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Manchester

Get more value for money in the museums and attractions of Manchester with your Modern History Discovery Pass. Benefit from offers including 10% off in the shop at MOSI, 10% off at Left Bank Cafe in the People's History Museum and a free childs ticket on the East Lancashire Railway with fare paying adults (subject to terms and conditions)

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 "There have always been ideas worth fighting for" (People's History Museum).

Photograph of People's History Museum, ManchesterBeyond the grand, gleaming engines and textile machinery of the Museum of Science and Industry - MOSI - are the stories of the Manchester people who, each in their own ways, have changed the world. Great scientists and engineers - inventors to whom nothing seemed impossible and who created a world capable of factory production, of computer technology, of ever quicker transport, of medical 'miracles'. And as if to prove that in Manchester the sky's the limit, within the museum you can stand on the platform of the world's first passenger railway station and look up to Beetham Tower, the tallest residential skyscraper in Europe and a potent symbol that this is truly a city of innovation - after all, Manchester University is home to more than its fair share of Nobel Prize winners.

Nearby, beautiful trade union and society banners fill the People's History Museum, every one of them a real, dazzling work of art, along with campaigning posters, satirical political posters and cartoons. From Industrial Revolution, the Peterloo Massacre, women's suffrage and the Welfare State to gay rights, anti-nuclear  nad anti-war campaigns - these are colourful stories, colourfully told.

Between the two museums, the magnificent John Rylands Library stands at the heart of the new Spinningfields area of Manchester - sleek, prosperous, businesslike. Visit the Royal Exchange Theatre  - the largest room in the world when it was rebuilt in 1874 - and imagine the noise in here in 1921 when the Manchester Exchange controlled almost half the world's cotton production. 

The opening of the Manchester Ship Canal may have sealed Manchester's fortunes - and you can Photograph of East Lancashire Railwaycruise along the Ship Canal all the way to Liverpool's Pier Head to understand just how important this waterway was - but it was the earlier canal network that opened up the possibilities. Canals weave in and out of Manchester to this day and provide a lovely leisure route through the city whether you are on the water, on bikes or on foot. Explore the canal system on a narrow boat trip from the Portland Basin Museum on the junction of the Ashton Canal and Peak Forest Canal. The stories of Industrial Revolution continue at Salford Museum and Bolton Museum. Hat Works tells Stockport's fascinating side of the textile story - and explains why the local football club is known as the Hatters! Trencherfield Mill Steam Engine is one of the largest and finest working examples of its type; Built over 100 years ago, this mammoth metal powerhouse was regarded as a feat of industrial engineering. A steam train ride from Bury on the East Lancashire Railway line will take you straight to the heart of Lancashire's textile heritage that was so important to Manchester's prosperity.


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 For more information on what you can discover in Manchester visit http://www.visitmanchester.com/

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