Dyer Street. Later
Wilfred Cripps, a member of a prosperous Cotswold wool merchant family, with his wife Helena, began collecting some of the many Roman items that were being found, and in 1889 built an extension to their substantial home on Thomas Street to house them. The gradual expansion of housing to the south of the town centre, onto areas that had been undisturbed since Roman times, was one source of material. Alongside this, there were the works needed for the Railway, which arrived in 1841 and an on-going process of installing drainage, water supply, gaspipes and later electricity supplies, each of which required ditches which cut through the archaeological layers and brought more finds to light.
A Public Museum The two collections were finally combined in 1938, the result of 80 years of collecting by the two families, in a newly built museum constructed in the grounds of Abberley House. As well as donating the contents of the two collections, the successor members of the Cripps and Bathurst families also donated the new site to Cirencester Urban District Council, who undertook to build the by building at a cost of nearly £4,000, with display cases paid for by a grant from the
Carnegie Trust. The next big expansion was when it was gifted to
Cotswold District Council and re-opened on 26 November 1974 by the
Duke of Gloucester, Further refurbishments took place as part of the 'Corinium Project' in 2002-2004 following a successful Heritage Lottery grant and other funding. The early galleries were redeveloped as a capital project called 'Stone Age to Corinium' in 2018- 2020, following another successful
National Lottery Heritage Fund grant with generous donations and other grant funding. The museum has a collection of 2nd- to 4th-century
Roman mosaic floors and sculptural carvings, as well extensive displays of Roman objects, large and small. Throughout the museum, there are displays covering prehistory across the Cotswolds, the
Iron Age including objects from the Iron Age hillfort at
Bagendon, an Anglo-Saxon gallery which largely profiles the rich objects unearthed at the Anglo-Saxon burial ground at Butler's Field in
Lechlade. The medieval gallery explores the medieval
Cirencester Abbey with the rise of the
wool trade featuring prominently in later galleries. ==Gallery==