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    York Castle Museum

    4.3 (49 reviews)
    InexpensiveMuseums, Art Galleries
    Closed 9:30 am - 5:00 pm

    York Castle Museum Photos

    Recommended Reviews - York Castle Museum

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    Candy from the 60's
    Nik N.

    I adore the castle museum and would have loved to stay longer but the Victorian street and the prison areas were too scary for my daughter so we rushed through the Victorian area and had to turn back rather than walk through the prison area. The 60s exhibit was my new favorite. How candy in a toy gun that you point into your mouth got through to production is beyond me.

    Christmas in victorian times
    Casey M.

    The castle museum is situated near Clifford's tower and I was first in the queue and I kind of raced round the other exhibits to get to the Victorian street before everyone else piled in but I wish I had taken my time to really enjoy the whole experience because there was so much interesting things to see but of course the highlight of this museum is the replica of a Victorian street with cute little shops, I especially loved Barton's confectionery where I bought a load of traditional sweets and chocolates served by a lady in traditional Victorian style clothes. I loved the cobbled streets and old lampposts, and the the horse and cart, it was such a beautiful authentic setting, very festive and I loved it. I think this is one place in York that should be high up on your to do list.

    Shackles.
    Keith A.

    Pretty interesting museum. Really enjoyed the recreated Victorian street. The debtors prison was cool. Some of the video re-enactments reminded me of US college students whining about paying their college loans. Really long walk through, well worth the money. 60s love section was boring to me, but I wasn't really a Beatles enthusiast. The war and prison parts were great. Some nanny trigger warning signs about for those who would rather erase history. Highly recommend.

    Over view of main area

    Service is amazing and so much fun! They have things for children to make it fun but educational, they have live shows running throughout the day that involves the crowd and endless entertainment throughout, kids get handed a map to full in while looking through providing a wide selection and value is great. Only negatives was prices which is inevitable no matter where you go. General place is amazing

    Witch stones
    Beth C.

    York sure has great museums! This one, in part of the old women's prison, is on grounds that have been used for military and justice purposes since the Norman conquest. The exhibits covered a diverse spectrum, from the history of the prison and the creepy old cells to insights into the human body and culture across decades and centuries, to a fascinating perspective on the Great War from Yorkshire experiences. Oh, and there was the charming Victorian street scene, which is perfect for selfie age. I can see why this place is packed with school kids, but us two American tourists enjoyed our visit, too.

    The old style street
    Callum T.

    Firstly I would say you pretty much need to spend the day here in order to visit all the exhibitions that are on offer. There is so much to see, read, do and learn about and they have an amazing array of artefacts across the three exhibitions we saw. The olden street is incredibly recreated and the WW1 stuff is mind blowing, well worth a visit for the whole family with plenty of interactive elements for the kids. The cafe is well priced with a wonderful array of food and drink and the shop isn't half bad either. Worth a visit for a rainy day or just in general.

    Penny L.

    To me this place really isn't a museum...most of it was like walking in my nans bedroom...or sometimes even mine...I mean a cabinet full of psones, sega megadrives and dslites..I might as well turn my house into a museum :p The only redeeming feature is the ''Victorian street''..This is literally a stretch of cobblestones with little quaint shops displaying Vicotrian apparel...I only wish that some of it was for sale!.. But personally I would not come back here in a hurry..luckily I did not have to pay to get in ;p

    Qype User (Templa…)

    For some reason the map will not recognise York. This is a truly excellent and huge museum. Great for kids too. York Castle sood on this site. The museum's past as two prison buildings is explored with a look at conditions in 18th century gaols and every child wants to know about its most famous former prisoner - highwayman Dick Turpin, who was hanged in 1739 for horse stealing. Turpin spent his last six months in the Debtors' Prison, which was built in 1701-5, and today houses half of the museum's displays. The other half of the museum was originally the Female Prison, built in 1780-83. It is best known for its recreated Victorian street, Kirkgate, which combines real shop fittings and stock with modern sound and light effects, to evoke an atmosphere of Victorian Britain. There is a sweet shop, a candlemakers, a fire station, a butchers and often these are manned plus many more shops and a handsome cab and horse. The street was named after the museum's founder, Dr John L. Kirk, a North Yorkshire country doctor who collected everyday objects and wanted to keep them safe for future generations. The museum's room settings include a Victorian parlour, an 1850s Moorland cottage, Jacobean and Georgian dining rooms, a 1940s kitchen and a 1950s front room. It has one of the largest collections of costumes anywhere plus a room full of 1950s items and recently a 60's display was added. Outside is a watermill where you can buy flour. Adult - £7.50 Child - £4 Under 5s - Free Concessions - £6.50 They also do family tickets and joint tickets with the Yorkshire museum. Best is if you buy a ticket it is valid for a YEAR. Go back at any time. An excellent few hours.

