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The Leather Museum Walsall

Heartland

master brummie
The making of leather was a long established process where bark was used in the tanning process of hides. Birmingham had an area beside the Rea at Digbeth where tanning was conducted and later there were tanneries in Birmingham for leather making. Walsall became an important centre for leather working especially for saddles and other goods. Associated with this was the ironmongery trade.

At Walsall the Leather Museum in Littleton Street has preserved aspects of this trade. Now Walsall Council want to move the museum to another site and the question to be raised for what purpose do they want for the Littleton Street site?
 
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More from the Express and Star…

“Walsall Council has decided to sell the current Leather Museum building on Littleton Street West to Walsall College so the college can expand its SEND (special educational needs and disabilities) provision on the main town-centre campus. In parallel, the council says it will buy another town-centre building and relocate the museum, pitching it as a “new and improved” offer.”
 
What a load of rubbish. The present site was built in 1891, and part occupied by J. Withers, who made metal items such as spurs and partly by a firm making belts. At a later date it was occupied by Gainsborough handbags, who made bags for M & S.. The new building, that is if one actually emerges, will certainly be smaller, probably more out of the way and possibly owned by someone with a connection to a council member. Incidentally, I wonder if every council member with a connection to SEND and Walsall College removed themselves from voting.The photos below are some I took on a visit in 2017
DSCN0921a.jpgDSCN0926a.jpgDSCN0939a.jpgDSCN0941a.jpgDSCN0942a.jpgDSCN0946a.jpgDSCN0951a.jpg
 
an old building used for a leather museum was perfect..wont be the same if they move to a newer building...ive read what has been written and i cant quite work out if it is the intention to demolish the old leather museum building unless i have missed something..nice photos mike

lyn
 
It does not seem clear Lyn. But undoubtedly the new owners will rip out all the inside at the very least, removing any remaining features. Teh hearths where the spurs, stirrups etc were forged are a feature of the museum. All because it is conveniently next door to the college. To hell with the history.
 
It does not seem clear Lyn. But undoubtedly the new owners will rip out all the inside at the very least, removing any remaining features. Teh hearths where the spurs, stirrups etc were forged are a feature of the museum. All because it is conveniently next door to the college. To hell with the history.
well mike i am not going to disagree with you on that...history counts for very little now

lyn
 
As I read it the new owners will be Walsall College and it will be repurposed to provide facilities for Special Educational Needs and Disabilities. The thinking seems to be that the placing near the college will give SEND children opportunity to “see people in full-time education and actually aspire to be one of those.” There may be many other reasons but you would have to read the council meeting records.
 
First proposed in 2024, the planned relocation is intended to address some of the challenges the council says are facing the venue, including low footfall and high running costs.

Local campaigners believe the decision was pushed through without proper consultation. As an historic property, they say it is not suitable for use as a Send facility and fear it may not be preserved in its current form. Due to the backlash, former council leader Gary Perry u-turned on the proposal earlier this year and removed it from the council’s 2025-26 budget. He said at the time that the discussions were ongoing and decisions about the museum would be taken in collaboration with local people.

Regarding the current museum building, the council spokesperson said: “A high quality Send offer will be delivered from the building. A new building is not planned for the site.”The council previously proposed closing Walsall Leather Museum in 2014 and 2016 but abandoned the plans after a public backlash.
(Museums Association)
 
an old building used for a leather museum was perfect..wont be the same if they move to a newer building...ive read what has been written and i cant quite work out if it is the intention to demolish the old leather museum building unless i have missed something..nice photos mike

Lyn
I saw quite a lot of a small Walsall leather business in the 1950s as a teenager, one which had been established in the 19th century, in purpose built premises just like the one occupied much later by the Museum. Its original product range was essentially bridlery and saddlery but by the time I became acquainted with it it that side of it had long since diminished to bespoke straps for a myriad of purposes (such as those which attached the coach-built body of the upmarket Marmet prams of the time to the great curved springs which were part of their chassis; and items required by the Birmingham gun-trade); and fancy goods like ladies belts, document and writing cases and the like. All supported by similar small manufacturers throughout Walsall who produced buckles, studs, rivets, locks and other items of metalware; and of course the tanneries from further afield, supplying the leather itself, in great rough-edged sheets of various sizes and in a variety of colours to match the ladies' tastes of the time. The workshops were medium sized rooms - not all used by then - with the skilled leatherworkers sitting on tall stools, intent on the cutting and forming and hand-sewing on the long benches in front of them. Almost all of the lived within a few hundred yards of their place of work and in some cases might even have been second or third generation, all devoting their lives to the creation of hand-made products which themselves would sometimes last a lifetime. I still have a few of them myself, all clocking up an age, now, of nearly three-quarters of a century.

I visited the Museum quite few years ago in order to donate a few hand tools retained for the rest of his life by my father-in-law and passed down to my own family - in particular the distinctive skiving knives, those half-moon shaped cutting tools used by every leather worker and probably still used, in modern guise, today. I have only related the above memories which I retain because that visit brought the whole atmosphere of the factory I knew back to life for me, the old, dusty workshops, the skilled men bent over their work, the occasional chatter or laughter, the pervading smell of leather, the working owners always referred to as Mr. Edwin or Mr. Claude or Miss Muriel....... It seemed to me that the Museum was just so "right" as it was (and, at the moment, still is, I assume). I hope that it can remain the same in the future. New premises will never replicate the sort of feeling the current Museum gave me.

(Not exactly the same thing, I know - but the Birmingham experience of Science Museum and Think Tank springs to mind for me. I think they call it "Progress").

Chris
 
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