Leila's Hair Museum

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Leila's Hair Museum

Leila's Hair Museum was a museum in Independence, Missouri that displays examples of hairwork dating back to the 18th century. It closed in September 2025[1].

Hairwork is a form of art that began in the 16th century or earlier, and flourished in the Victorian era. A collection of hair from family, friends, or a gathering such as a wedding, was made into a hair wreath by making flowers of the hair. It was then put into a shadow box frame. Wreaths were also made as memorial pieces using hair from the deceased. Hairwork was used by people wanting to keep a memento of a loved one before the invention of photography.[2] Hairwork also consisted of necklaces, bracelets, rings, lockets, paintings and medallions embellished with strands of hair.[2]

Museum history

Leila Cohoon (1931-2024)[3] was a retired cosmetology teacher living in Independence, Missouri, who started collecting hair in 1956 and considered it to be her life work.[4] She had a lifelong fascination with hair, and considered it one of the most interesting parts of the human body.[5][6] In 1990, having begun to run out of space in her home for her hairwork collection, Cohoon opened her hair museum in a small front room in the Independence School of Cosmetology (which she founded in 1960).[6] Later, she moved her hair museum a few blocks from the old location so as to be able to expand.[6] The new location for the museum consists of multiple rooms with walls covered from top to bottom with hairworks.[7] The museum closed down during the COVID-19 pandemic,[8] and reopened in autumn 2023 with the caveat that visitors must schedule an appointment via email.[9] Struggling after its reopening and Cohoon’s death, the museum closed permanently in September 2025.[10] Lindsay Evans, Cohoon's granddaughter, is working to place the collection in other museums across the U.S.[11]

The collection

References

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