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In the 1920s, R R Hutchinson,
manager of the Wallingford Westminster Bank, esta blished a small museum
in the Free Library, St Leonard's Square. When he moved away in the
1930s, the museum closed and the contents were given to the Town Council
for safe keeping. In 1974
The Wallingford Historical and Archaeological
Society (TWHAS) was founded.
The society thrived, and the need for a
new museum soon became apparent - a place to display the results of
research, to deposit excavation finds and to collect local artefacts.
TWHAS gained expertise by putting on a series of exhibitions in the Town
Hall (left, whilst actively seeking premises for a permanent museum.
In 1977 Flint House became vacant. The owners, the
Town Council, agreed to lease it to the Workshop For the Disabled
(downstairs) and a Museum (the top two floors). The rent was £1000 per
year each. TWHAS did a
feasibility study on conversion costs, sought
advice from the County Museum on storage and organisation and decided
that the Museum was a viable project but should be a Charitable Trust,
quite separate from TWHAS. At a Public Meeting in November 1978 a
steering committee was appointed - a year later the Trust Deed was
signed and the new Trustees appointed the Management Committee.
Meanwhile, work had begun on
converting Flint House
(pictured here as it was at the time). Central heating was
put in, the whole building was rewired, fire alarms and a security
system were installed, displays were prepared and the rooms were opened
out, which led to the discovery of fine 15th century timber-work. Almost
everything was done by volunteers and the project was funded by a
continuous jumble sale in the guise of a charity shop: The Museum was
due to open on Carnival Day 1980.
But on
May 1st 1980, a serious fire broke out in Flint Cottage, the adjoining
private residence, originally part of the same medieval hall-house. Fire
swept through the common roof-space, destroying the ancient timber roof
and threatening the whole building. It took eight fire engines many
hours to bring it under control – miraculously neither the flint façade
nor the timber framing of the building was damaged. Fortunately, the
fire was contained and doubly fortunately, the old Hutchinson
collection, due to be deposited in the Museum within a few days, had not
yet been moved in. It was a moment of great despondency, but the work of
re-construction began. The roof
was completely rebuilt, sadly not in its original oak but in softwood as
the owners of Flint Cottage were
under-insured. At last, on April 18th 1981, Wallingford Museum opened to
the public. In September the 'offical' opening took place, to the sound
of the guns of the Sealed Knot re-enacting a Civil War skirmish on the
Kinecroft opposite. The photo shows Museum Chairman Stephen Whitwell
(third from left) and the Mayor Bill Revell processing to the Museum
with members of the Sealed Knot for the official opening.
In 1989 history came full circle when the Trustees asked the members of
the TWHAS Committee to take on the responsibility for day-to-day
management of the Museum, a situation which continues today.
For a decade, the Museum staged ever more ambitious
special exhibitions in the
back room (the Norreys Room - the one pictured above!).
The
photo below shows the last of these, the history of Payne and Son,
silversmiths and jewellers, which involved constructing a complete shop.
At this point we realised that now our permanent displays looked dull
and dowdy compared to our special ones, so in 1991, the Committee launched a major fund-raising
campaign to make radical changes to the display areas. The Museum closed
completely while the first stage of this work was undertaken – the total
refurbishment of the main exhibition room (known as the Hutchinson
Room), to provide a series of settings in which changing exhibits would
be displayed. Centred around a paved and cobbled street/courtyard, it
consists of a walk-in shop, with a domestic area and workshop at the
rear, plus a pub area, a peep-show of life in the Workhouse and a
Church/School area.

With this new room completed, the Museum re-opened to the public in May
1993. Almost immediately work began on the Norreys Room to provide a
maze-like series of areas which provide a 'walk through time' - tracing
the early history of the town from Saxon times, through the rise of the
castle, a 'cloister' denoting religious places and events, and ending up
in the 'market place' under the pillars of the 17th century Town Hall.
To enhance the experience, this area was designed without captions –
instead a continuous narration with music and sound effects carries the
visitor through. It also surreptitiously controls the speed of his/her
progression, ensuring that there are no traffic jams in the confined
corridors!
Nearly all this work was done in-house to the Director's
detailed plans (this is his original model for the Norreys Room) by a small team of Museum volunteers, with some professional
assistance for texturing walls and floors. The Norreys Room, complete
with tape commentary voiced by a former BBC announcer, finally opened in
1995, thus completing the refurbishment and creating the Museum on the
first floor as we see it today.
Another ten years passed and then it was time for an even more radical
change - see our Latest News pages. |