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English Heritage says record numbers of families visited English Heritage sites in 2023

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English Heritage care for over 400 properties in England, and last year, they welcomed more families to their historic venues than ever before.

Over 550,000 families visited English Heritage sites in 2032 – this is the highest figure since records began.  What’s more, the number was up by 54% over the last 10 years. 

 

Stonehenge in Wiltshire saw its best year ever in 2023 for families coming to visit.
Stonehenge in Wiltshire saw its best year ever in 2023 for families coming to visit. 
It saw family visits go up by 23% year on year. 

Nine historic castles, palaces and abbeys saw their highest ever number of visitors in 2023, and 10 more had their best years in over a decade.

English Heritage is thrilled to see so many families enjoying the sites where history happened. 

Tintagel Castle in Cornwall had its best ever figures for the third year in a row.  Their numbers were up by nearly 20% in 2023, compared to the year before.

Helmsley Castle is in North Yorkshire - visit it to find out how it evolved over 900 years.
Helmsley Castle is in North Yorkshire - visit it to find out how it evolved over 900 years.

Other castles also had a great year:  Helmsley in North Yorkshire, Deal in Kent, Portland in Dorset and Yarmouth on the Isle of Wight all had their best ever years.  Leicestershire’s Kirby Muxloe, Pevensey (Sussex) and Stokesay (Shropshire) all had their best years in over 10 years.

Nine of the properties with their highest ever visitor numbers were connected to Henry VIII.   The castles build in Deal, Portland and Yarmound were all build by Henry VIII as coastal fortresses.   His childhood home was Eltham Palace in London, where visitor numbers were up 9%. 

Gainsborough Hall is one of the biggest and best-preserved medieval manor houses in England.
Gainsborough Hall is one of the biggest and best-preserved medieval manor houses in England.
It's in Lincolnshire, and it hosted Henry VIII several times.
Catherine Parr lived there as a girl. 

Roman sites saw numbers go up as well, such as the Richborough Roman Fort  and Amphitheatre in Kent, which welcomed 145% more visitors than it had before it closed for a two year conservation project.   And visitors flocked to Aldborough Roman Site and Wroxeter Roman City in Shropshire had their best visitor figures since 1999 and 2011 respectfully

And monastic sites did well, too, such as Furness Abbey (Cumbria), Lindisfarne Prior (Northumberland) and St Augustine’s Abbey in Kent had their highest visitor numbers in over 20 years.   Battle Abbey (Sussex), Tynemouth Priory (Tyne and Wear) and Hailes Abbey (Gloucestershire) had strong years, too.

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