Paisley Thread Mill Museum occupies a room inside Mile End Mill, one of the surviving buildings of the Coats and Clark thread-making complex that once employed thousands of Paisley residents. Registered as a Scottish charity, the museum is run entirely by volunteers, many of them former mill workers who staff the guided tours and speak from direct experience of the machinery. The collection traces thread production in the town from its origins in 1722 through to the closure of the last mill in 1993, using looms, bobbins and photographs donated largely by former employees. Tours run on Wednesday and Saturday afternoons, with the last guided entry at 3.30pm, and a café on the ground floor of the business centre serves food on weekday mornings. Admission is free, though the volunteers rely on donations and memberships to keep the collection open.
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