Peak District Breaks
action packed or relaxed
you decide!
The Old House Museum has five hundred years of history. Explore 10 beamed rooms with wattle and daub partitions and great open fireplaces. Discover a rare Tudor toilet and a Victorian privy. Experience life in a Victorian mill workers dwelling. See displays of lace, textiles and elegant costumes in tableau settings. View historical toys as featured on BBC 2 Restoration Roadshow. Experience the fun, award winning Rat Trail - ratty facts and competition Tudor dressing up box, dolls house to play with and courtyard games
History of the house
In the time of Henry VIII the southern four rooms were built as a tax collector's house. Ralph Gell of Hopton, near Wirksworth, had taken over the collection of tithes, the tenth of all produce due to the church, and needed a house for his steward, Christopher Plant. The produce, such as oats and wool, was stored in nearby barns before being sold.In the time of Elizabeth I the house was made much bigger as a gentleman's residence, with the luxury of an internal toilet or garderobe. The central room has a big fireplace where the cooking was done.
In 1777 Richard Arkwright, the founder of the factory system, built his third cotton mill at Bakewell and divided this house into 5 cottages for workers at the mill. Another was built on.They were good for their time but by the 1950s the cottages were condemned as unfit for human habitation. They would have been demolished but the Bakewell & District Historical Society was formed to protect the Old House and to use it as a museum.
Open daily from 11am - 4pm from 1st April - 31st Oct
Tel 01629 813642 .
