Signs of the times at Queen Street Mill

Shirley and I paid a visit to the Queen Street Mill Textile Museum at Harle Syke, Burnley, yesterday, and discovered some images that capture the transformation in British society between Victorian times and today.

List of rules in Victorian cotton mill
The list of rules

The first image is of the ‘Rules to be observed by the hands employed in this mill’ published at Water-foot Mill, near Haslingden in September, 1851. They show how the masters maintained strict control of their workers by means of fines and the threat of dismissal.

That control extended to personal hygiene:

‘The Masters would recommend that all their workpeople Wash themselves every morning, but they shall Wash themselves at least twice every week, Monday Morning and Thursday morning; and any found not washed will be fined 3d. for each offence.’

More serious was the threat of instant dismissal and the fact that the workers had to give the master a month’s notice if they wished to leave their employment:

‘All persons in our employ shall serve Four weeks’ Notice before leaving their employ; but L. WHITAKER & SONS, shall and will turn any person off without notice being given.’

The 1823 Master and Servant Act (not repealed until 1875) meant workers could be jailed for up to three months for breaching their contracts with their masters. The Preston Chronicle contains reports of workers prosecuted under this legislation.

One of the difficulties facing workers, and this would surely have applied in Preston, was that the magistrates in industrial towns were mainly drawn from employers: in Preston’s case, the mill owners.

A key study of the workings of master and servant legislation by Douglas Hay examined trends in its use in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. He concluded that the greater use of prison sentences and the continual weakening of the protection the legislation offered to workers meant that ‘by the mid-nineteenth century the law of master and servant appeared far more significant in the creation of great social inequalities than it had a century before’.

Another rule governed the use of the toilets:

‘If two persons are known to be in one Necessary together they shall be fined 3d each; and if any Man or Boy go into the Women’s Necessary he shall be instantly dismissed.’

Toilet signage in 2025
Toilet signage in 2025
Toilet signage at Queens Street Mill, Burnley
Toilet signage at Queens Street Mill, Burnley

Compare the toilet provision at Queen Street Mill today where there are separate facilities for men and women and a third signed ‘All Gender Toilet’. I think the last is a sign that must have been added following this year’s gender-recognition legislation: a contentious landmark in Britain’s social history.


To plan your visit: https://www.lancashire.gov.uk/…/queen-street-mill…/

There are guided tours twice a day. We were lucky to have Ben as our guide. His enthusiasm and entertaining delivery certainly enhanced our visit.


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