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Attractions in Marsden & Things to Do in Marsden
(and nearby) |
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Marsden Moor
(1 Mile)*
Straddling the well-known Pennine Way Marsden Moor offers pre Roman archaeology. |
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Saddleworth Museum & Art Gallery
(5 Miles)*
Saddleworth Museum and Art Gallery is full of intriguing objects from the past and tells the story of the people who have created Saddleworth's landscape and character |
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Eureka! The National Children's Museum
(8 Miles)*
Eureka! has a fun-packed programme of events every holiday and half term. |
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Bankfield Museum
(9 Miles)*
For half a century from 1837-1886, Bankfield House was the home of Edward Akroyd, the largest wool manufacturer in Britain. |
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Shibden Hall
(9 Miles)*
Built in 1420, Shibden Hall with it's oak panelled interiors and atmospheric room settings is Halifax's Historic Home. The Folk Museum and Barn also offer you a world without electricity, where craftsmen worked in wood and iron. |
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Rochdale Art Gallery
(10 Miles)*
Touchstones is an exciting arts and heritage centre that has something special for everyone. The site consists of Art Galleries, Museum, Local Studies Centre and Tourist Information Centre. |
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Portland Basin Museum
(11 Miles)*
Portland Basin Museum is the centrepiece of the recently rebuilt Ashton Canal Warehouse, now looking much as it did in 1834 when it was first built. |
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Hardcastle Crags
(11 Miles)*
Walkers, naturalists and those interested in spotting the rare northern hairy wood ant will enjoy the 400 acres of unspoilt woodland which makes up the National Trust property of Hardcastle Crags. |
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Kirklees Light Railway
(12 Miles)*
Ride on 'Yorkshire's Great Little Steam Train' through the lovely South Pennines on this old country branch line. A quarter mile long tunnel adds to the thrill of this nostalgic 50-minute return journey. |
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National Coalmining Museum for England
(13 Miles)*
A visit to Caphouse Colliery is great day out with a unique opportunity to travel 140 metres underground down one of Britain's oldest working mines. |
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Cannon Hall Museum
(13 Miles)*
Cannon Hall was designed by John Carr of York and is set in over 70 acres of historic parkland which includes beautiful formal gardens providing a perfect setting for picnics or relaxing strolls. |
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Bagshaw Museum
(14 Miles)*
This stunning Victorian Gothic former mill owner's house is set in 36 aces of parkland and ancient woodland. The home of George Sheard from 1875-1902, the house became a museum in 1911 and was named after its first curator, Walter Bagshaw. |
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Oakwell Hall
(14 Miles)*
This beautiful, Elizabethan manor house has delighted visitors for centuries. Built in 1583, the hall is now set out as it would have been in the 1690s, when it was the home of the Batt family. |
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Cawthorne Victoria Jubilee Museum
(14 Miles)*
The Cawthorne Museum Society was founded in 1884 by the Rev. Charles Tiplady Pratt who was vicar of the parish at the time. He encouraged the young people of the village to become interested in Natural History and start a museum collection. |
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Yorkshire Sculpture Park
(14 Miles)*
Yorkshire Sculpture Park is an international centre for modern and contemporary sculpture. |
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Heaton Hall
(14 Miles)*
A magnificent neo-classical country house with beautifully restored 18th century interiors, set in 650 acres of rolling parkland. |
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Bolling Hall
(14 Miles)*
Tucked away in a leafy garden, less than a mile from the city centre. Bolling Hall is one of Bradford's most precious jewels. |
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National Media Museum
(14 Miles)*
Consistently the most visited museum outside London with an average of 750,000 people coming each year, the National Museum of Photography, Film & Television has amazing interactive galleries to explore. |
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Manchester Art Gallery
(15 Miles)*
The gallery's amazing collection of art is displayed in an innovative and imaginative way. An undoubted highlight is the outstanding collection of 19th century Pre-Raphaelite paintings. |
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People's History Museum
(15 Miles)*
The People's History Museum tells the dramatic story of the British working classes struggle for democracy and social justice - told at the only national museum in Manchester city centre, the radical city where it belongs. |
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Bronte Parsonage Museum
(15 Miles)*
Charlotte, Emily and Anne Bronte, were the authors of some of the greatest books in the English language. Haworth Parsonage was their much-loved home and Jane Eyre, Wuthering Heights and The Tenant of Wildfell Hall were all written here. |
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Whitworth Art Gallery
(16 Miles)*
The Gallery is home to an impressive range of watercolours, prints, drawings, modern art and sculpture, as well as the largest collections of textiles and wallpapers outside London. |
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Salford Museum & Art Gallery
(16 Miles)*
Museum of Salford's local history and art. |
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Bradford Industrial Museum & Horses At Work
(16 Miles)*
Think of industry in Bradford and you think of wool. Think of mills and you think of machinery, steam engines and horses, all of which can be found at Bradford Industrial Museum! |
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Rossendale Museum
(16 Miles)*
Rossendale Museum is housed in a 19th century mill owner's residence built in 1840 for the Hardman family, overlooking their woollen mill at New Hall Hey |
Above, you'll find a list of the Tourist Attractions in Marsden and things to do in Marsden (and nearby) listed on AboutBritain.com.
So if you're wondering what to do in Marsden, simply click on some of the links on this page to see detailed information on places to go.
As you can see, there's plenty of ideas for family days out in Marsden and the surrounding area - so you need never be short of places to go and things to do in Marsden again.
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