Just after the London 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games, we set up Sporting Heritage as a vehicle to ensure that all sporting collections – where-ever they were held and whoever they were held by – were protected and supported for the future. We noticed that the formal heritage sector wasn’t switched on to sport, most of the collections were (and still are) held in private hands – by individuals, in sports clubs, and in governing bodies - with people who have amazing subject knowledge, but aren’t always sure how to protect and share their heritage. As a result, loads of these collections – the amazing stories, objects, archives, and history – were at risk of being lost.
Celebrating sporting heritage
Three sporting heritage collections
Here are just three examples of the amazing collections around the country.
More from Sporting Heritage
The heritage we share is diverse and has often been excluded from the formal heritage record. National Sporting Heritage Day (NSHD), and the work we deliver at Sporting Heritage, aims to change that and place sport at the centre of the heritage field, protecting and celebrating these amazing sporting collections for future generations.
Find out more
- Sporting Heritage You Tube channel – loads of content from how to start a sporting heritage journey and look after a collection, to how to expand audiences and develop digital engagement.
- Sporting Heritage Sound Cloud channel – podcasts and personal stories and journeys of sporting heritage.
- Sporting Heritage website – all the information you could need on developing a sporting heritage collection, accessing our grants programme, taking part in our events, and our groundbreaking Sporting Heritage Toolkit!
- Sporting Heritage newsletter – regularly distributes up to date news, advice and information.