Staffordshire History Centre
Staffordshire History Centre open
We are thrilled to announce that the new Staffordshire History Centre is now open.
The new £8.7 million Staffordshire History Centre project has been delivered by Staffordshire County Council and funded by The National Lottery Heritage Fund with a grant of £4,858,699.
Opening times
Staffordshire History Centre
Tuesday to Saturday 10am - 4 pm
Research Room
Tuesday to Friday 10am - 4pm
3rd Saturday of the month 10am - 2pm
Visit our website for more information and details on how to book a Research Room visit the Staffordshire History website
National Lottery funding secured for Staffordshire History Centre
Keep up to date with all the latest news about the Staffordshire History Centre Project on our microsite: Staffordshire History Centre
Over a thousand years of Staffordshire’s history is to be brought to life in an exciting new heritage project thanks to National Lottery funding.
Bringing together three incredible collections, from the Staffordshire and Stoke on Trent Archive Service, the County Museum and the William Salt Library, the project will create exciting and imaginative ways to connect Staffordshire people and their stories.
Staffordshire County Council and its partner the William Salt Library Trust, has received a National Lottery Heritage Fund grant of £3,964,000 towards the Staffordshire History Centre project.
Made possible by money raised by National Lottery players, the project will include an extension to the existing Staffordshire Record Office on Eastgate Street in Stafford incorporating the William Salt Library. The Library will be restored and will retell the story of the building as well as William Salt and his collection. A modern glazed link between the Library and the record office will create a new entrance and permanent exhibition space to showcase the collections.
In addition to modern reading areas, and research labs the centre will also allow people to discover more about their family or local history by visiting exhibitions, taking part in events and family activities.
Extra strong rooms will provide space for a further 55 years of collections and a new learning offer will be created for schools with courses for students and adult learners. The centre will be supported by a programme of touring exhibitions and targeted projects to reach all communities across the county.
Commenting on the award, Victoria Wilson, Cabinet Member for Communities and Culture at Staffordshire County Council said: “We are all thrilled with the funding award which will allow us to preserve and promote the wonderful history of our great county and people.
“We’re incredibly proud of our history and amazing collections, and we want to be able to share them and be able to protect them for future generations to enjoy. Not only will the project help to get more people interested in our history but it will also give us a brand-new heritage attraction which will support the recovery of Stafford town centre.”
Staffordshire Archives and Heritage collections are nationally important stretching back over 1000 years. The archives are designated outstanding including rare items such as Anglo-Saxon charters confirming the foundation of Burton Abbey and a letter written on the eve of the American revolution.
The museum collections include the Douglas Hayward puppet collection and carriage collection both of national significance. The William Salt Library is an outstanding rare book and manuscript collection amassed by Victorian collector William Salt whose family originated in Stafford. The Georgian Library building held the collection for over 100 years and has its own history as a fine town house, a doctor’s surgery and a shop before becoming a Library.
Mithra Tonking, Chair of the William Salt Library Trust added: “The Trustees are delighted by the National Lottery Heritage Fund’s generous grant towards the creation of the Staffordshire History Centre.
“The project will see the development of a fascinating new town centre attraction, preserves and creates a new future for our much loved historic building and will make our unique library collection better known and more widely available.”
The total cost of the project is £7.1m with match funding of £3.184m already raised by the partnership including Staffordshire County Council funding, grants, donations from local organisations and Friends, and in-kind contributions from volunteers.
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