Forging the cityscape
by Sharon Macdonald
Forging the cityscape is concerned with the shaping of the city today as well
as past Sheffields. Rather than recounting a single history as told in
many popular histories of the city, however, the chapters in this section
look in detail at other aspects of Sheffield's past that are less often
considered. By so doing, they address questions of which of Sheffield's
pasts tend to be remembered or forgotten. The material culture of the
industrial past, for example, tends to predominate in many historical
accounts - and in contemporary public memory - over that of other,
especially earlier, periods. This has implications for the city's
identity as well as for issues of conservation and preservation. By
highlighting different histories Materializing Sheffield shows the
rich resource that the past offers for other city stories.
Steel City: an archaeology of
Sheffield's industrial past by
James
Symonds explores the industrial archaeology of Sheffield, providing
a lively account of the city's industrial past and showing well how
a focus on material culture can provide a richer perspective on the
city's history than can relying on documents alone. As well as being
of interest in itself, the industrial past should not be ignored, he
argues, as an archaeology that highlights the individual and
collective skill of former inhabitants has a therapeutic role to
play in the remaking of the Twenty-first Century city. Interpretive
historical archaeology can thus play a role in reanimating past lives
and lifeworlds and creating new meanings that result from mediated
encounters of the past with the present.
For the nineteenth century history of Sheffield, it is possible to
use documentary as well as material cultural resources. Just how
resourceful it is possible to be is well illustrated in
Recreating Nineteenth Century
Sheffield: The Sheffield urban study project by
Peter Blundell Jones. He writes of a project by Sheffield University
architecture students to literally materialize Nineteenth Century Sheffield
- but in miniature. That is, by creating as accurate a model of the city
at that time as possible on the basis of numerous different records.
Although the model itself is in storage further work on the recreation
of Sheffield's history can be found on
http://sucod.shef.ac.uk.
Linked with this project were also two other studies, each with a more
specific in-depth focus, both of which were originally Sheffield
University architecture PhDs. Alan Williams' PhD on the
historically significant steel-works if Benjamin Huntsman in
Attercliffe, Sheffield, has formed the basis of an e-project linked
to this one and also called
Materialising Sheffield
. The project has involved
creating a sophisticated virtual reconstruction of the famous crucible
steel-works on the basis of historically rigorous research. It
shows well how material culture research can be animated by
innovative technological approaches.
Jo Lintonbon's
Designer shopping: the development of the department
store in Nineteenth Century Sheffield looks at a site which, like
the steel-making works that we more immediately associate with
Sheffield's material culture, was also involved in considerable
and historically significant material cultural transformations.
Her detailed and insightful account of the development of the
department store in Nineteenth Century Sheffield provides ample
rich detail about Sheffield in that period - and not only directly
on the subject of the department store itself. Her study also
speaks of a wider struggle in dealing with material culture at
that time: between coping, on the one hand, with what seemed to
be speeding up cycles of fashion and the production of obsolescence
that this also entailed, and, on the other hand, with the fixity of
buildings. This is a dilemma that continues.
One type of commodity available for purchase in the department stores -
and indeed in specialist shops that later became department stores -
was furniture. As Julie Banham shows in
Materialising the domestic interior.
Sheffield's nineteenth-century furniture industry.
, Sheffield's production and associated consumer
boom brought about a great expansion in the need for home furnishing.
Like the department store, the production and consumption of furniture
in Sheffield provides a kind of material window into past lives and
concerns, and also highlights the interrelationship between local and
wider concerns. She shows us how some of the newly wealthy adopted
fashionable styles that were current in other parts of the country.
Others, however, especially those whose position was a little more
economically precarious, resisted the temptations of fashion and the
material obsolescence that accompanied it, and instead developed
what came to be known as 'the Sheffield code'. This entailed an
emphasis on qualities such as 'durability, practicality, propriety
[and] comfort' rather than on novelty and cosmopolitanism. This even
resulted in certain styles still being produced by Sheffield furniture
makers after they had ceased to be made elsewhere.
The theme of focusing on particular kinds of objects - and using these
as a lens onto local and wider practices and social relations - continues
, and indeed hones down further in its immediate subject scope, in
A filecutter's hammer from the Hawley Collection
by Joan Unwin.
Here she shows brilliantly how exploring one particular object -
and, moreover, one which many might dismiss as too boringly mundane
for attention - can form the focal point of a complex and nuanced
history. This includes consideration of the craft and skill involved
in both making and using such an object, gender relations and gendered
work, local politics and radicalism, and even stories of the author's
own Sheffield forbears. Objects such as industrial tools are too often
forgotten by collectors. Fortunately for Sheffield, these have been
collected by Ken Hawley, though unfortunately there is no funding for
the Hawley Collection, which is housed
within the University, to be placed on permanent public display.
Some of us included in this volume have been fortunate enough to
have been shown around the Hawley Collection by Joan, and I think
that all of us, even those who began with little interest in the
collection itself, left utterly convinced of its value as a unique
window onto some of Sheffield's hidden lives and worlds. Joan's
article here likewise shows just what a significant contribution
a permanent display of the Hawley Collection might make to
telling stories of lives that were crucial to the forging of Sheffield.
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