History Of Louis Tussaud's Waxworks
There are known to have been Waxworks in Blackpool
since the 1870's, principally at the time those of
Monsieur D'Arc & Elias Fletcher, housed in wooden
buildings a little to the south of Central Pier. By
1890, there was Mr. Lee's "Grand Museum and Royal
Waxwork" in shop premises on Church Street (opposite
The Grand).
Louis Tussaud, a great grandson of Madame Tussaud,
came to Blackpool in 1900 from London, where he had
previously held waxworks exhibitions. Following a fire
and trouble obtaining further premises there, he had
decided to tour the provinces. He first set up a
waxworks in Blackpool in the basement of the
Hippodrome Theatre, Church Street (later the ABC and
now the Syndicate Nightspot), opening it in July 1900.
The following year, he moved the exhibition to the
Brunswick Café, South Beach, now the area of the
Golden Mile just north of the Oasis amusement centre.
Later, Tussaud was bought-out by Albert Lindsay
Parkinson. Parkinson was one of Blackpool's most
significant figures, he was mayor throughout the Great
War and owned and built much property, his building
firm operating nationally. By 1907, Parkinson had also
acquired Walker's Waxworks, adjoining the Wellington
Hotel opposite Central Pier and he had put in his
brother Tom as manager. They were able to transfer the
famous Tussaud name to these premises under the
company name Louis Tussaud (Blackpool) Ltd and the
Waxworks continued on Wellington Terrace until 1928.
From the outset there had been a Chamber of Horrors.
In 1929, Lindsay Parkinson built Tussaud's present
premises on the Golden Mile. Opened in May that year,
they originally had an Egyptian-style glazed façade by
Shaw's of Darwen (removed in 1974, when the building
was extended over the
forecourt). The link with the Tussaud family was
briefly re-established at this time, when Bernard
Tussaud became the company's sculptor for several
months, during which time he created many new figures.
After A. L. Parkinson's death in 1936, Tussaud's
remained under the ownership of A. L. Parkinson
Holdings Ltd until quite recently. Besides displaying
representations of famous people past and present,
Tussaud's also had the Liverpool School of Anatomy's
exhibition, which was for adults only. During the
1950s, several of Sir Jacob Epstein's controversial
sculptures were exhibited in the basement, along with
some of his drawings.