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Orkney Wireless Museum

1983 establishments in ScotlandCharities based in ScotlandCommunications in ScotlandEngvarB from April 2019Kirkwall
Military communications of the United KingdomMilitary electronicsMuseums established in 1983Museums in OrkneyScience museums in ScotlandScotland in World War IITelecommunications museums in the United KingdomWorld War II museums in the United Kingdom
Orkney Wireless Museum exterior2008
Orkney Wireless Museum exterior2008

The Orkney Wireless Museum in Kirkwall, Orkney, Scotland, houses a collection of domestic and military wireless equipment. It developed from the private collection of the late Jim MacDonald from St Margaret's Hope and marks the importance of wireless communications in Orkney during World War II.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Orkney Wireless Museum (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Orkney Wireless Museum
Junction Road,

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Wikipedia: Orkney Wireless MuseumContinue reading on Wikipedia

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Latitude Longitude
N 58.984444444444 ° E -2.9602777777778 °
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Orkney Wireless Museum

Junction Road 1
KW15 1LB
Scotland, United Kingdom
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Orkney Wireless Museum exterior2008
Orkney Wireless Museum exterior2008
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St Magnus Cathedral
St Magnus Cathedral

St Magnus Cathedral dominates the skyline of Kirkwall, the main town of Orkney, a group of islands off the north coast of mainland Scotland. It is the oldest cathedral in Scotland, and the most northerly cathedral in the United Kingdom, a fine example of Romanesque architecture built for the bishops of Orkney when the islands were ruled by the Norse Earls of Orkney. It is owned not by the church, but by the burgh of Kirkwall as a result of an act of King James III of Scotland following Orkney's annexation by the Scottish Crown in 1468. The cathedral has its own dungeon. People accused of witchcraft in Orkney from 1594-1708 were usually incarcerated in the church, with their trials also held here. Construction began in 1137, and it was added to over the next 300 years. The first bishop was William the Old, and the diocese was under the authority of the Archbishop of Nidaros in Norway. It was for Bishop William that the nearby Bishop's Palace was built. Before the Reformation, the cathedral was presided over by the Bishop of Orkney, whose seat was in Kirkwall. Today, it is a parish church of the Church of Scotland (with a Presbyterian system of Church governance), but remains consecrated grounds and place of worship within the Roman Catholic Church with occasional Catholic services taking place. The congregation of St Magnus Cathedral is now (since 1 October 2024) part of Orkney Islands Church of Scotland - a single ecclesiastical parish staffed by a team ministry.