The museum’s visitor numbers increased to 801,756 in 2023, making it top in the region and the 17th most visited paid-for attraction nationally, the annual Survey of Visits to Visitor Attractions showed.
The news comes as the museum is celebrating the recent opening of its new 1950s cinema, shops, and STEM learning space, as well as the Georgian Drovers Tavern and pottery.
The VisitEngland 2023 survey gathered information from 1,513 English visitor attractions, which showed that while visits to attractions continued to recover last year, they were still significantly down on pre-pandemic levels.
The Tower of London was the most visited paid-for attraction in England, with 2.8 million visitors, followed by Kew Gardens with 2 million visitors. The British Museum was the top free attraction, with 5.8 million visitors, followed by the Natural History Museum with 5.7 million visitors.
Last weekend (6th July), Beamish opened in its 1950s Town, a recreation of the Grand cinema from Ryhope, Sunderland; a toy shop named after Romer Parrish in Middlesbrough; A Reece Ltd Radio and Electrical Services electrical and record shop; STEM (science, technology, engineering and maths) learning space and a milk bar.
The Drovers Tavern, which opened in The 1820s Landscape in June, serves Georgian-inspired food and drink, including an exclusively-brewed ale and gin. At the pottery, visitors find out more about the traditional skill and can have a try.
The museum also recently celebrated winning the national Visitor Welcome Award at the Museums + Heritage Awards.
Beamish, an open air museum set across 350 acres, has around 500 staff and 400 volunteers. An independent charity, it relies on income from its much-valued visitors and supporters to help maintain the museum, develop new and exciting exhibits, and support Beamish’s work to preserve North East heritage for future generations, while supporting today’s communities, including through health and wellbeing and education work.
Beamish is now looking forward to the summer ahead, when it has a programme of activities, including 1950s fun and games, Suffragette marches, pottery and poster making. Upcoming events include Crank It Up this weekend (13th and 14th July), Attelage Horse Weekend and Meccano Exhibition (20th and 21st July), Beamish Tractor Show (27th and 28th July) and North East Horticultural Society and Beamish Museum Annual Show (7th and 8th September).
With the museum’s Beamish Unlimited Pass and Friends of Beamish membership, visitors can pay once and return free for 12 months, including daytime events.
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