A row of 11 Victorian terraced houses will transport visitors back to the heyday of The Potteries following the launch of Stoke-on-Trent’s latest tourist attraction today.

Dubbed the world capital of ceramics, Stoke-on-Trent is already home to award-winning museums, attractions, and tours - and offers a chance for visitors to have a go at the wheel themselves.

Now, the city is set to welcome its newest addition, thanks to a £2.5m transformation of the terraced houses alongside one of The Potteries’ most popular visitor destinations.

Over the last two years the properties in Harper Street, Burslem, Stoke-on-Trent, which are opposite the main entrance to the Middleport Pottery site, have been restored to create a new heritage attraction.

Harper Street, Middleport

The project - part-funded by the National Lottery Heritage Fund - extends the Pottery's popular heritage trail and is set to open to the public at the end of June, revealing more about life in a city regarded as the UK’s spiritual home of ceramics.

‘How we lived at Harper Street’ enables visitors to step back in time to 1950, with one of the properties - originally the Lodgekeeper's House - filled with period furnishings as well as featuring audio-visual stories of people who lived locally.

How We Lived at Harper Street

Mr and Mrs Hall and their three children lived in the house at 113 Harper Street - which was formerly known as Albion Street - and the house has been recreated as if the family has just stepped out, with today’s visitors able to look round their scullery, back kitchen, parlour, and bedrooms, as well as seeing the original steep staircase.

Harper Street, Middleport

Other houses have exhibitions showcasing the people and neighbourhood as well as life in the Potteries in the 1950s and 1960s, along with six further retail studios for creative businesses, a purpose-built archive for Middleport Pottery, office space and a community hub for Middleport Matters.

Regeneration charity Re-Form Heritage is behind the restoration of the Harper Street houses, which were originally built in 1893. However, because they were built on top of broken pieces of pottery, and lacked proper foundations, they were prone to subsidence and there were successive waves of demolition in the area from the 1930s onwards.

The row of houses is intrinsically linked with Middleport Pottery, the UK’s last working Victorian potbank in continuous production, and an award-winning visitor destination in the heart of Burslem, the Mother Town of the Potteries.

Harper Street, Middleport

Visitors to Middleport Pottery can already explore the heritage site, beginning in the original Victorian offices before discovering the mould store housing Europe’s largest collection of ceramic moulds. Visitors can also look inside the pottery’s huge bottle kiln, one of the few remaining in Stoke-on-Trent and an iconic reminder of the city’s great industrial heritage.

A factory tour offers the chance to see world-famous Burleigh pottery being made using the same traditional methods as in the 1880s, including the unique method of decoration, underglaze 'tissue-transfer' – with Middleport the only place in the world where this technique is still being used.

For updates on the Harper Street project, visit www.re-form.org/harper-street.

Images Credit: Jenny Harper for Re-Form Heritage. 

Related

Middleport Pottery
Pottery Visitor Centre
Middleport Pottery

Middleport Pottery, home of Burleigh, is an award-winning visitor destination in the heart of Burslem, the Mother Town of the Potteries. World famous Burleigh pottery has been created here using traditional methods since 1889.

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