Finding collections relating to d/Deaf, disabled and neurodiverse people

One of the aims of our project is to make collections relating to d/Deaf, disabled and neurodivergent people more visible – and to share some of the objects our Fellows and Trainees are discovering.

Some will have quite obvious connections to disabled people’s lives – a walking stick, some braille or images of disabled people. But we will also be exploring less obvious connections too. Sometimes the significance of an object is its owner; its part in a bigger story, or the way someone with lived experience of disability has responded to it. In this way we hope to broaden the ways that d/Deaf, disabled and neurodivergent stories are told.

Collections

GUIDE DOG GOLDIE' PHOTOGRAPH (Certificate)

1987

MMM.1990.45.17

ID: A white certificate titled “Guide Dog Goldie” with a photograph of a golden retriever puppy underneath. She sits on top of a pile of green and brown autumn leaves in a park. The certificate reads: “Presented to Walton Park T.W.G, Liverpool 1987 in sincere gratitude from the Guide Dogs Association”. This certificate featuring Guide...

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Rights information: Courtesy of Museum of Liverpool

Description

ID: A white certificate titled “Guide Dog Goldie” with a photograph of a golden retriever puppy underneath. She sits on top of a pile of green and brown autumn leaves in a park. The certificate reads: “Presented to Walton Park T.W.G, Liverpool 1987 in sincere gratitude from the Guide Dogs Association”.

This certificate featuring Guide Dog Goldie, a trainee guide dog, was presented as a thank you to Walton Park Townswomen's Guild (T.W.G).

The Guide Dogs for the Blind Association (known today as Guide Dogs) was established in Wallasey, Merseyside in 1931, by two local women, Muriel Crooke and Rosamund Bond. They organised the training of the first four British guide dogs. As of 2022, 1,217 puppies started their journey to become guide dogs with the charity.

Alongside the certificate, a member of the T.W.G, Mrs Flo Smith, and her dog, also named Goldie, were presented with a cheque.

The donor, Mrs Ruddock, remembers:

“The members of Walton Park Townswomen’s Guild were asked to name this puppy which was born and being trained at the Blind Training Association. We called it Goldie, knowing it would learn to be as faithful as Mrs Smith’s own dog.”