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Economic Development

£2 million project to restore Newman Brothers Coffin Works almost complete

£2 million has been spent renovating the Grade II* listed Coffin Works in Fleet Street to restore the building and its contents as a unique heritage attraction

A 15-year scheme to restore the historic Newman Brothers Coffin Fitting Works in Birmingham’s Jewellery Quarter is almost complete.

Conservation experts have revealed the factory will reopen as a museum at the end of October.

Around £2 million has been spent renovating the Grade II* listed building in Fleet Street to restore it as a unique heritage attraction.

A £1 million grant from the (HLF), matched by English Heritage and Birmingham City Council, formed part of the package of funding that made the conservation work possible.

The Coffin Works was built in 1894 when Queen Victoria was still on the throne and funerals were big business.

Newman Brothers developed a reputation for making some of the finest coffin fittings in the world, and their products adorned the coffins of , Winston Churchill  and the Queen Mother among many others.

Though in business for more than a century, the manufacturing processes and the way the business was run changed very little, so visitors to the new attraction can step back into a different world.

Suppliers to the undertakers’ trade for over 100 years, Newman Brothers closed its doors in 1999, leaving most of the contents in place as if at the end of an ordinary working day.