    I was very surprised to see that the museum of broken relationships exhibit here. I saw it in Los Angeles two years ago. You can get lost in this museum. Be careful. There are no visible signs.

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    8 years ago

    What a nice day! Set aside at least three hours to take in this great museum! The indoor city was crazy accurate and so much fun!

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    Page 1 of 2

    Review Highlights - York Castle Museum

    The first thing we did was to walk through the victorian street which was beautiful and surreal.

    Mentioned in 13 reviews

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    York Minster - Interior dedicated to children

    York Minster

    4.5(92 reviews)
    0.5 mi

    Beautiful piece of architecture and history. I had the opportunity to tour this place and go up the…read moretower. Admission was £21.00 general admission and tower tour. That tower was no joke. The stairs are narrow and steep. You do get to stop mid way to see the view before heading to the top and seeing the panoramic view of the city. You do go down the way you came up. The tickets for the tower are for specific times. The church was beautiful! When you walk in you're greeted with an amazing view of stain glass and art details across the entire building. Definitely a place worth exploring.

    York is a wonderful town and well worth a visit. It's easy to park and the historic center is…read moreperfectly easy walkable. And the centerpiece of course is the massive York Minster. It's an Anglican cathedral. The first record of a church on the site dates to 627, but the bulk of the building was constructed between 1220 and 1472.The minster retains most of its medieval stained glass, a significant survival among European churches. The Minster stands tall at a max. tower height of 235 feet (72 m) and is visible from far away. Good if you get lost...just look out for the Minster. And it is a really impressive piece of history, art and architecture. Really amazes you when you first walk up to it. There are so many details to find, to explore. To think how long it's been standing here - surviving quite the fire in 1984. We didn't go in this time around, but that's surely something for another visit. Not sure it's always as windy as it was when we've visited (August), but boy....did it almost blow us away at Precentors Court on the west side of the Minster. So, hold on your hats! Definitely a must do - probably THE must-do when in York.

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    York Minster
    York Minster
    York Minster - Pretty

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    Pretty

    Barley Hall - Barley hall with stocks.

    Barley Hall

    4.6(5 reviews)
    0.4 mi

    My wife and I visited Barley Hall in September 2024. It was an afterthought, having bought tickets…read moreto the Jorvik Viking museum, this was a small additional fee. But it was worth it. Not a long visit, probably an hour or so. There are several rooms to explore, each with laminated info cards to pick up and read the history and purpose. Interactive games for kids learning too. Along with the Jorvik museum, this gave us a really good insight to medieval life in York. It makes sense to get the package, even though we did not have time to visit the other 2 attractions in the package. Finding the Hall was an adventure in itself, tucked away down a narrow lane, under an archway into a courtyard. We were there on a weekday, at the end of the day, and it was not busy. We were able to take our time and enjoy the exhibit.

    Coffee Yard is a snickelway that runs between Stonegate -- a very fashionable address in the later…read moremiddle ages a site tucked away in one of its back alleys--Barley Hall, a fifteenth-century townhouse in Coffee Yard. A house occupied by one of Richard III's urban supporters. One of the emerging middle class that gave such strong allegiance to the Yorkists. Barley Hall is a stunning medieval townhouse, once home to the Priors of Nostell and the Mayor of York. Until the 1980s the house was hidden under the relatively modern façade of a derelict office block. Only when the building was going to be destroyed was the amazing medieval building discovered and its history uncovered. Barley Hall's medieval origins had been long forgotten by 1980, when it appeared to be a jumble of brick structures. Ironically, millions of tourists had literally walked right through what was originally an internal corridor of the L-shaped house as they used the Coffee Yard snickelway (an alley-like passageway from one street to another) to travel from busy Stonegate to Swinegate and Grape Lane. I am not sure but I think I stood in a coutyard, that I ten realised wasn't, that may have been a part of this. It was a roofless room and I was looking at interior walls. The building has now been lovingly restored to its original splendour with stunning high ceilings, beautiful exposed timber frames, and possibly the only horn window in England. It has been decorated to replicate what it would have looked like as the Snawsell home around 1483 and boasts a magnificent Great Hall. It is a hands-on living museum, letting visitors experience life in a 15th century house in the centre of York. This is one historic attraction where you are encouraged to touch and pick up exhibits. Sit on the chairs, open chests, and generally explore the house as you choose,and experience what it would have been like to live in Medieval England.. They also have many events. In July and August medieval summer schools for children and coming up: Thu 27 - Sun 30 Nov 2008 St Nicholas Fayre Medieval Market Wed 3 - Sat 6 Dec 2008 Deck the Hall A Medieval Christmas Thu 4 Dec 2008 Barley Hall by Candlelight Sat 6, Sun 7 Dec 2008 Barley Hall Christmas Fayre Wed 10 - Sat 13 Dec 2008 Deck the Hall A Medieval Christmas Thu 11 Dec 2008 Barley Hall by Candlelight Sat 13, Sun 14 Dec 2008 Barley Hall Christmas Fayre Wed 17 - Sat 20 Dec 2008 Deck the Hall A Medieval Christmas You can follow costumed guides as they escort groups through the hall, or hire an audio tape tour. On summer weekends there are special period events, such as mystery plays and medieval markets. Great place to visit.

