Yorkshire Sculpture Park
(2 Miles)*
Yorkshire Sculpture Park is an international centre for modern and contemporary sculpture.
|
National Coalmining Museum for England
(2 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.
|
Wakefield Museum
(3 Miles)*
Explore the sights and sounds of the rainforest as you enter the world of Wakefield explorer and early conservationist Charles Waterton
|
Wakefield Art Gallery
(3 Miles)*
Significant early works by the highly acclaimed locally born sculptors Henry Moore and Barbara Hepworth, and important work by other major British modern artists, form the core of this collection.
|
Wakefield Cathedral
(3 Miles)*
The ancient Parish Church of All Saints, Wakefield became the Cathedral Church of All Saints in 1888, when the Diocese of Wakefield was carved out of Ripon Diocese.
|
Kirklees Light Railway
(4 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.
|
Bagshaw Museum
(6 Miles)*
Bagshaw Museum will be closed for structural work and gallery developments jointly funded by the Heritage Lottery Fund and Kirklees Council. The museum is due to reopen in Spring 2009.
|
Cawthorne Victoria Jubilee Museum
(6 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.
|
Cannon Hall Museum
(6 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.
|
Oakwell Hall
(6 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.
|
Middleton Railway
(8 Miles)*
The Middleton Railway was established by the first British railway Act of Parliament in 1758 to carry coal from Middleton to Leeds and has operated continuously since that time. It can claim to be "the world's oldest working railway!"
|
Thwaite Mills Water Mill
(8 Miles)*
At Thwaite Mills you will find a fully-restored working watermill in an attractive riverside setting.
|
Wentworth Castle Gardens
(9 Miles)*
One of the most important historic gardens in the North of England, this hidden gem from the 18th century opened fully in spring 2007.
|
Temple Newsam House
(9 Miles)*
At Temple Newsam you can explore three floors of a magnificent country house, admire beautiful paintings, furniture and silver.
|
Henry Moore Institute
(9 Miles)*
The Henry Moore Institute in Leeds is a unique resource devoted exclusively to sculpture, with a programme comprising exhibitions, collections and research.
|