The National Railway Museum in York has appointed Paddy McNulty as Railway Partnerships Manager.
In this newly-created role, Paddy will work with railway partners and the heritage railway sector, to develop and strengthen relationships and to act as the day-to-day contact for existing borrowers and for new loan enquiries.
Paddy will work across the museum’s professional teams including curatorial, registration, conservation, engineering, and rail operations to ensure a coordinated approach.
Enjoy more Steams Days Magazine reading every month.
Click here to subscribe & save.
An experienced heritage professional, Paddy will develop constructive relationships with current and potential borrowers and will give advice to borrowers as well as assessing new loan requests.
Paddy said: “I am delighted to join the Science Museum Group in the run-up to Vision 2025 which promises to bring transformational changes to the National Railway Museum and Locomotion.
“This new role has been created to improve communication with our borrowers and I aim to nurture these important relationships and to celebrate the National Collection.
“Covid-willing, I plan to be as proactive as possible and I want to get out to meet as many partners and borrowers and to visit as many heritage railways as possible.”
The Science Museum Group cares for an internationally significant national collection of 275 railway locomotives, carriages and wagons, many of which are on loan to borrowers across the UK.
Paddy has worked in the cultural heritage sector for over 20 years. In 2014 he established his own cultural heritage consultancy and he has extensive experience of partnership development.
He was the national museum lead for the Arts Council England-funded Museum-University Partnership Initiative and provided strategic, operational, and business consultancy services to a wide range of museum and heritage organisations including – Kirkaldy Testing Museum, Coombe Mill, The British Museum and Bath Preservation Trust.
A regular visitor to the National Railway Museum from a young age, Paddy has a keen interest in railway heritage and has family connections to the North York Moors Historical Railway Trust where his late step-father was a founding member.