Cuckooland Museum
The Cuckooland Museum, previously known as the Cuckoo Clock Museum, was a museum that exhibited mainly cuckoo clocks, located in Tabley, Cheshire, England. The collection comprised 300 years of cuckoo clock-making history, since the earliest examples made in the 18th to the 21st century.
This private museum closed in 2024, the collection was sold for £1,000,000 and moved to Ireland to be exhibited in the Irish Museum of Time.
Foundation
The museum was set up in 1990 by brothers Roman and Maz Piekarski after bringing together a collection of antique Black Forest cuckoo clocks that was continuously increased until the museum's last years. Both men were trained as clockmakers in Manchester from the age of 15, which is when their fascination with these timepieces began.It became apparent to them that an important part of European clock-making history was liable to disappear if surviving examples fell into irretrievable disrepair. Their guiding principles were to purchase objects of museum quality which held an important significance in the historical development of cuckoo timekeeping.
In Roman Piekarski's own words: When we started collecting in the 1970s no one wanted them because battery and electric clocks were all the rage. We picked many up for next to nothing.
The collection
In the past, the exhibition also included other kind of timepieces such as longcase, wall and bracket clocks but later on it focused mainly on cuckoo clocks.The museum also hosted a range of Black Forest cuckoo and quail clocks, trumpeter clocks, monks playing bells and other associated musical movements.
Cuckooland came to have over 600 cuckoo clocks of different styles, sizes, manufacturers and times. Many of the pieces were rare and the collection contained some of the best examples of the cuckoo clockmaker's art:
- A "cuckoo and echo" clock that emulates the whistles and bellows the bird makes in the wild and is thought to be one of only six in the world.
- The museum also displayed many timepieces made by Johann Baptist Beha, one of the most reputed Black Forest clockmaker of all times.
- Examples in Art Nouveau and other unusual styles.
- Other rarities included; picture frame cuckoo clocks, several timepieces with a life size automaton cuckoo bird on top of the case, models combined with paintings of people or animals with blinking or flirty eyes, designer cuckoo clocks, etc.