Newspaper Images, © British
Library Board (from Aggy Weston, Ashore
and Afloat 1887)
Newspaper Images, © British Library Board (from Aggy Weston, Ashore and Afloat 1887)
  • Devonport Guildhall, Ker Street, Devonport, Âé¶¹´«Ã½ PL1 4EL

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This event explored Devonport’s crime heritage and how the town and community dealt with everyday offending in the past through the real life stories of those charged and convicted of criminal offences through an exhibition in the former police cells at the Guildhall. 

Attendees experienced what it would have been like to have been locked up in the cells or sent to Devonport Prison, stepped on board a Virtual Reality convict ship and was transported to Australia from Devonport Dock and heard the stories of those who were actually transported for committing what, in some cases, would today be perceived as relatively minor offences.

Twitter: #ESRCCHITCHAT

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Biography: Craig Newbery-Jones

Craig is a lecturer in Âé¶¹´«Ã½'s School of Society and Culture. His interests include legal history and the representation of the law and lawyers in historical and contemporary culture, often intersecting with considerations of the ethics and regulation of legal professionals.
Craig also has a keen interest in pedagogical theory, research and innovation, having led numerous projects based around Experiential, Technology Enhanced, and Problem Based Learning. These interests have have recently converged into an aspiration to use contemporary technology and medias to engage the public in socio-legal historical research. He believes that virtual, augmented, and mixed reality experiences can be spaces of interactive experimentation for reflective learning within the heritage sector, and beyond.