Helmshore Mills Textile Museum, Rossendale
Facts and practical information
Helmshore Mills are two mills built on the River Ogden in Helmshore, Lancashire. Higher Mill was built in 1796 for William Turner, and Whitaker's Mill was built in the 1820s by the Turner family. In their early life they alternated between working wool and cotton. By 1920 they were working shoddy as condensor mule mills; and equipment has been preserved and is still used. The mills closed in 1967 and they were taken over by the Higher Mills Trust, whose trustees included historian and author Chris Aspin and politician Dr Rhodes Boyson, who maintained it as a museum. The mills are said to the most original and best-preserved examples of both cotton spinning and woollen fulling left in the country that are still operational. ()
Helmshore Mills Textile Museum – popular in the area (distance from the attraction)
Nearby attractions include: Peel Monument, Musbury Tor, Longholme Methodist Church, Haworth Art Gallery.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
How to get to Helmshore Mills Textile Museum by public transport?
Train
- Irwell Vale (32 min walk)