Carriage maker's archive secured for public
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Items charting the journey of a Derby carriage makers with links to Rolls-Royce have been secured for the county’s archives.
Derbyshire Records Office has taken the archive of Holmes & Co, which was founded in Lichfield in the 1760s before relocating to Derby in 1820.
The Carriage Foundation, based in Matlock, believes the collection is the largest of its kind.
Holmes & Co, which closed for good in the 1970s, began life creating high-end carriages before becoming Sanderson & Holmes, building car bodies for Rolls-Royce.
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The firm worked with many wealthy customers, including royalty and had a showroom in London.
Documents, drawings, and other items dating back to the 1800s have been bought for £32,200 using grant funding and are now in the care of Derbyshire County Council’s record office in New Street, Matlock.
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Cataloguing and digitising will now take place to make the collection accessible to the public, some showcasing the firm’s royal links.
The archive includes a bound ledger detailing work commissioned by Queen Victoria from 1849 to 1861, photos of a four-wheeled enclosed landau carriage that the Prince of Wales – later Edward VII – used during his tour of India in 1875 and 1876, and the Maharajah of Kutch’s four-wheeled barouche carriage with collapsible hood.
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There are also pen-and-ink, watercolour, and gouache drawings of carriage designs from the 1800s.
Council leader Barry Lewis said: “This is a very exciting and valuable acquisition. What a story it can tell about how we used to travel in the 19th Century.”
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