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    Barley Hall
    Barley Hall
    Barley Hall

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    The Merchant Adventurers Hall

    The Merchant Adventurers Hall

    4.7(3 reviews)
    0.2 mi

    I didn't actually go into the Merchants hall but I passed it several times while visiting York as…read moremy hotel on Piccadilly was close by and each time I passed I had to stop to admire this beautiful building, it is stunning and I wish I had had the time to go in but next time for sure.

    This is one of the most beautiful buildings, in the most beautiful setting, that I have ever seen…read more Worth going just to look at the outside. The Merchant Adventurers' Hall is of major national importance and is a grade 1 listed building and scheduled ancient monument. It was built between 1357 and 1361, before most of the craft or trade guild halls in Britain, making it one of the largest buildings of its kind and date in Britain. The gardens around the Hall were formed as a Rest Garden for the people of York after World War I. Until about 1900 the area was a clutter of ramshackle buildings and hovels. In 1357 a number of important men and women came together to form a religious fraternity and to build the Merchant Adventurers' Hall. By 1430 most members were mercers. There are still 150 members of the guild today and they keep alive the York Mystery plays amongst other things. The Great Hall is where meetings and business took place. In the undercroft is the hospital, where the poor and destitute of York were cared for until about 1900. At the far end of the undercroft is the chapel, rebuilt in 1411 in both brick and stone. The furnishings of the chapel are not original; they date from 1661. The best way to go is, as I did once, in a party when an historian of the place (ours was American) will give the group a talk on its history as well. Most of the things to see are asscociated with the guild but it is the building that is what one goes for. If just visiting it is reasonably priced at about £2.50 for entrance.

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    The Merchant Adventurers Hall
    The Merchant Adventurers Hall
    The Merchant Adventurers Hall

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    Fairfax House - The salon

    Fairfax House

    4.5(2 reviews)
    0.2 mi

    Fairfax House is supposedly the finest Georgian townhouse in England. The house is owned by York…read moreCivic Trust who carried out major restoration work in the 1980s. it has quite a few events through the year, is open to the public and houses the Noel Terry Collection of English Furniture and Clocks. The house was built in 1762 as a dowry for Anne Fairfax, the only (surviving) child of Viscount Fairfax who got York's most distinguished architect, John Carr, to design the interior. The Great Staircase is a magnificent with its exquisite Venetian Window, wrought iron and decorative plasterwork. There are ceramics, silverware and paintings plus interesting household objects of the time like a linen press. It also has rooms available for hire. Not immensely exciting but worth a visit if in York.

    A bit of a gem! We just happened to see Fairfax House on our way to somewhere else, and we stepped…read morein. It's only 6 pounds for an adult, and you really get a feel for what it was like to live as an aristocrat in a Georgian home. Friendly volunteers are stationed throughout the house offering an excellent level of historical detail and their own color commentary, complete with pithy British humor. Better than visiting castle or a palace, as you can get very close to all of the displays. No velvet ropes here! Also features a beautiful gift shop in which we bought a lovely antique teapot. Highly recommended!

    Photos
    Fairfax House
    Fairfax House
    Fairfax House - Entrance - just to the left of the main building

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    Entrance - just to the left of the main building

    York Castle Museum - museums - Updated June 2026

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