The new Postal
Museum will provide
access to the BPMA’s unique collections of 400 years of postal, social and
design history, including photographs, posters, vehicles, pillar boxes,
employment records of millions of people and a world-class stamp collection.
Under a plan endorsed by the Government, the new centre will
be established at Calthorpe House, on London ’s Mount Pleasant site, where
the country’s oldest mail centre is located. It is close to the existing home
of the BPMA at Freeling House, which has very limited space for exhibitions and
displays.
Royal Mail Group will grant a lease of 999 years for
Calthorpe House, a property which will provide a secure foundation for the BPMA
once redeveloped and extended. Agreements have been signed with Royal Mail and
Post Office Ltd for a £6m long term, low interest loan to fund the conversion
of Calthorpe House to meet the basic needs of the organisation. In addition,
Royal Mail and POL are providing other support, including a £500,000 grant.
A fundraising campaign by the BPMA will be launched shortly
to raise the remaining funds required to create a state of the art museum and
visitor facility. The BPMA is an independent charity set up in 2004 to care for
two significant collections: The Royal Mail Archive and the collections of the former
National Postal Museum .
It is the BPMA’s mission to increase public access to these collections, making
the story they tell of communication, industry and innovation accessible to
everyone.
The new centre will allow the BPMA to exhibit objects from its
fascinating museum collection, which is currently held in storage. It will also
include educational facilities for visiting schools.
Donald Brydon, Royal Mail Group’s Chairman said: “These plans will give our postal heritage a
world-class home. The history of Royal Mail is a key part of the history of
postal services worldwide. I am delighted, therefore, the Group’s Board has
agreed to support the BPMA’s ambitious plan to provide a new, permanent home
for its unique collection of postal artefacts, stamps and equipment, as well as
allowing greater access to the archive”
Dr Adrian Steel, Director of the BPMA, said: “We are aiming to create a state-of-the-art,
sustainable home for a unique part of our national heritage. The new centre
will showcase the UK ’s
pioneering role in developing postal communications, which has shaped the world
we live in.”
Norman Lamb, Postal Affairs Minister, said: "This
exciting new home for the British
Postal Museum
and Archive is a great initiative, to which I hope people will lend their
support. Celebrating the history of Royal Mail in this way will bring to life a
key part of our nation's cultural heritage. The many and varied items in the
archives will show how Royal Mail has been at the heart of British life for
centuries, and it is great news that the museum will contain an educational
facility to allow young people to engage with the history of our postal
services in an innovative way."
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