Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Potteries Museum and Art Gallery

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Visitors
  
over 100k per annum

Phone
  
+44 1782 232323

Director
  
Keith Bloor

Potteries Museum & Art Gallery

Location
  
Hanley, Stoke-on-Trent, United Kingdom

Type
  
Art museum & local museum

Curator
  
Collections Officers for Arts, Ceramics, Natural History and Local History

Website
  
www.stokemuseums.org.uk

Address
  
Bethesda St, Stoke-on-Trent ST1 3DW, UK

Hours
  
Open today · 10AM–5PMSaturday10AM–5PMSunday11AM–4PMMonday10AM–5PMTuesday10AM–5PMWednesday10AM–5PMThursday10AM–5PMFriday10AM–5PMSuggest an edit

Similar
  
Gladstone Pottery Museum, Water World - Stoke‑on‑Trent, Trentham Estate, World of Wedgwood, Potteries Shopping Centre

The Potteries Museum & Art Gallery is in Hanley, one of the six towns of Stoke-on-Trent in Staffordshire. Admission is free.

Contents

One of the four local authority museums in the City, the other three being Gladstone Pottery Museum, Ford Green Hall and Etruria Industrial Museum, The Potteries Museum & Art Gallery houses collections that bring together the identities that went into forming the area known as the Potteries. The Museum holds a collection of Staffordshire ceramics.

All the collections at this Museum are categorized as Designated Collections. Galleries display fine and decorative arts, costume, local history, archaeology and natural history collections. There is a second world war aircraft on permanent display, a Supermarine Spitfire whose earlier Marks were designed by R. J. Mitchell who came from nearby Butt Lane.

Since February 2010, The Potteries Museum & Art Gallery has been the home of a number of artefacts from the Staffordshire Hoard. 52,500 visitors viewed 118 items at the Potteries Museum during a 23-day exhibition in February 2010. Since Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery and Stoke-on-Trent Museums have purchased the Hoard, items have been on permanent display at both venues. Over 80 pieces can be seen in The Potteries Museum & Art Gallery's archaeology gallery. Redevelopment of the Saxon part to this gallery in the latter half of 2010 has set the Hoard within a more tangible context, using existing pieces from the Museum's collection of Staffordshire archaeology.

On 28 February 2017, the Leekfrith torcs, believed to be the oldest Iron Age gold jewellery found in Britain, were unveiled to the public for the first time, at the museum. From the following day, they were placed on public display.


References

Potteries Museum & Art Gallery Wikipedia