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

HAND SPLINT (Medical splint)

2000s

MOL.2024.4.1

ID: A pale yellow plastic medical splint, with a hand and forearm shape. It is designed so the wearer places their hand inside, supported and straightened by the plastic. It has Velcro straps to keep it fastened.This hand splint was used by Phil Hume. Phil is originally from Luton but has lived in Merseyside for...

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Rights information: Courtesy of Museum of Liverpool

Description

ID: A pale yellow plastic medical splint, with a hand and forearm shape. It is designed so the wearer places their hand inside, supported and straightened by the plastic. It has Velcro straps to keep it fastened.

This hand splint was used by Phil Hume. Phil is originally from Luton but has lived in Merseyside for many years. He now lives in Bootle. Phil was born with a limb difference in his left hand and arm, and he had an operation in the early 2000s to straighten it. He used the splint, which helped to keep it straight, every night for about 2 to 3 years. However, Phil remembers that his hand would seize up when using the splint and said that it became uncomfortable and very painful, so he eventually stopped using it.

Phil kept the splint as a memory of the operation but says that “it still haunts me a little”. He says:

“I didn’t tell the doctors at the time that the splint was painful. I felt like I couldn’t and was used to just accepting everything.”

He believes that by donating his splint to the Museum, he is passing it on to a good new home. It reminds him that the operation changed his mobility for the better, and of how he has learned to speak up for himself since then.

Phil has been a member of People First Merseyside, a self-advocacy group for adults with learning disabilities, since around 2007. He says that he has learned a great deal through being a member of the group. Phil believes that people with learning disabilities need to be around the right people and have the right support to help others.

Community curation: We collected two objects from Phil when his partner, Rebecca, donated her pop fidget toy to us as part of my display, Assistive Technology: What it means to Us. Phil is Rebecca's partner and they are both members of People First, who I've absolutely loved working alongside during Curating for Change - Iris Sirendi, Curating for Change Fellow at Museum of Liverpool