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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Sites  





2 Origins  





3 New Postal Museum  





4 Relationship with Royal Mail  





5 See also  





6 References  





7 External links  














Postal Museum, London







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Coordinates: 51°3126N 0°0645W / 51.5240°N 0.1126°W / 51.5240; -0.1126
 

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


The Postal Museum
Anair mail postbox at the Postal Museum
Map
Established2004; 20 years ago (2004)
LocationClerkenwell
London, WC1
United Kingdom
Public transit accessLondon Underground National Rail Farringdon
London Underground Russell Square
Websitepostalmuseum.org

The Postal Museum (formerly the British Postal Museum & Archive) is a postal museum run by the Postal Heritage Trust. It began in 2004 as The British Postal Museum & Archive and opened in Central London as The Postal Museum on 28 July 2017.[1]

Sites[edit]

The Postal Museum operates three sites: The museum at Phoenix Place, London near the Mount Pleasant sorting officeinClerkenwell, a museum store in Loughton, Essex and The Museum of the Post Office in the Community, located about the post office in Blists Hill Victorian Town, Shropshire.[2]

Origins[edit]

The Public Records Act 1838 was the first step in organizing government archives, including the civil service department known then as ‘the Post Office’. This represents the beginnings of what is now The Royal Mail Archive. By 1896 a report concerning the maintenance of Post Office records had been produced and the first archivist was appointed. The Public Records Acts of 1958 and 1967 reinforced the need for the Post Office to keep, catalogue and make its archive records available.

Post Office vehicles in the BPMA's collection.

In 1966, the first National Postal Museum (NPM) was established, in part due to The Phillips Collection of Victorian philately being donated to the nation by Reginald M. Phillips. The museum was opened by the Queen on 19 February 1969, at King Edward Building near St Paul's Cathedral in London. A collection of postal equipment, uniforms, vehicles and much more was developed over the years; far more than could be displayed in the small museum.

In 1998, the King Edward Building was sold, and the NPM closed. The collections were retained and the management of the museum and archive was combined. This was known as the Heritage unit of the Post Office (then renamed Consignia, then Royal Mail Group).

Royal Mail Group decided to transfer the work of this heritage unit to an independent charitable trust, in light of the changing mail market and its own shift from public service to competitive business. This 'Postal Heritage Trust' came into being in April 2004, and was branded as the British Postal Museum & Archive.

From 2004, the BPMA expanded its work into providing a programme of events, exhibitions, education and web resources.[3]

New Postal Museum[edit]

The Postal Museum booth at Spring Stampex 2016 in Islington, London

In February 2016, the BPMA was renamed the Postal Museum,[4] and began building a new museum which opened in 2017 in Clerkenwell, London, near to the Mount Pleasant Mail Centre.[5][6] The museum was expected to cost £26 million to build, and consists of two sections.[7][8] The Postal Museum has opened up to the public a 0.62 miles (1 km) stretch of track in London's Mail Rail, which was the world's first driverless electric railway.[6][9] In the museum section, anticipated attractions include a commemorative stamp that would have been used had Scotland won the 1978 FIFA World Cup, telegrams from the night that the Titanic sank, the childhood stamp album of Freddie Mercury, and an intercepted first edition of Ulysses (banned in the United Kingdom until 1936).[7][8][10]

Relationship with Royal Mail[edit]

The Postal Museum is an independent charity but is strongly linked with Royal Mail Group. The former director of the Postal Museum is Adrian Steel.[11] The Postal Museum receives an annual payment from Royal Mail for managing the Royal Mail archive. Although the archive is part of the Postal Museum, because it is a public record, the ultimate responsibility for it lies with Royal Mail. The records have been given official designated status which means that they are recognised as nationally important, and are available to researchers to consult.[12]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "The Postal Museum's Opening Date Announced". The Postal Museum. 7 June 2017. Retrieved 21 January 2018.
  • ^ "Visit Us". Postal Museum. Retrieved 10 July 2023.
  • ^ "British Postal Museum & Archive". British Postal Museum & Archive. Archived from the original on 6 December 2014. Retrieved 11 July 2012.
  • ^ "Post & Go to change following The Postal Museum brand launch". The British Postal Museum & Archive.
  • ^ "Work begins on London's new Postal Museum".
  • ^ a b India Ashok. "London's vintage Mail Rail to open to public as part of new Postal Museum in 2017". International Business Times UK.
  • ^ a b "New Postal Museum set to revive pains of Scotland football team's Argentine trip".
  • ^ a b Lizzie Edmonds (4 February 2016). "New Postal Museum is a scrapbook of British history". Evening Standard.
  • ^ "Firm's first class contract at London postal museum".
  • ^ "Freddie Mercury's 'priceless' stamp collection to be celebrated". The Guardian. Retrieved 9 July 2023.
  • ^ "Nerves of Steel" by Andrew Neish in British Philatelic Bulletin, Vol. 51, No. 5, January 2014, pp. 144–147.
  • ^ "Collections". The Postal Museum.
  • External links[edit]

    51°31′26N 0°06′45W / 51.5240°N 0.1126°W / 51.5240; -0.1126


    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Postal_Museum,_London&oldid=1181784625"

    Categories: 
    Museums established in 2004
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