Outside The Pankhurst Centre, Manchester
Museum

The Pankhurst Centre

Manchester
Free to all

With a National Art Pass you get

20% off in café

An iconic site of women’s activism, the Pankhurst Centre tells the extraordinary story of the Pankhurst family and the birth of the suffragette campaign for votes for women.

Emmeline Pankhurst and her family lived at 62 Nelson Street from 1898-1907. The site is the first-known meeting place of the movement that would later become the suffragettes. You can visit the parlour where it all began as well as explore the other nooks and crannies of the house that provide a window into the lives of this famous radical family.

The Pankhurst Centre is the only museum dedicated to telling the story of women's fight for the vote, a monumental movement in history that has had a huge impact on the ongoing battle for women's equality. The centre is run entirely by women, a testament to the importance of its story.

Today the site is also home to the headquarters of Manchester Women's Aid, supporting women's activism in Manchester and the surrounding areas. A new permanent exhibition, At Home with the Pankhurst Family will focus in on the lives of the Pankhurst family through a range of objects and archive material, and the centre are also planning an accessible archive to put their extensive feminist materials into the public realm.

Visitor information

Address

The Pankhurst Centre

The Pankhurst Centre, 60-62 Nelson Street, Manchester, Greater Manchester, M13 9WP
0161 273 5673

Free to all

Opening times

Thursdays and Sundays, 11-4pm

Visitor information

IndividualTiana Clarke Please note this is an example card and not a reflection of the final product

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