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Opening times

  Mar & Nov Apr & Oct May-Sep
Mon CLOSED* CLOSED* CLOSED*
Tue 12 - 4pm 12 - 5pm 12 - 5pm
Wed 12 - 4pm 12 - 5pm 12 - 5pm
Thur 12 - 4pm 12 - 5pm 12 - 5pm
Fri CLOSED 12 - 5pm 12 - 5pm
Sat CLOSED CLOSED 12 - 5pm
Sun CLOSED* CLOSED* CLOSED*

* Open 12 – 5pm on Sunday and Monday
on Bank Holiday weekends (Easter, May and August).

Engine in steam on weekdays and Saturdays (see above opening hours).
Limited Sunday steaming please phone for details.

We suggest you allow at least 1.5 hours for your visit.

Disabled Access

Due to the historic nature of the building some emergency exit routes require the use of a flight of stairs.

Queen Street Mill Textile Museum is fully accessible to disabled users but numbers of people who would require the assistance of a staff member to evacuate the building in an emergency may need to be restricted in certain parts of the building.

Please call the museum or email us if you have any concerns or would like to know more.

Admission Charges

Save money with our Xplorer multi-pass tickets

Adults £ 3.00
Concessions £ 2.00
Accompanied Children FREE
Burnley Residents FREE

Facilities

  • Ample free parking 
  • Gift shop
  • Café serving snacks and light refreshments
  • Toilets including disabled and baby change facilities
  • Full access for disabled users
  • Visitors with guide dogs welcome
  • Family events and activities

Contact the museum

Queen Street Mill Textile Museum
Harle Syke, Burnley, BB10 2HX.
Tel: (+44) 01282 412555
Fax: (+44) 01282 430220

Our venues

Queen Street Mill Textile Museum

Grounds

Harle Syke became one of the most important weaving villages in Victorian Lancashire and is now a conservation area displaying industrial architecture which has seen little change in the last 100 years.

In the grounds of the Mill is the chimney, which stands 120 feet high, and the Mill pond or lodge, which is fed by rainwater collected in the gutters and piped through downspouts from the mill roof.

To the side of the lodge is a small stable building made of brick and stone which would have housed the Mills' four horses until motorised transport was purchased in 1926. It is unusual for stable blocks to be found intact, as they were often demolished or converted into garages.