Shrewsbury Flaxmill Maltings to Join English Heritage

Historic England have annoucned that they will be handing over the visitor attraction at Shrewsbury Flaxmill Maltings to the care of English Heritage from the 1st April 2025. The visitor experience at Shrewsbury Flaxmill Maltings will become part of the charity’s 400-strong portfolio of historic attractions, welcoming thousands of potential new visitors. It will sit…

Historic England Advice on Re-use of Mills Updated

Historic England has updated (September 2024) its guidance on the value of re-utilising historic mills, outlining their many potential new uses. These re-uses include houses, offices, shops, restaurants, art galleries and even an NHS outpatients’ department . The revised guidance notes that the vast majority of adults (89%) believe mills are an ‘important part of…

New Historic England Heritage Assets Guide to Textile Mills

Historic England’s latest Heritage Asset guide deals with the above and below ground archaeology of the industrial textile mill, from spinning and integrated mills to weaving sheds and the power plants needed to run these sites. The textile mill is one of the iconic monuments of industrialization, and a variety of different ways of recording…

National Trust Helping to Find a Future for Lancashire’s Textile mills

The National Trust has joined forces with Lancashire County Council to tell the story of two of the most important surviving textile mills in North West England – Queen Street Mill in Burnley and Helmshore Mill in Rossendale. The Grade I listed Queen Street Mill is the last surviving 19th-century steam powered weaving mill in the…

New Strategy for Oldham’s Textile Mills Launched

Oldham Council has published its Mills Strategy (March 2022) setting out how these historic textile buildings can play an important part in the future of the borough. The study, one of the first of its kind in the country, was commissioned by Oldham Council and Historic England to explore the mills potential for future use….

Mills of the North Free Online Seminar

Historic England’s fourth free Industrial Heritage HELM Webinar covers the Historic England ‘Mills of the North’ project (https://historicengland.org.uk/services-skills/training-skills/online-training/webinars/helm-webinars/). This is taking place on Monday 15 November between 1300 and 1400. Speakers include James Stephenson (Wakefield Council), Bernadette Bone (BB Heritage Studio), Stef Wyke (Islington Mill) and Alastair Godfrey (Historic England). They will be exploring how…