Liberty Shoes (Leicester, England)
Liberty Shoes Ltd was a shoe-manufacturing company in Leicester, England. Its premises were located in the Liberty Building in central Leicester, an architecturally-significant building that was demolished amid some controversy in 2002.
Liberty Shoes Ltd
The company was founded by the Lennard Brothers in 1877. One brother, Samuel, served as a town councillor in Leicester, and later became mayor of the city.[1] The firm was initially known as the Lennard Shoe Company, and appears in trade directories as early as 1887.[2][3]
By the early twentieth century, the company specialised in the production of high-quality footwear for women.[4] At its peak the company employed 650 people, and was an important force in the local community; but by the 1960s it had entered a period of decline, and its eventual closure began with 200 layoffs in 1962.[4][5]
Architecture and heritage
The Liberty Building was opened in 1919, and the well-known Statue of Liberty replica was added two years later – it was from this statue that both the building and the company would soon get their name.[6][7][8] The building used state-of-the-art construction techniques for its time, including the Hennebique system of reinforced concrete.[9] When completed, the internal space measured 42,000 square feet.[10]
In 1992 an application to demolish the buildings was made for the first time – two years later, the building was granted Grade II listed status. By this time the building had been vacated, and regularly suffered from vandalism and intrusion.[11] Its final use was as offices and the location of a printing works.[3] After much further campaigning, the building was demolished in April 2002.[12] The Liberty statue was relocated to a nearby roundabout, and student accommodation was built on the site.[12]
References
- ↑ "The architecture around us tells our city's history". Leicester Mercury. 28 Apr 2001. Retrieved 2013-01-14.
- ↑ 'Liberty Building timeline, Manufacturing Pasts, University of Leicester 2012.
- 1 2 "Urgent work needed to protect building". Leicester Mercury. 24 Sep 1999. Retrieved 2013-01-14.
- 1 2 Rebecca Madgin, Heritage, Culture and Conservation: Managing the Urban Renaissance (Saarbruken, 2008), p. 32.
- ↑ Ben Beazley, Postwar Leicester (Sutton Publishing, 2006), p. 120.
- ↑ "Liberty Statue". Leicester City Council. Retrieved 2013-01-14.
- ↑ "Building plans for Liberty Works, 1919". My Leicestershire (Manufacturing Pasts collection). Retrieved 2013-01-14.
- ↑ For the statue, see: They made Leicester's Statue of Liberty, Leicester Mercury, 23/03/1998.
- ↑ The architecture around us tells our city's history, Leicester Mercury, 28/04/2001.
- ↑ "A new factory in Leicester". The British Builder: 123–6. June 1922. Retrieved 2013-01-14.
- ↑ Vandals plague Liberty building, Leicester Mercury, 30/09/1995.
- 1 2 "Factory is reduced to pile of dust", Leicester Mercury, 16/04/2002.
External links
- English Heritage building description and listing information
- Draft letter from Lennard Brothers Ltd, concerning tariff reform, 1904