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Visitors will now be able to see brand new additions to the Hamlet, including a newly refurbished new welcome hub, telling the story of the Hamlet and the people who shaped it, and a new nature and heritage inspired timber-framed play area for families to enjoy. These latest developments mark the end of a two-year programme of improvement breathing new life into the site.
Abbeydale Works, as the Hamlet was originally known, is one of the cornerstones of Sheffield industry. With earliest records dating back to the 1700s, the Works was once a producer of agricultural tools and the largest water-powered industrial site on the River Sheaf. Almost all the processes used in the production of blades were carried out on one site. The main industrial features are the tilt forge, the grinding hull and the crucible steel furnace, which is the last complete surviving example in the UK.
In 1935, the site was purchased for the city by the J G Graves Trust and Abbeydale Industrial Hamlet opened as a museum in 1970. Today, the Hamlet comprises a significant group of preserved Grade I and Grade II listed buildings and a Scheduled Monument, offering a fascinating window into Sheffield’s steelmaking past.
© Andy Brown
© Andy Brown
Thanks to support from The National Lottery Heritage Fund, Sheffield City Council and the JG Graves Charitable Trust, work has been underway to safeguard this unique heritage site. The most recent improvements at the Hamlet include:
These latest improvements follow on from work over the last two years to complete the restoration of the water wheel which drives the Blowing Engine, the introduction of new information panels telling the Hamlet’s stories, the development of new schools’ workshops and volunteer tours, and work to extend the Hamlet car park.
© Andy Brown
© Andy Brown
Alongside the recent improvements to the Hamlet, Sheffield City Council and their contractors Esh Construction are currently undertaking a major repair to the dam that supplies the waterwheels at the site. The repairs will see the water level in the Hamlet millpond restored, enabling the historic waterwheels to turn again.
© Ian M Spooner
© Ian M Spooner
Our vision is for heritage to be valued, cared for and sustained for everyone, now and in the future. That’s why as the largest funder for the UK’s heritage we are dedicated to supporting projects that connect people and communities to heritage, as set out in our strategic plan, Heritage 2033. Heritage can be anything from the past that people value and want to pass on to future generations. We believe in the power of heritage to ignite the imagination, offer joy and inspiration, and to build pride in place and connection to the past.
Over the next 10 years, we aim to invest £3.6billion raised for good causes by National Lottery players to make a decisive difference for people, places and communities.
Find out more at heritagefund.org.uk