The Melton Carnegie Museum is a museum in Melton Mowbray, Leicestershire, which documents the history of the market town. It is managed by Leicestershire County Council and supported by Melton Borough Council and is Heritage Lottery Funded.
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The former Andrew Carnegie Library, built in 1905, was refurbished and opened by Leicestershire County Council in 1977 as the Melton Carnegie Museum.
In 1983 the National Museum of Hunting Trust was established. With Melton being a world-renowned centre on Fox Hunting - the Melton building was intended to incorporate material on hunting. The refurbishment of the building, costing some £500,000, gave the opportunity to include a fox-hunting display - greatly celebrated at the re-opening in the speech of Baroness Mallalieu - given on Friday, 3 May 2002.
The museum, which reopened in 2002 following major refurbishment, traces the social and economic history of Melton and includes exhibitions on the town’s world-renowned Stilton cheese and pork pie industries and accounts of the arguments for and against fox hunting.
Stilton Cheese and Pork Pies from Melton Mowbray are famous all around the world. The museum has displays on the history of these trades and others including saddle, shoemaking and tinsmithing and the impact they had on the town, as well as how the Romans, Anglo Saxons, Normans, Tudors, Georgians and Victorians would have lived in the area.
"Painting the town red" also has strong local connections.
The Museum is accredited by the Museums, Libraries and Archives Council (MLA).
During 2002, the Museum was opened by Baroness Mallalieu.