World of Glass, St Helens explained

Location:Chalon Way East, St Helens, WA10 1BX, England
Coordinates:53.4501°N -2.7349°W
Type:Museum and visitor centre
Collections:Pilkington collection; St Helens history collection
Collection Size:7,000
Parking:On site

The World of Glass is a local museum and visitor centre in St Helens, Merseyside, England. The museum is dedicated to the local history of the town and borough primarily through the lens of the glass industry but also looking at other local industries.[1] [2] [3] [4]

The World of Glass was founded in 2000 and is an amalgamation of the former Pilkington Glass and St Helens Borough Council collections. The purpose-built premises was constructed adjacent to the Pilkingtons glassworks and the stretch of the St Helens Canal known as the "Hotties".[5]

The World of Glass was named as England's Best Small Visitor Attraction (2006).[6]

History

In the early 1990s, Pilkingtons undertook the £1 million restoration of the Grade II*-listed Pilkington's Jubilee Cone building, a brick cone structure built in 1887 to house the first ever continuous glass making furnace.[7] Following the restoration, Pilkingtons floated the idea of utilising now redundant adjacent factory space (known locally as "The Hotties") as a museum for its historic glass collection. With subsequent interest from the Borough Council looking for somewhere to host their collection of local historical artefacts, the centre was funded through a National Heritage Lottery Fund contribution of £8,385,000 and European support in the form of Objective One and RECHAR II grants totalling £2,240,000 in addition to other grants.[7]

The £14 million visitor centre was opened in March 2000 in a ceremony attended by the first chairman of the World of Glass and former chairman of Pilkington Glass Sir Antony Pilkington, the Mayor of St Helens Councillor Patricia Jackson as well as St Helens R.F.C. players and other dignitaries and special guests including local school children.[8] [9]

Museum and visitor centre

The museum and visitor centre comprises:

Currently the museum holds a total of over 7,000 artefacts.[12]

The museum has two main galleries - the Glass Roots Gallery and the Earth into Light Gallery. The first is concerned with the history of glass, its role in everyday life, and contains artefacts that date back as far as Ancient Egypt. The second tells the story of the growth of the town of St Helens as it moved from relative insignificance to become a world leader in glassmaking.[13]

There are live glassblowing demonstrations daily and visitors can try the art of glassblowing on one of their courses.[14] The Victorian furnace and underground tunnels of the world's first regenerative glass making furnace, built in 1887 by William Windle Pilkington, can also be explored at the visitor centre.[1]

There is an artisan gift shop and a café which looks out over the stretch of the St Helens Sankey Canal known as the Hotties.[15]

The Manchester Airport chandelier

Since 2008 the World of Glass has been home to one of four chandeliers, restored by David Malik & Son, which originally hung in the main hall of Manchester Airport.[16] With 1,300 clear, smoked grey and amethyst lead glass droplets, individually blown by master craftsman Bruno Zanetti and weighing two tons, each chandelier was commissioned at a cost of £3,000 in the 1960s but would now cost more than £250,000.[17]

The Clare Island Lighthouse optic

Off the west coast of Ireland, Clare Island Lighthouse was decommissioned in 1965 after almost 160 years' service.[18] The lighthouse optic, made in 1913 by Chance Brothers of Birmingham, found a new home at the Pilkington Glass Museum and then the World of Glass.[19]

The Clare Island Lighthouse itself was transformed into an upmarket guesthouse.[20]

St Helens library

A brand-new lending library for St Helens, provided by St Helens Council, opened at the World of Glass in September 2020. Occupying space on both the ground floor and mezzanine level, the lending library is for both children and adults, complete with more than 18,000 books.[21]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Koncienzcy. Rebecca. 20 January 2018. Why you need to visit World of Glass Museum. 5 July 2021. Liverpool Echo. en.
  2. News: 16 January 2016. Sutton Manor colliery: What happened to the miners?. en-GB. BBC News. 5 July 2021.
  3. Web site: Molyneux. Jess. 6 June 2021. Man who first brought glass making to St Helens. 4 July 2021. Liverpool Echo. en.
  4. Harris. J. R.. 1 June 1968. Origins of the St Helens Glass Industry. Northern History. 3. 1. 105–117. 10.1179/nhi.1968.3.1.105. 0078-172X.
  5. Web site: World of Glass 3DReid. 4 July 2021. Archello. en.
  6. Web site: 20 May 2006. Merseyside's men of iron the top tourist attraction. 21 July 2021. Liverpool Echo. en.
  7. Web site: 5 October 2000. World of Glass by Geoffrey Reid Associates. 4 July 2021. The Architects' Journal. en.
  8. Web site: Sir Antony Pilkington. 21 July 2021. telegraph.co.uk.
  9. Web site: Glittering debut for World of Glass. 21 July 2021. Lancashire Telegraph. en.
  10. Web site: Pilkington Glass Museum, Prescot Road, St. Helens. 5 July 2021. Royal Armouries collections. en.
  11. Book: Hudson. Kenneth. The Directory of Museums & Living Displays. Nicholls. Ann. 18 June 1985. Springer. 978-1-349-07014-5. en.
  12. Web site: pilkington glass museum. 4 July 2021. sunrisespecialservices.com.
  13. Web site: The World of Glass – ERIH. 21 July 2021. erih.net. de.
  14. Web site: 26 January 2018. World of Glass, St Helens. 4 July 2021. Nearly There Yet? - Things to do with the kids in Liverpool and beyond. en.
  15. Web site:
    • Temporarily Closed* The World of Glass
    . 4 July 2021. Visit Liverpool. en-GB.
  16. Web site: Restoration of Venini Chandeliers. 17 August 2021. David Malik & Son.
  17. Web site: 20 April 2010. Museum houses airport's chandelier. 17 August 2021. Manchester Evening News. en.
  18. Web site: Clare Island Lighthouse: 5 Things You Didn't Know. 31 August 2021. Great Lighthouses of Ireland.
  19. Web site: Clare Island lighthouse optic made by Chances Brothers, 1913, displayed in the Pilkington Glass Museum @ChanceTrust Glass museum, Lighthouse, Island lighthouse. 31 August 2021. Pinterest. en.
  20. Web site: Clare Island Lighthouse. 31 August 2021. Great Lighthouses of Ireland.
  21. Web site: Council. St Helens. St.Helens Council. 5 July 2021. sthelens.gov.uk.